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Jul 27 2009
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ImageWaging the War on Terrorism on American Soil
by Jacob G. Hornberger

A logical consequence of having permitted the Bush administration to treat terrorism as either an act of war or a criminal offense, came to the forefront last week when the New York Times revealed that top administration officials were considering deploying troops here in the United States to take suspected terrorists into custody as “enemy combatants.” The suspected terrorists were part of a group that came to be known as the Lackawanna Six.

Even though Bush ultimately decided against the move, instead relying on the FBI to handle the matter, the fact that it was even being considered reveals the revolutionary change in our structure of government as a result of the so-called war on terrorism.

Terrorism is a federal criminal offense. It is denominated as such in the federal criminal code. That’s why suspected terrorists have been indicted by federal grand juries and tried in federal district court. These have included Zacharias Moussaoui, Timothy McVeigh, Ramzi Yousef, Jose Padilla, and many others.

So, how did it come to be that the Bush administration even considered using military troops to arrest people here in the United States suspected of terrorism? Isn’t that the type of thing that occurs in places like Latin America, Burma, and China? Doesn’t the United States use the cops, not the military, to enforce criminal laws?

The answer lies in the revolutionary action that Bush administration officials took in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. They simply declared that from that day forward, U.S. officials would have the option of treating this particular federal criminal offense — terrorism — as either a federal crime or as an act of war, at their option.

It is impossible to overstate the difference between how a person is treated, depending on whether federal officials decide to treat him as suspected criminal or as an enemy combatant in the war on terrorism.

If he’s treated as a criminal defendant, he is accorded all the protections of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights — habeas corpus, grand jury indictment, protection from unreasonable searches and seizures and coerced confessions, right to counsel, trial by jury, due process of law, and protection from cruel and unusual punishments.

If U.S. officials, however, opt to treat him as an enemy combatant, their position has been that he is entitled to none of those protections. After all, they tell us, we are at war, where constitutional niceties don’t apply. Thus, those suspected terrorists who have the bad fortune of being sent down the enemy combatant road are subject to military custody, Guantanamo, torture, rendition, kangaroo tribunals, and indefinite detention, even in the unlikely event they are acquitted.

And it’s because of the power that George W. Bush was permitted to exercise in the environment of fear following the 9/11 attacks — the power to unilaterally declare that a federal criminal offense — terrorism — was now also an illegal act of war.

Given that declaration, how can it surprise anyone that Bush administration officials contemplated deploying U.S. troops to take suspected terrorists into custody here in the United States? Isn’t it the job of the military to wage war?

Let’s not forget, after all, that according to the war-on-terrorism paradigm, the entire world is a battlefield. Not just Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, and Pakistan. The entire world also includes the United States.

While the Bush administration decided against using the troops to take the Lackawanna Six people into custody, the discomforting fact is that he didn’t have to go that route. Under the war-on-terrorism paradigm that now controls the United States — a paradigm that permits U.S. officials to treat terrorism as an act of war — Bush could easily have gone the other way, and the troops would have loyally obeyed his orders.

All that is what has come with the power to treat what has historically been a federal criminal offense as an illegal act of war, at the option of federal officials. The federal power to send the military sweeping across our land to investigate and arrest suspected terrorists is now as much a part of American life as the military power to arrest, torture, and indefinitely detain American citizens as illegal enemy combatants in the war on terrorism.

Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation, publisher of Your Money or Your Life: Why We Must Abolish the Income Tax by Sheldon Richman. 


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Comments (3)
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1. 27-07-2009 12:43
FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE
to view a partial list of crimes committed by FBI agents over 1500 pages long see 
http://www.forums.signonsandiego.com/showthread.php?t=59139 
 
to view a partial list of FBI agents arrested for pedophilia see 
http://www.dallasnews.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=3574
Guest
2. 28-07-2009 06:26
FORGET CHANGE

 
Forget change, I would just gladly settle for Obama returning some of our rights and privileges stolen under the Bush administration. I cannot believe that a power once created by despotism is never renounced by subsequent leaders. It troubles me that all the infringements and atrocities initiated by Bush are now still cruising full speed ahead (only more surreptitiously) under Obama. War, domestic spying, torture and the US military mucking about in domestic police work seem to be undeterred. 
 
I just finished listening to a report on Democracy Now! This morning concerning the US military’s continued spying and use of agent provocateurs to infiltrate peace groups in the Northwest. Tell me Obama has plausible deniability in this. It looks like Posse Comitatus is as dead in Amerika as is Habeas Corpus 
 
Another fraud that continues to be perpetrated under Obama is the myth of the infamous “sleeper cells.” To my knowledge, there never has been a case of substantial evidence presented for such an entity, in spite of front-page headlines announcing indictments on Monday and retractions on page ten on Friday. 
 
The infamous, fraudulent prosecution of the Lackawanna Six is a good case in point. In it we see evidence of the pressure of the “criminal prosecution v enemy combatant status” dilemma perfected by prosecutors and used to indict innocent defendants.  
 
This report is excerpted from: 
http://www.historycommons.org/timeline.jsp?timeline=complete_911_timeline& complete_911_timeline_al_qaeda_by_region=complete_911_timeli ne__lackawanna_six_ 
 
The Lackawanna Six 
A group of seven men in Lackawanna, near Buffalo, New York, are influenced by religious discussions with two al-Qaeda operatives, Kamal Derwish and Juma al-Dosari. The seven US citizens leave for jihad training in Afghanistan and attend a six-week long weapons course at the Al Farooq camp. Some of them meet Osama bin Laden in Kandahar and they all hear him give a speech (June 2001). However, most of them apparently think they are in over their heads and find excuses to cut their basic training course short and return home. The six who return show little to no evidence of any al-Qaeda plotting in the following months. Jaber Elbaneh, however, becomes committed and stays overseas with al-Qaeda. The six who return will later be arrested and dubbed an al-Qaeda cell known as the “Lackawanna Six” (see September 13, 2002). [PBS  
 
Early September 2002: Bush Administration Considers Designating ‘Lackawanna Six’ Enemy Combatants 
 
In early September 2002, a group of senior Bush administration officials gathers for a secret videoconference to decide what to do with the “Lackawanna Six,” the six Yemeni-Americans living in Lackawanna, New York, who had attended an al-Qaeda training camp before 9/11. Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld argue that the men should be locked up indefinitely as “enemy combatants,” and thrown into a military brig with no right to trial or even to see a lawyer. The US has already done this with two other US citizens, Yaser Hamdi and Jose Padilla. According to a participant in the meeting, Cheney argues, “They are the enemy, and they’re right here in the country.” However, all six men left their basic training course early and there is no evidence any of them had carried out or even planned any terrorist acts (see April-August 2001). Attorney General John Ashcroft insists he can bring a tough criminal case against them for providing “material support” to al-Qaeda. Ashcroft wins the argument and the six men are formally charged several days later (see September 13, 2002). [Newsweek, 10/10/2007] The six men will all eventually strike plea bargains and plead guilty, saying they were essentially forced to because the government made clear that if they fought the charges they would be declared enemy combatants (see May 19, 2003).
Guest
deboldt@gmail.comNOSPAM! ">Bob Boldt
3. 29-07-2009 06:05
forget redundancy

 
Sorry for the redundancy here. When my response to Jacob Hornberger was unable to load on this thread, I decided to post it as a separate op-ed (see Forget Change.) I should have been more patient. One cannot speak too often or too strongly of the dangers of the police state which is the greatest threat to our freedom. 
 
Peace, 
 
Bob Boldt
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Tags:  Jacob G. Hornberger War on Terrorism American Soil Lackawanna Six
 
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