10/17/06 C-SPAN: CAPITAL NEWS...
RE: Bush Signs Military Commissions Act
ACLU "THIS ACT IS UNLAWFUL & SHOULD BE OVERTURNED!"
AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/L001I061017-CSPAN.MP3
Bush Signs Military Commissions Act
E Canada Now, Canada - 4 hours ago
In his speech prior to signing the bill, President Bush
dedicated the Military Commissions Act of 2006, To the memory of
the victims of the terrorist attacks ...
MORE:>>
Bush signs Military Commissions Act
Jeannie Shawl at 10:02 AM ET
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&tab=wn&ie=UTF-8&q=Bush+signs+Military+Commissions+Act&btnG=Search+News
[JURIST] President George W. Bush signed the Military
Commissions Act of 2006 [PDF text; S 3930 summary] Tuesday. The
US Congress approved the bill [JURIST report] late last month
after leaders of the House of Representatives decided to forego
the process of reconciling slightly-divergent House and Senate
versions, with the House instead adopting the Senate version of
the legislation.
The military commissions bill [JURIST news archive] became
necessary after the US Supreme Court ruled in June that the
commissions, as initially constituted, lacked proper legal
authorization [JURIST report]. The law provides statutory
authorization for military commission trials for Guantanamo Bay
[JURIST news archive] and the Bush administration has promised
to immediately take steps toward beginning prosecution [briefing
transcript; AP report]. A senior state department official said
last week that as many as 80 detainees could face trial by
military commission [JURIST report].
Under the Military Commissions Act [CRS summary], the president
is authorized to establish military commissions to try unlawful
enemy combatants. The commissions are authorized to sentence
defendants to death, and defendants are prevented from invoking
the Geneva Conventions [ICRC materials] as a source of rights
during commission proceedings. The law contains a
highly-controversial provision stripping detainees of the right
to file habeas corpus petitions in federal court and also allows
hearsay evidence to be admitted during proceedings, so long as
the presiding officer determines it to be reliable. The law
addresses permissible interrogation methods, making US
interrogators subject to only a limited range of "grave
breaches" purporting to reflect the requirements of Common
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, and clarifies [JURIST
report] what actions would subject interrogators to liability
under the existing federal War Crimes Act [text; JURIST report].
A legal challenge to the law [JURIST report] has already been
filed by a group of Afghan detainees who argue that Congress, by
passing the bill, endangered the rights [CCR press release] of
detainees. The habeas stripping provisions of the new law apply
retroactively, and in order for the detainees to be successful,
a judge will have to strike down the portion of the new law that
precludes the challenges.
10:26 AM ET - Signing the Military Commissions Act, Bush called
the law "one of the most important pieces of legislation in the
War on Terror." In remarks [text] before signing the bill, Bush
said:
The bill I'm about to sign also provides a way to deliver
justice to the terrorists we have captured. In the months after
9/11, I authorized a system of military commissions to try
foreign terrorists accused of war crimes. These commissions were
similar to those used for trying enemy combatants in the
Revolutionary War and the Civil War and World War II. Yet the
legality of the system I established was challenged in the
court, and the Supreme Court ruled that the military commissions
needed to be explicitly authorized by the United States
Congress.
And so I asked Congress for that authority, and they have
provided it. With the Military Commission Act, the legislative
and executive branches have agreed on a system that meets our
national security needs. These military commissions will provide
a fair trial, in which the accused are presumed innocent, have
access to an attorney, and can hear all the evidence against
them. These military commissions are lawful, they are fair, and
they are necessary.
When I sign this bill into law, we will use these commissions to
bring justice to the men believed to have planned the attacks of
September the 11th, 2001. We'll also seek to prosecute those
believed responsible for the attack on the USS Cole, which
killed 17 American sailors six years ago last week. We will seek
to prosecute an operative believed to have been involved in the
bombings of the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which
killed more than 200 innocent people and wounded 5,000 more.
With our actions, we will send a clear message to those who kill
Americans: We will find you and we will bring you to justice.
In a fact sheet [text] highlighting key aspects of the Act, the
White House noted that the law will allow the administration "to
prosecute captured terrorists for war crimes through full and
fair trials" and, referring to the Act's interrogation
provisions, "will preserve the tools needed to help save
American lives." The White House stressed that the law "Provides
legal protections that ensure our military and intelligence
personnel will not have to fear lawsuits filed by terrorists
simply for doing their jobs; Spells out specific, recognizable
offenses that would be considered crimes in the handling of
detainees - so that our men and women who question captured
terrorists can perform their duties to the fullest extent of the
law; and Complies with both the spirit and the letter of our
international obligations."