By

Andrew Cohen /

CBS/ July 27, 2009, 1:17 PM

Obama And Terror Law: More Of The Same?

Attorney Andrew Cohen analyzes legal issues for CBS News and CBSNews.com.
As Attorney General Eric Holder prepares Monday to visit the terror detainees and their guards at the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, it is fair to say that the first month of the Obama administration has been a major disappointment to civil libertarians and others who believed that the new president would swiftly deconstruct some of the most dubious terror law policies enacted by the Bush White House and the Pentagon.

It's true that President Barack Obama formally pledged in the first hours of his presidency to close down Gitmo within one year. But don't forget that George W. Bush declared on several occasions that he, too, wanted to close down the place as quickly as possible.

Indeed, it's hard to find anyone of substance who wants to keep open the sad symbol of American penal excess except for a few hysterical senators who have unhelpfully adopted a Not-In-My-Backyard stance on relocating the detainees to prisons on American soil.

So the Attorney General goes to Gitmo with his Justice Department (and no doubt the Pentagon as well) undertaking a review of individual detainee cases that cannot be much different in form than the review of those cases that Bush officials had performed over the past few years (which has resulted in the release of hundreds of Gitmo prisoners).

The only measurable difference, it seems to me, are the new sets of eyes that will be reading the dossiers. The evidence against the men (in some cases good, in many other cases not so much) is the same - and so are the diplomatic challenges in sending the least dangerous ones away for good.

We will know whether the Obama administration really is serious about alternatives to Gitmo when it announces how it plans to disperse the men. How many will be repatriated or otherwise sent abroad? How many will be tried in our civilian criminal courts, or in new terror-law courts? How many under repaired military commission rules? What will those rules look like? Will the men be housed at Supermax in Colorado, which already houses al Qaeda convicts? Or will Sen. Sam Brownback's worst nightmare come true - terror law prisoners at Ft. Leavenworth? We just don't yet know.

But we do know how the new president has reacted to other terror law policies. And so far there has been no reason for Obama's staunchest supporters on the left to be anything but dismayed.

A few weeks ago, the Obama Justice Department informed a federal judge that it would follow the Bush administration's expansive interpretation of the "state secrets" doctrine; a legal standard that allows the government to ask for dismissal of a case against it if the evidence is classified and may not be revealed without harming national security.

The case in question involves the government's still-controversial domestic surveillance program. The feds used the same argument to recently support the dismissal of a lawsuit against the Boeing Corporation which alleged the planemaker had helped transfer terror suspects abroad for torture as part of the government's "extraordinary rendition" program."

Then, on Friday, the Obama Justice Department hewed to another oft-litigated Bush administration policy when it curtly told another federal judge in another case that terror detainees held at the U.S. military airbase at Bagram, Afghanistan have no "habeas corpus" right to petition U.S. courts for a redress of their grievances.

The position indicates the new administration is willing to live with two sets of rules for its detainees: one that grants Gitmo prisoners rights to our courts (the Supreme Court made that call last year), and one that does not. Noodle on that for a second more - Gitmo now is the best place a terror detainee can be these days!

In the next month or so, there will be several other ways in which the Obama administration will reveal its plans and priorities. For example, the Justice Department has until March 23 to file a brief in the Supreme Court case of Ali Saleh Kahlah Al-Marri, a Qatari national who was arrested in December 2001 while living lawfully in the United States. He was initially charged with making false statements to investigators, but before his criminal case could proceed he was designated an "enemy combatant" and put into the brig in Charleston, South Carolina, where he resides today.

The prisoner's lawyers say that his indefinite detention is unconstitutional - that the government must either release him, as it did Yaser Esam Hamdi (an American citizen who was captured abroad, brought to the States, designated a "combatant," and then abruptly returned to Saudi Arabia after the Supreme Court ruled in his favor in 2004), or charge him in our regular courts, as it did with Jose Padilla (an American citizen who was arrested in Illinois, designated a "dirty bomber," sent to military detention, and then brought back into the criminal justice system, tried and convicted after the Supreme Court ruled in his favor in 2004).

The Bush Administration had argued that al-Marri is an Al Qaeda operative who was sent to America to take part in a post-9/11 terror plot. As Jane Mayer magazine, the feds allege that al-Marri met with Osama bin Laden, had links to one of the financiers of the Twin Tower plot, was trained in the mid 1990s in chemical warfare, and may have some sort of connection to top 9/11 planner Khalid Sheik Mohammed.

But much of this evidence, if it exists, would be inadmissible in our civilian courts because of the way it was obtained or because it is otherwise classified. The Bush team weighed the factors in the al-Marri case and opted to keep him on ice.

Now the Obama team gets to have its say. The Justices will hear argument in Al-Marri during the last week of April and may have a ruling by the end of the term. But we should know well before then whether the earliest decisions of the Obama administration on terror law represent the exceptions … or the rule.
Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
28 Comments Add a Comment
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GODSnLIBERALS says:
What our forefathers fought for and gave their lives for was Habeas Corpus, above all else - to live without the arbitrary power of the King to imprison and punish without due process.

It is the foundation of this nation and its Constitution. Mr. Cohen is right to be concerned with that, above all, for without it, we are no better than the Taliban, stand on no moral ground, mean nothing as the light for democracy.

I am not willing to turn this nation into a dictatorship in order to "protect us". I am not willing to throw away the sacrifice of our earliest patriots to allay your fears.

Cohen is right. You are wrong.
Posted by aakalan at 3:46 AM : Feb 23, 2009
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*******

our forfathers was thinking more of american citizens and NOT FOREIGN "non-american" MUSLIMS
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lfallis62 says:
Re:The problem is systemic & the boat is sinking
we do however have a nicer president.

I agree with you on this 100% markangeloo.
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usa-no1 says:
When face with reality, barrack and his cronies knows they can't change a thing. The fantasies they dreamed up during the election is over.
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notblue says:
All that pre-election rhetoric was just that, Obama had to appease the screaming child left and now that the election is over reality and sense can return to the equation. Obama has Americas best interests at heart not some focused demagogery or political ideology designed for the leftwing critisizers, extremists, and haters.
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markangeloo says:
The problem is systemic & the boat is sinking
we do however have a nicer president.
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divitius says:
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
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aakalan says:
Splamco wrote: "Always seems to be a fetish of Andrew Cohen to want to defend those who kill/injure our soldiers and marines. It''s always strange how he expects them to collect evidence and conduct police interviews in the middle of a firefight. He seems more afraid of what might happen to the constitution, but never seems to care for those who protect and give their lives to defend it."

What our forefathers fought for and gave their lives for was Habeas Corpus, above all else - to live without the arbitrary power of the King to imprison and punish without due process.

It is the foundation of this nation and its Constitution. Mr. Cohen is right to be concerned with that, above all, for without it, we are no better than the Taliban, stand on no moral ground, mean nothing as the light for democracy.

I am not willing to turn this nation into a dictatorship in order to "protect us". I am not willing to throw away the sacrifice of our earliest patriots to allay your fears.

Cohen is right. You are wrong.
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ioweign says:
IbnFarteen - You seem to have forgotten that it was the Clinton administration that dilebrately put the barrier between the FBI and the intelligence departments that directly led to the 9/11 attacks. It seems the intelligence departments were aware of the suspects but due to the wall of seperation between the FBI and the intelligence agencies they weren''t allowed to tell them.



Posted by jimmyc1955 at 08:09 PM : Feb 22, 2009

jimmy numbnuts - what barrier might that be.

Richard Clark informed the Bush Administration about OBL and they did not listen.

As for barriers between the FBI and CIA, those existed since the creation of the CIA and still exist to some degree today...
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vranger says:
"Baloney. Clinton prevented a repeat of the WTC bombing for 7 years, too. WITHOUT trashing the Constitution."

The ignorant morons that crawl out of the dirty spaces under their floors never cease to amaze me.

Let's see, under Clinton there was the first Trade Center bomb, then the Cole, two major Embassy bombings, and THE ENTIRE 9/11 CONSPIRACY right under his nose.

He managed to fire a few multi-million dollar cruise missiles at empty camps in Africa as a response. Strong leadership at its finest.

Now hear this ... Obama isn't half the man Clinton was. ROFL
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vranger says:
"And what proof is there that Bush stopped anything?"

Well, look who had HIS head in the sand for the last eight years! ROFLMAO

The press has reported many times during that span about cells that have been broken up while planning more mass murder. I'm not doing the work for you, I already know about them. Spend five minutes and Google them yourself before you make a complete ignorant jerk out of yourself YET AGAIN. LOL
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