YesBut do the ends justify the means?
YesBut do the ends justify the means?
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.
the ICRC said:Geneva (ICRC) – On 18 January 2002, four delegates of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), including a medical delegate, started visiting the prisoners transferred from Afghanistan and detained by US forces at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station. The delegates will register the prisoners and document the conditions of their arrest, transfer and detention.
Under an agreement with the US authorities, the visits are being conducted in accordance with the ICRC's standard working procedures, which involve talking to the prisoners in private and giving them the opportunity to exchange news with their families by means of Red Cross messages.
These procedures include submitting strictly confidential written reports on the delegates' findings to the detaining authorities. In no circumstances does the ICRC comment publicly on the treatment of detainees or on conditions of detention. The ICRC delegates will discuss their findings directly with the detaining authorities, submit their recommendations to them, and encourage them to take the measures needed to solve any problems of humanitarian concern.
Funny, that.
Emphasis is mine. There is a very good reason why the ICRCdoesdid not comment publicly - but it probably will come off as lawyer-ly, so I'll spare you guys.![]()
At any rate, we can at least agree that the ICRC - by their own definition - has failed their mission, right?
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-renditions_31jan31,0,2998929.storyObama lets CIA keep controversial renditions tool
By Greg Miller | Washington Bureau January 31, 2009 WASHINGTON — The CIA's secret prisons are being shuttered. Harsh interrogation techniques are off-limits. And Guantanamo Bay will eventually go back to being a wind-swept naval base on the southeastern corner of Cuba.
But even while dismantling these discredited programs, President [URL="http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/obama/"]Barack Obama[/URL] left an equally controversial counterterrorism tool intact.
Under executive orders issued by Obama last week, the CIA still has authority to carry out what are known as renditions, or the secret abductions and transfers of prisoners to countries that cooperate with the U.S.
Current and former U.S. intelligence officials said the rendition program is poised to play an expanded role because it is the main remaining mechanism—aside from Predator missile strikes—for taking suspected terrorists off the street.
Hopefully, "countries that cooperate with the US" will mean something different in the future. Hopefully, it won't mean, "countries that don't have any of those inconvenient human rights protections that we have to deal with in the US."
So why would the US send a detainee to a third country for interrogation other than to remain unhindered by US law?
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Eleven Saudis who were released from Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and then passed through a Saudi rehabilitation program for former jihadists are now believed to have fled the country and joined terrorist groups abroad, Saudi officials said Tuesday.
The 11 former detainees include two who were already identified last month as members of a Yemeni terrorist group. Their names were on a list of 85 wanted terrorism suspects made public Tuesday by the Saudi Interior Ministry.
The announcement further underscored the difficulties faced by the Obama administration as it prepares to close the Guantánamo detention center. All told, 14 Saudis now appear to have rejoined terrorist groups after their return from Guantánamo, including the 11 living abroad and 3 who were rearrested in Saudi Arabia after their return.
The reason the rendition policy was controversial under Bush was that it was widely perceived that the Bush administration was, indeed, using foreign countries to avoid US law. I have a problem with that. Rendition itself doesn't mean that. It means using our people to capture a person in country A, and turn him over to country B. There's nothing inherently immoral about such an action. As for legalities, it gets tricky. I'm sure that it breaks the laws of at least the country in which the person was captured but, in some cases, I don't have a problem with that.
Why would it have to be in Afghanistan?Not everyone the Bush regime detained was picked up on a battlefield in Afghanistan though.
Why would it have to be in Afghanistan?
There is a real misunderstanding amongst critics of GITMO that just because we released some detainees that they were innocent bystanders that were in the wrong place at the wrong time. In the case of Saudi Arabia they told the United States that they had a "rehabilitation program" in place that would put their minds right. That appears to have been a bit optimistic just as the ones we released to sent to Yemen.
In the case of Saudi Arabia they told the United States that they had a "rehabilitation program" in place that would put their minds right.
Why would it have to be in Afghanistan?
If they were captured elsewhere then the justification "we are keeping them as POWs until the end of hostilities with the Taliban" makes no sense, because they weren't captured as Taliban or Taliban-aligned combatants.
Well, ok. Sure. Everyone would like it if we always played by the rules, and some people will find fault with anything.The very act of rendition itself was roundly condemned.
...(Rendition is clearly illegal under international law and domestic law).