That's seems very partisan. What substantive differences are required? In the main, the objection to holding enemy combatants without charge and without access to civilian courts strikes me as a partisan complaint against a well-established practice.
The well established practices are the ones the Red Cross finds acceptable.
Under Bush, they didn't approve of what we were doing. I'm confident that under Obama, they will.
Of course, I can't say specifically exactly how to treat all the various cases that are all being thrown together, as you noted earlier. It's hard for me to discuss the various legalities of prisoner abuse, versus. POW status, versus detainees captured inside of Afghanistan or outside, or whatever. Yet, that's kind of the point. For seven years, the Bush administration tried to do that sort of legal dance. Whatever anyone said, there was some reason why that wasn't really applicable in these circumstances right now. During the first year of the conflict, we were ok with that, but as one year rolled into another, and as we learned about waterboards, and secret prisons, and Abu Ghraib, and indefinite detention, and leaked memos detailing strange practices, we started saying that something was fishy here.
If it were the ACLU that were complaining about prisoner treatment and/or legal status, I wouldn't take more than passing notice. It's not. It's the Red Cross. They're the good guys, and I want our country to be on their side.
And maybe we already are. Maybe, after the Supreme Court told them that they had to change their ways, they did, and now everything's fine. Excellent. I just don't think it should have had to go that far.