Click Here to Go to the Ashbrook Center's Homepage

Subscribe to Our Email Update
 
SEARCH
 

Home



Support the Ashbrook Center




No Left Turns:
The Ashbrook
Center Blog




  Ashbrook
Podcasts


Podcast Index

What's a Podcast?

Peter Schramm's "You Americans"

Ashbrook Events

Teaching American History




Ashbrook Scholar Program



Social Studies
Teacher Seminars






Congressional Academy for American History and Civics





Presidential Academy for American History and Civics





Master of American History and Government





American Speeches, Letters, and Documents
On-Line Library






Constitutional
Convention


Ratification of
the Constitution




Ashbrook 
Columnists 

Robert Alt

Andrew E. Busch

John C. Eastman

Christopher Flannery

David Forte

Patrick J. Garrity

Steven Hayward

Joseph Knippenberg

Terrence O. Moore

Lucas Morel

Mackubin T. Owens

Peter W. Schramm

David Tucker

John Zvesper




Calendar of Events



Subscribe to Our
E-Mail Update





Book of the Week:
Delta Blues: The Life and Times of the Mississippi Masters Who Revolutionized American Music
by Ted Gioia




Book of the Week Archive



Vindicating The
Founders.com




Classics of Strategy and Diplomacy



Suggested Articles



Who Was
John Ashbrook?




Other Sites of Interest

Moral Equivalency in International Law
Editorial
January 2002

by: John C. Eastman


There is a continuing apoplexy about the land, even more pronounced abroad, about President Bush’s November 13 executive order authorizing that terrorists be tried before military commissions. Recent photos from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, depicting captured members of the Al Quaeda terrorist network and the Taliban in the shackles in which they were transported to the prison camp, have given new life to the movement. The United States, it is stridently contended, is violating international law by threatening to prosecute terrorists before military tribunals rather than in open, civilian courts, and by refusing to treat these individuals as prisoners of war entitled to all the protections of the Geneva Convention.

These are extraordinary claims, and betray a moral equivalency that has become rampant in international law. In the midst of the United States’ armed response to the unprecedented attack on civilians on September 11 by international terrorists, for example, Amnesty International issued a report demanding, as its top priority, an end to the war against terrorism, giving that an even higher urgency than the elimination of terrorism itself. Imagine: stopping the United States and its allies from defending themselves against terrorism is a higher human rights priority than eliminating the scourge of terrorism itself.

The Guantanamo Bay claims are equally revealing. In a lawsuit filed in federal district court in Los Angeles, California last week, a group of self-proclaimed international human rights activists and local civil rights attorneys challenged the detention as unconstitutional and contrary to international law. Without any pretense of representing the terrorists being detained in Guantanamo Bay, these activist lawyers petitioned the Court for a writ of habeas corpus, which, if issued, would order the United States government to produce the prisoners at a hearing in Los Angeles that would be held to determine whether the terrorists were being lawfully detained. Essentially, the petition seeks to have the federal court in Los Angeles declare that the detainees are prisoners of war, subject to the protections of the Geneva Convention.

The claims could not be more misguided. Los Angeles does not have any connection with the case other than that most of the petitioner-lawyers, including lead petitioner-lawyer Stephen Yagman, happen to live there. And the individual petitioners do not even purport to have any personal connection to the case. Moreover, it appears that the petitioners engaged in some questionable judge-shopping, attempting to get the case heard by Circuit Judge Stephen Reinhardt, a U.S. Court of Appeals judge whom they may have believed would lend a favorable ear to their claims. But quite apart from these obvious jurisdictional and standing problems, the case is a non-starter on the merits. International Law, including the relevant Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War, continues to recognize the fundamental distinction between lawful and unlawful combatants. Only the former are entitled to treatment as prisoners of war when captured, and even then are subject to prosecution by the capturing party for violations of the laws of war. Unlawful combatants, on the other hand, are entitled to no such protections.

So how does international law define the two different categories? Lawful combatants, entitled to prisoner of war status, can be either members of the regular armed forces of a party to the conflict or members of other militias or volunteer corps they meet certain conditions that were initially adopted in Article I of the 1907 Annex to the Hague Convention, namely, that they are 1) commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates; 2) have a fixed distinctive emblem recognizable at a distance; 3) carry arms openly; and 4) conduct their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.

Clearly the al Quaeda network does not meet these conditions. Osama Bin Laden may be commanding his subordinates, but he is certainly not taking responsibility to ensure that they do not violate international law and the laws of war. Its members do not have a fixed distinctive emblem. They do not carry their arms openly—unless one considers hidden box cutters and tennis-shoe bombs as "open" arms. And most fundamentally, they do not conduct their operations in accordance with the laws of war, particular the rule prohibiting deliberate attacks on civilian populations such as occurred in New York, without warning, on September 11. Individuals who join such an unlawful force, therefore, are not entitled to prisoner of war status even if individually they did not violate the laws of war. Rather, they are to be treated as unlawful combatants, essentially members of an international criminal conspiracy of terrorists, and can be prosecuted as such before a military tribunal. Indeed, the old rule in international law, which has not been fully abrogated, was that such individuals could even be subjected to summary execution. A 1977 Protocol to the Geneva Convention provides that unlawful combatants be afforded certain procedural rights that were not previously required by international law, but the United States is not a signatory to that Protocol.

The question is a bit closer with respect to the Taliban; if the Taliban can be viewed as the regular army of Afghanistan, Taliban soldiers would qualify for prisoner of war status (although they could be tried individually for violations of the laws of war). But whether the Taliban is entitled to treatment as the regular army of Afghanistan is itself a dubious claim. The atrocities against the people of Afghanistan that have reportedly been committed by the Taliban appear to have been not just individual acts but declared policy of the organization’s leadership. If the organization itself is not committed to compliance with the Geneva Convention or other norms of civilized society, then its members are not entitled to the protections afforded to "lawful combatants." As the International Committee of the Red Cross has noted in its authoritative commentary on the Geneva Convention of 1949, military organizations must conform to the norms of international law in order to be protected by the Geneva Convention. "In all their operations, they must be guided by the moral criteria which, in the absence of written provisions, must direct the conscience of man; in launching attacks, they must not cause violence and suffering disproportionate to the military result which they may reasonably hope to achieve. They may not attack civilians or disarmed persons and must, in all their operations, respect the principles of honor and loyalty as they expect their enemies to do." Reports of the Taliban’s indiscriminate killing of Afghan civilians, beheading of prisoners, and raping of women as a policy condoned by Taliban leaders in order to reward Taliban "soldiers" would clearly disqualify the organization for the status afforded to lawful combatants.

To even suggest, as the petition does, that these international terrorists are entitled to the protections of the Geneva Convention is to place their actions on a moral par with the actions currently being taken by the United States to protect itself against future atrocities. It is, in the end, an extraordinary claim, and it must be resisted with all the reason and might that a free people can bring to bear.

Dr. Eastman is a professor of constitutional law at Chapman University School of Law, the Director of the Claremont Institute Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, and an adjunct fellow at the Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs at Ashland University.

"First Principles" is a monthly column that appears in the Los Angeles Daily Journal that addresses current legal issues in light of the principles of the American founding. Copyright 2001 Daily Journal Corp. Reprinted and/or posted with permission. This file cannot be downloaded from this page. The Daily Journal’s definition of reprint and posting permission does not include the downloading or any other type of transmission of any posted articles.



 


Printer-Friendly Version

Upcoming Events

William B. Allen on George Washington
Friday, January 23

Robert J. Norrell on Booker T. Washington
Friday, April 3


Recent Publications


The Republic Stands by David Forte

Barack Obama and the Politics of Can’t by Terrence O. Moore

Johnny Gore and Sarah Lieberman: What the Republican Ticket Can Learn From 2000 by Andrew E. Busch

The Case for McCain as Adult-in-Chief by Ivan Kenneally

A Pox on My House?? by Joseph Knippenberg

What Obama Says About Iraq, What Iraq Says About Obama by Andrew E. Busch

Financial Crisis—Yes; Great Depression—No by Burton W. Folsom, Jr.

Expect Quiet Issues to Come to the Fore by Andrew E. Busch

On the Trail of the Bush-McCain Monster by Andrew E. Busch

Time for a Makeover at Mount Rushmore? by Stephen F. Knott

Will 2008 Be Another 1980? by Andrew E. Busch

McCain Campaign Faces Unexpected Risk: What to do If Iraq Goes Too Well? by Andrew E. Busch

Let’s Give the Constitution a Chance by Stephen F. Knott

Obama is Straight Out of The West Wing in More Ways Than One, But Are the Credits Rolling? by Andrew E. Busch

The Mendacity of Hope: Rewriting the Story of the Faith-Based Initiative by Joseph Knippenberg


Audio Archive


The No Left Turns Bloggers on Election 2008 (2008)

Conference on the Presidency and the Courts featuring President George W. Bush (2008)

Jeb Bush on America’s Promise (2008)

Jeremy Bailey on Thomas Jefferson (2008)

Kristofer Ray on Popular Democracy on the Southwestern Frontier (2008)

Jean Edward Smith on FDR (2007)

Jay Nordlinger on This President and the Next (2007)

Gordon Lloyd on Hoover and FDR (2007)

Harry V. Jaffa on the Lincoln-Douglas Debates (2007)

Glenn Beck on Militant Islam (2006)

Lamar Alexander on Education (2006)

Karl Rove on Conservatism (2005)

James McPherson on the Battle of Antietam (2005)

David Hackett Fischer on Liberty and Freedom (2004)

William Bennett on the Politics of War (2004)

Edwin Meese on Homeland Security (2003)

Barbara Bush on CSPAN (2003)

Victor Davis Hanson on Terrorism (2003)

Benjamin Netanyahu on Attaining Peace (2002)

Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court (1999)

Margaret Thatcher on Ronald Reagan and Freedom (1993)

Lynne V. Cheney on Academic Freedom (1992)

Dick Cheney on American Foreign Policy (1991)

Ronald Reagan on John Ashbrook (1983)

  Real Logo
Visit our archive of over 200 other Ashbrook speeches at
audio.ashbrook.org








ASHBROOK SCHOLAR PROGRAM | MASTER OF AMERICAN HISTORY AND GOVERNMENT |
PUBLICATIONS | EVENTS | PODCASTS | NO LEFT TURNS BLOG | AUDIO ARCHIVE | DONATE | ABOUT US

 

Ashbrook Scholar Program:  Home | Apply Online | Request More Information | Course of Study | Faculty | Speakers |
Why Study History or Political Science? | Internship Opportunities | Student Publications | Financial Assistance | FAQ | Contact Us

Master of American History and Government:  Home | About | Admission | Schedule of Courses | Course Registration | Tuition | Faculty | Request More Information

TeachingAmericanHistory.org:  Home | Saturday Seminars | Summer Institutes | Partner on a Teaching American History Grant | Historical Documents Library | Audio Lectures and Discussions | Constitutional Convention | Ratification of the Constitution

Presidential Academy for American History and Civics:  Home | About the Program | Documents and Texts | Faculty | Itinerary | Application

Congressional Academy for American History and Civics:  Home | About the Program | Documents and Texts | Faculty | Itinerary | Application

Podcasts:  Home | What's a Podcast? | Subscribe

No Left Turns Blog  Home | Archive | Postings by Author | Comments by Our Readers | What's in a Name? | RSS Site Feed

Publications:  Home | Editorials | On Principle | Right from the Center | Dialogues | Books | Monographs |
Ashbrook Statesmanship Theses | Res Publica | Publication Request Form | Publications by Subject

Events:  Home | John M. Ashbrook Memorial Dinner | Major Issues Lecture Series | Colloquium |
Van Meter Scholarship Luncheon | Conferences and Special Events | Calendar of Events | On-Line Speeches (RealAudio)

About Us:  Home | Board of Advisors | Staff | Who Was John M. Ashbrook | Support the Ashbrook Center |
Map and Directions

 

The Ashbrook Center is a townhall.com Member Organization.

Verizon Foundation
Support for ashbrook.org is provided by the Verizon Foundation.


John M. Ashbrook Center for Public Affairs
Ashland University
401 College Avenue | Ashland, Ohio 44805
(419) 289-5411  |   (877) 289-5411 (Toll Free)