Two problems in war on terror
The latter issue should be overturned on appeal. It is interpreting the constitution as a suicide pact instead of a rationale document and its ignores precedent in its own circuit as well as the Supreme Court. It is a really bad poorly thought out decision by a couple of light weight thinkers appointed by Clinton. It assumes the failed lawfare model from the Clinton administration as the only way to deal with terrorist.The Bush administration is battling on two different fronts in the war on terrorism -- and it may be losing on both. It is trying everything it can think of -- even mobilizing the New York Times -- to prod Iraq's prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, into action before it is too late. Meantime, it is searching in vain for a legal strategy to stop the federal courts from dismantling its effort to impose indefinite military detention on those it calls "enemy combatants."
On both fronts, time is running out. When President Bush decided in January to commit about 25,000 more troops to the war, his stated goal was to provide enough security in and around Baghdad that Maliki's struggling administration could become a functioning government.
That meant, according to Bush's benchmarks, a government that would move to disarm the sectarian militias and mobilize a national army, and a parliament that would amend the constitution, rehabilitate thousands of disenfranchised Sunnis, conduct promised local elections and -- most of all -- negotiate an equitable division of Iraq's oil revenue.
Now, with the military buildup complete and Congress expecting a full Iraq status report in September before it votes again on whether to continue U.S. efforts there, the inaction by Maliki and the parliament on almost all of these issues is drawing a frantic response from Bush.
Last Tuesday's Times contained a remarkable story at the top of Page 1. The headline was only mildly arresting: "U.S. Warns Iraq That Progress Is Needed Soon." The first three paragraphs described the message delivered to Maliki by Adm. William J. Fallon, the head of U.S. Central Command: You need to make "tangible political progress by next month to counter the growing tide of opposition to the war in Congress."
Then, in the fourth paragraph, came this shocker: "The admiral's appeal . . . was made in the presence of Ryan C. Crocker, the American ambassador to Iraq . . . and this reporter" -- Pentagon correspondent Michael R. Gordon.
Later in the article, Gordon explained that he was allowed to sit in on the session, adding that "it was only at the end of the meeting that American officials agreed that it could be on the record."
Remarkable. Not only does the admiral invite the New York Times to what would normally be a private meeting, thus signaling to Maliki that the pressure will be publicized around the world, but then the American officials -- no reference to agreement on Maliki's part -- tell Gordon, "Go ahead and quote everybody directly on the record."
From an administration known for its secrecy, this deviation means only one thing: So desperate is the need to push Maliki into action that even the Times becomes a lever. But still Maliki balks, writing in the Wall Street Journal that Americans should understand from our own Civil War how deep the divisions within a country can be. What Maliki forgets is that President Abraham Lincoln raised his own army to battle the Confederate forces. He didn't ask the outside great powers to do the fighting for him.
While Iraq's government dithers and American troops die, the courts are sending Bush the message that indefinite military detention of supposed "enemy combatants" is a gross violation of the Constitution.
The latest such ruling came last week from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in Richmond. A citizen of Qatar with a student visa to enroll at Bradley University, Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri, was arrested in Peoria, Ill., on charges of credit card fraud and lying to federal agents and was accused of being an al-Qaeda operative. But rather than trying him on those charges, the government transferred him to the Navy brig in Charleston, S.C., and has held him there for four years.
...
How ridiculous is this decision? Mohammad Atta would have been set free if he had been arrested before boarding the plane.
The Iraqis fate is in their own hands on the other issues. If they cannot help themselves on making tough political decisions and want to replace the US Senate as the worlds most deliberative body, they do so at their own peril.
Comments
Post a Comment