gnome said:
Does an abuse of power have to happen before we can decide, intellectually, that a power of government has too much potential for abuse? And I don't think it is so far fetched... given this power, what is to stop the US government from, TOMORROW if they wanted to, picking up anyone they liked, telling the press some completely fabricated information that causes the detainee to be painted as a terrorist in most people's minds, calling them an "illegal combatant" and denying them any access to legal assistance or the court system? Please explain how such a scenario would play out in the real world.
Gnome,
Let's take your fantasy a step further. What's to stop an evil US government bent on global conquest from invading a state based on trumped up charges of that state's possession of WMD?? I mean c'mon...right after the invasion we could plant a few untraceable WMD's and justify the whole damned thing!
Let's let reality set in some....when a government conspires to do the illegal....and that government has a free press.....that government gets caught. Now I'm not saying they
always get caught, but enough of them do so that we can see a trail of failed government coverups throughout history.
Let's see, there's Nixon's "plummers". Reagan's Iran-Contra connection. Kennedy's Cuban ex-pats. Harding's Teapot-Dome oil scam. Clinton's perjury. These days a guy can't even get away with a little thing like remaking himself into an "anti-war" candidate without being busted.
Gnome, the very fact that we are even speaking of Habib, etal speaks to the fact that the process is open to public scrutiny. If the US was a success at being secretive enough to "disappear" someone to a gulag as you suggest then why
did we even see the Abu Ghraib photos? Why
didn't they just plant some WMD's in Iraq??
So your question again?
" what is to stop the US government from, TOMORROW if they wanted to, picking up anyone they liked, telling the press some completely fabricated information that causes the detainee to be painted as a terrorist in most people's minds, calling them an "illegal combatant" and denying them any access to legal assistance or the court system?
Obviously the consequences of being caught at it are too high. The benefits too low. Government wonks are usually pretty good at the old cost/benefit analysis.
Another misunderstanding of my position. I don't trust Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Egypt, or Indonesia to respect human rights. I do, however, expect the US to. And it is a proposed power of the US government that I am objecting to.
The simple problem is this: supporters make a good case why ACTUAL illegal enemy combatants have no right to counsel. My problem is the ability to slap that label on anyone.
...and the government has had that ability all along, yet we have only a few controversial cases out of...how many total??? Sorry, but you'd have a point if a certain high percentage of Gitmo cases were just like Habib. Right now we're looking at a controversial cases in Gitmo as a fraction of one percent of the total detainees.
Your scenario has had plenty of time to play out...yet it hasn't. It's a non-starter.
-z