NDAA
2013: White House and Senate fight over indefinite detention
RT,
30
September, 2012
A
reprise of last year’s war in Washington over whether or not
Americans can be indefinitely detained without trial is occurring
already. The Senate has approved a measure that voids parts of the
2012 NDAA, but the White House says they plan to veto.
Just
hours before lawmakers in the US Senate overwhelming voted in favor
of an amendment that will challenge controversial provisions in the
National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, the Obama administration
cited seemingly unrelated sections of the annual Pentagon spending
bill as the reasoning behind a planned veto.
Last
year, staffers working directly under Pres. Barack Obama said they’d
recommend the commander-in-chief reject the 2012 NDAA because of
certain provisions that provided the Executive Branch the power to
indefinitely hold any US citizen in military prison for mere
suspicious of ties to terrorism. Despite his office’s assurance
that the NDAA would not be authorized as written, Pres. Obama signed
his name to the bill on December 31, 2011, all the while
acknowledging that he had reservations about the sections that
stripped away habeas corpus from US citizens. Even still, the White
House has been adamantly fighting in
federal appeals court for the right to continue having the ability,
despite a district judge having already called that part of the
act unconstitutional.
Now
as next year’s bill is being scrutinized in Congress, lawmakers in
the Senate this Thursday agreed to pass by a vote of 67 to 29 a
measure sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California) that
applied civil liberty protections to US persons who could be detained
under the current NDAA.
"An
authorization to use military force, a declaration of war or any
similar authority shall not authorize the detention without charge or
trial of a citizen or lawful permanent resident of the United States
apprehended in the United States, unless an Act of Congress expressly
authorizes such detention,” the
senator’s amendment reads.
"I
know this is a sensitive subject, but I really believe we stand on
the values of our country, and the value of our country is justice
for all," she
told her colleagues on the Senate floor.
Sen.
Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), an avid critic of the NDAA, said the passing
of Feinstein’s amendment has signaled a “victory” in
a year-long effort to keep indefinite detention without charge or
trial off the books.
“Let’s
don't play any games with any aspect and really believe that any
Supreme Court in the United States, whether appointed by a Republican
or a Democrat, is going to say that an American citizen does not have
a right to trial by jury,” he
said.
Now
with the Senate’s approval of Sen. Feinstein’s amendment, the
indefinite detention provisions from the 2012 NDAA stand a chance of
being stripped off next year’s bill. Citing completely unrelated
reasons, though, the Obama White House said on Thursday that the
president is not likely to accept the defense bill in its current
form.
According
to the White House, the impetus behind Pres. Obama’s reluctance
this time around isn’t that a veto will reauthorize his ability to
imprison his own citizens without charge. Instead, the administration
argues that separate provisions on the current draft of the NDAA
would hinder Pres. Obama’s efforts to relocate the foreign terror
suspects currently held at the United States’ military prison at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
“When
he signed past versions of this legislation, the president objected
to the restrictions carried forward by section 1031, promised to work
towards their repeal, and warned the Congress that the restrictions
on transferring detainees from Guantanamo Bay to foreign countries
would in certain circumstances interfere with constitutional
responsibilities committed to the Executive Branch,” reads
a statement published this week from the White House Office of
Management and Budget.
"Since
these restrictions have been on the books, they have limited the
Executive's ability to manage military operations in an ongoing armed
conflict, harmed the country's diplomatic relations with allies and
counterterrorism partners and provided no benefit whatsoever to our
national security.”
Under
the latest draft of the 2013 NDAA, the Pentagon will be prohibited
from using governmental funds to relocate Gitmo detainees to a new
facility in the US. The president vowed on the campaign trail leading
up to the November 6 election that he would close the infamous
military prison under a second term in office, but that promise was
one he also waged back in 2008 with so far no sign of following
though. Now a renewed interest in shutting-down Gitmo is being used
by the White House to justify the administration’s refusal to
accept a bill that challenges the draconian legislation that he
signed into law and has fought adamantly in appeals court to uphold
since.
Sen.
Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), a key figure in getting the
indefinite detention provision added to the 2012 NDAA, insisted this
week on renewed authorization of that clause while also advocating
the continued operation of Guantanamo. Defending America’s current
powers to prosecute suspected terrorists by any means necessary, Sen.
Graham said both indefinite detention and a prison at Gitmo need
remain options on the table for the sake of advancing American
dominance in overseas military efforts.
"When
you're fighting a war, the goal is not to prosecute people, the goal
is to win," Grahamsaid.
"How
do you win a war? You kill them, you capture them and you interrogate
them to find out what they're up to next."
“Simply
stated, the American people don’t want to close Guantanamo Bay,
which is an isolated, military-controlled facility, to bring these
crazy bastards that want to kill us all to the United States,” he
told fellow senators during Thursday’s vote. “Most
Americans believe that the people at Guantanamo Bay are not some kind
of burglar or bank robber. They are bent on our destruction. And I
stand with the American people that we’re under siege, we’re
under attack and we’re at war.”
Even
if the White House was to agree with Sen. Graham’s take, Pres.
Obama’s current plans call for ending the only war the United
States is officially fighting — the 11-year-long operation in
Afghanistan — by 2014. Just this week, however, it was revealed
that as many as 10,000 US troops may stay station in Afghanistan for
the undeterminable future to assist in so-called stabilization
efforts.
On
his part, Sen. Rand Paul rebuffed Sen. Graham’s comments by
remarking,
“Since I know this record of this debate will be widely read, that
I want to make formal objection to the ‘crazy bastards standard.’”
“I
don’t really think that if we’re going to have a ‘crazy
bastards’ standard that we shouldn’t have a right to trial by
jury, because if we’re going to lock up all the crazy bastards, for
goodness sakes, would you not want, if you’re a crazy bastard, to
have a right to trial by jury?” said
Paul.
Before
Sen. Feinstein’s amendment was approved this week, the most recent
revision of the 2013 NDAA including a passage reaffirming
every American’s right to habeas corpus. The complete defense bill
must successfully pass through Congress before Pres. Obama can sign
it. In all, the bill outlines spending for the Department of Defense
during the next fiscal year and is crucial for figuring out expenses
for the entire military complex. Presidents Carter, Reagan, Clinton,
and George W. Bush have each vetoed an NDAA during their
administrations.
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