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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TideGlider who wrote (524823)1/15/2004 9:59:38 PM
From: CYBERKEN  Respond to of 769667
 
You may feel free to discontinue breathing, for all I care...



To: TideGlider who wrote (524823)1/15/2004 10:18:44 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769667
 
and they get some of their own medicine in Brazil!....AHAHAHAHAA
don't kid around in Brazil
biz.yahoo.com
CC



To: TideGlider who wrote (524823)1/15/2004 10:18:44 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769667
 
and they get some of their own medicine in Brazil!....AHAHAHAHAA
don't kid around in Brazil
biz.yahoo.com
Dangerous Veil of Secrecy
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday bought the Bush
administration's leaky logic on terrorism, tacitly
endorsing secret detentions of hundreds of suspects
after the 9/11 attacks. Moreover, by embracing the
ends-justify-means reasoning in this case, the justices
set a dangerous precedent as they ponder other key
challenges to the administration's anti-terror policies
before them this term.

Without comment, the court let stand a federal
appellate ruling that disclosing names of any of the
suspects could endanger national security. Federal
agents swept up at least 750 men immediately after the
attacks, nearly all of them Muslims. Most were
immigrants nabbed for visa problems or minor criminal
charges. All were held for months in secret — some for
nearly a year — before they were deported or
released.

The Justice Department has identified 129 individuals
against whom it brought criminal charges; none was charged in connection with
the Al Qaeda attacks. Yet the government withheld most of their names, their
location and the reasons for their arrest. Not even their wives or lawyers could
find them. Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft persuaded the appeals panel last year — and
the high court, unfortunately, has now affirmed this argument — that disclosing
information about these jailed individuals would give terrorists "a virtual road map
to our investigation."

But why then did the government trumpet the arrest of Zacarias Moussaoui,
asserting he was to have been the "20th hijacker" on Flight 93, which crashed in
Pennsylvania? And why publicize the arrest of John Walker Lindh, the "American
Taliban" picked up on an Afghan battlefield? And why talk about the arrest of
Richard Reid, the convicted Al Qaeda operative who tried to blow up an airliner
by igniting his explosive-filled shoes?

Even if the government had kept mum about those arrests, the "road map"
argument collapses. When key operatives vanish, it's naive to think that
co-conspirators wouldn't fear their arrest. The veil of secrecy the administration
has utilized to cloak much of its anti-terrorism efforts is incompatible with
democratic principles of openness and accountability. It ignores history: When no
one watches, good people too readily may act on shaky assumptions and treat
the innocent like criminals; a government acting in secret imperils citizens as well
as immigrants.

The Bush administration argues that the courts owe it deference where national
security is concerned. The president's obligation to defend the nation, his lawyers
argue, sometimes outweighs the liberties the Bill of Rights guarantees individuals.
Deference, perhaps, but not acquiescence. Other pending cases, including a
challenge to the administration's secret detentions of U.S. citizens as enemy
combatants, present the Supreme Court with the same tough balancing test. This
week's decision should not be the template.

CC