31.5.09
On Friday, court-watchers received some deeply depressing news — 33 pages of unconstitutional hogwash directed at the Supreme Court by President Obama’s Justice Department (PDF), in which no stone of dubious legality was left unturned in the administration’s desperate and unprincipled attempts to mimic its predecessors by preventing 17 Uighurs at Guantánamo from being resettled in the United States.
This is a long-running saga, which I have reported at length over the last year, but it centers on two conflicting court rulings. The first, a great day for American justice, took place last October, when the US government had given up all pretense that the Uighurs were “enemy combatants.” This occurred after the government had suffering a withering court defeat in June, when a group of admirable judges compared its attempts to marshal evidence to a nonsense poem by Lewis Carroll, the author of Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland, and last October, in the District Court in Washington D.C., Judge Ricardo Urbina followed up on this historic decision by ruling that, because the Uighurs’ continued detention in Guantánamo was unconstitutional, because they were at risk of torture if returned to China, and because no other country had been found that was prepared to risk the wrath of the People’s Republic by emulating Albania, which accepted five other Uighurs in 2006, they were to be moved to the United States, where communities in Washington D.C. and Tallahassee, Florida, had prepared detailed plans for their resettlement.
The second ruling, on a day as bleak as Judge Urbina’s was inspiring, was delivered, in response to a groundless appeal by the Bush administration’s Justice Department, by two appeals court judges, A. Raymond Randolph and Karen LeCraft Henderson, who reversed Judge Urbina’s ruling three months ago. Noticeably, both Henderson and Randolph (who has the dubious distinction of having supported every position maintained by the Bush administration regarding Guantánamo that was later overturned by the Supreme Court) ignored the dissent of the third judge, Judith W. Rogers, who argued that the government’s case “misstates the law,” because “the Supreme Court has made clear that, in at least some instances, a habeas court can order an alien released with conditions into the country despite the wish of the Executive to detain him indefinitely.” Judge Rogers also maintained that, in Boumediene v. Bush (last June’s ruling that granted the Guantánamo prisoners habeas rights), the Supreme Court not only granted the prisoners “the privilege of habeas corpus to challenge the legality of their detention,” but also held that “a court’s power under the writ must include ‘authority to … issue … an order directing the prisoner’s release.’”
In presenting the government’s brief to the Supreme Court, Solicitor General Elena Kagan had the nerve to claim that the Uighurs “have already obtained relief,” explaining, “They are no longer detained as enemy combatants, they are free to leave Guantánamo Bay to any country that is willing to accept them, and in the meantime, they are housed in facilities separate from those for enemy combatants under the least restrictive conditions practicable.”
Cynics might note that living in Guantánamo, under whatever conditions, does not constitute the “relief” that the Supreme Court had in mind last June, but this did not deter the Solicitor General, who continued to channel the Bush administration by maintaining that the court of appeals “properly recognized that whether to admit an alien into the United States presents a question wholly distinct from issues concerning detention abroad — and a question that is reserved to the political Branches.” She added that the Supreme Court “has repeatedly stressed that whether to allow an alien into the United States is a sovereign prerogative that requires the consent of the political Branches.”
Moving on, the Justice Department entered a previously uncharted realm of callousness when its brief dismissed the reasons that the Uighurs cannot be returned to China — because of international treaties preventing the return of foreign nationals to countries where they face the risk of torture — by pretending that it was their own choice. The Uighurs, the government stated, “would like the federal courts to order that they be brought to the United States, because they are unwilling to return to their home country (emphasis added). But they have no entitlement to that form of relief.”
In an attempt to paint a rosy picture of the Uighurs’ current conditions of confinement, the Justice Department “sought to persuade the Court,” as SCOTUSblog put it, that the Uighurs “are not really being detained any longer.” Their “continued presence at Guantánamo Bay,” the brief stated, “is not unlawful detention, but rather the consequence of their lawful exclusion from the United States, under the constitutional exercise of authority by the political Branches, coupled with the unavailability of another country willing to accept them.” The brief added that, because their exclusion from the US “is constitutionally valid, their resulting harborage at Guantánamo Bay is constitutional as well.”
Elsewhere, the government also defended another ad-hoc policy of the Bush administration: the so-called “wind-up” period of indefinite duration, while efforts to resettle prisoners in third countries are underway. Rather disturbingly, the brief did not specify how long this “wind-up” period might last, but noted — with another burst of callousness towards men already deprived of their liberty for seven and a half years — that, although it would be “a reasonable period of time,” previous examples of what was regarded as “reasonable” lasted for “several years.”
Whether the Supreme Court will agree with the picture painted by the Justice Department is another matter, as it differs substantially from the interpretation offered by both Judges Urbina and Rogers, when they were given the opportunity to determine what the Court had intended when it granted the prisoners habeas rights in Boumediene. The Uighurs’ lawyers will now respond to the Justice Department’s brief, and the Supreme Court will decide whether to hear the case. As SCOTUSblog explained, “It is possible, though not a certainty, that the Court will make up its mind for or against review before recessing for the summer late next month,” adding, “If the Court accepts the government’s view, either by denying review or by granting review and ruling against the detainees’ release, the Uighurs’ fate will depend entirely upon efforts by the State Department to find another country willing to accept them — a prospect that appears to be diminishing, especially in foreign governments’ negative reaction to heavy political resistance in Congress to resettlement of any Guantánamo prisoner inside the US.”
This is an important point, and, sadly, it reveals nothing more than an administration that is rapidly losing its immediate post-election advantage by shifting in the wind and, as a result, giving more, and not less power to the cowardly or cynical politicians who have leapt on President Obama’s promise to close Guantánamo — as well as plans to move prisoners to the US mainland, and to release the Uighurs — with a despicable dose of NIMBYism (Not In My Back Yard) that demonstrates cynical political maneuvering at its worst.
As Eric Holder tours Europe looking for new homes for some of the prisoners that the administration’s inter-departmental review has cleared for release (who, like the Uighurs, cannot be repatriated because their home countries have notoriously poor human rights records), he is increasingly meeting resistance from countries whose governments argue, with some justification, that they cannot be expected to help out unless the US is also willing to play its part by accepting prisoners.
Without firm action by the administration, President Obama may just find that he has been outplayed, and that he will not only hand victory to the NIMBYists — who would like nothing better than to see Guantánamo stay open forever — if he is unable to close the prison by January 2010, but will also undermine his reputation abroad, and, in particular, in the Muslim world, where undoing the damage of the Bush years is critical.
My hope is that the Supreme Court will accept the case, and will rule in the Uighurs’ favor, but if that doesn’t happen, Obama needs to find the courage to resist the shrill opportunism of some of his least principled colleagues, and to order the Uighurs’ release into the United States, resurrecting the spirit of justice that prevailed last October, when Judge Urbina stated, “I think the moment has arrived for the court to shine the light of constitutionality on the reasons for detention. Because the Constitution prohibits indefinite detentions without cause, the continued detention is unlawful.”
Andy Worthington is the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon — click on the following for the US and the UK). To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my RSS feed, and also see my definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, published in March 2009.
As published on Antiwar.com and the Huffington Post. Cross-posted on Common Dreams.
For a sequence of articles dealing with the Uighurs in Guantánamo, see: The Guantánamo whistleblower, a Libyan shopkeeper, some Chinese Muslims and a desperate government (July 2007), Guantánamo’s Uyghurs: Stranded in Albania (October 2007), Former Guantánamo detainee seeks asylum in Sweden (November 2007), A transcript of Sabin Willett’s speech in Stockholm (November 2007), Support for ex-Guantánamo detainee’s Swedish asylum claim (January 2008), A Chinese Muslim’s desperate plea from Guantánamo (March 2008), Former Guantánamo prisoner denied asylum in Sweden (June 2008), Six Years Late, Court Throws Out Guantánamo Case (June 2008), Guantánamo as Alice in Wonderland (July 2008), From Guantánamo to the United States: The Story of the Wrongly Imprisoned Uighurs (October 2008), Guantánamo Uyghurs’ resettlement prospects skewered by Justice Department lies (October 2008), A Pastor’s Plea for the Guantánamo Uyghurs (October 2008), Guantánamo: Justice Delayed or Justice Denied? (October 2008), Sabin Willett’s letter to the Justice Department (November 2008), Will Europe Take The Cleared Guantánamo Prisoners? (December 2008), A New Year Message to Barack Obama: Free the Guantánamo Uighurs (January 2009), Guantanamo’s refugees (February 2009), Bad News And Good News For The Guantánamo Uighurs (February 2009), A Letter To Barack Obama From A Guantánamo Uighur (March 2009), Obama’s First 100 Days: A Start On Guantánamo, But Not Enough (May 2009), Pain At Guantánamo And Paralysis In Government (May 2009), Guantánamo: A Prison Built On Lies (May 2009), Guantánamo: A Real Uyghur Slams Newt Gingrich’s Racist Stupidity (May 2009), and the stories in the additional chapters of The Guantánamo Files: Website Extras 1, Website Extras 6 and Website Extras 9.
Investigative journalist, author, campaigner, commentator and public speaker. Recognized as an authority on Guantánamo and the “war on terror.” Co-founder, Close Guantánamo and We Stand With Shaker. Also, photo-journalist (The State of London), and singer and songwriter (The Four Fathers).
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12 Responses
the talking dog says...
It seems every two or three years, we have “the ballgame” before the U.S. Supreme Court… in ’04, it was the constellation of (1) Rasul, Padilla and Hamdi, in ’06, (2) Hamdan, in ’08, and (3) Boumediene… and now, it seems, it’s (4) Kiyemba.
The United States cannot simply pick up anyone it wants, and place them somewhere within exclusive American control and authority but still contend the hapless kidnappees are beyond a MEANINGFUL remedy (as opposed, of course, to a paper/academic remedy, which is what the now-Obama-Administration argues). [This is, quite literally, what the Earl of Clarendon was doing with the King’s enemies in the 17th century- private, offshore jails, beyond the realm of the Crown courts. Legislation was passed to stop this… then. Funny, that. Quite charming that what’s old is new again.]
I too hope against hope that the Supreme Court, if for no other reason than to protect itself against this kind of disrespect to its holdings, will grant review, and reverse the Neo-con All Stars of the D.C. Circuit.
And one fears, in a year or two, the S.Ct. will, once again, have to overrule the knuckle draggers of the D.C. Circuit, Congress, etc…
An amazingly remarkable saga… beyond frustrating for all involved… absolutely Sisyphean… and one would have hoped (and still does, I suppose) absolutely unAmerican.
...on May 31st, 2009 at 11:11 pm
Frances Madeson says...
I think I have a solution. After reading the delightful conditions under which the Uighurs are housed in Guantanamo (page 5), the administration should simply ask for American volunteers who might wish to change places with them. The nutjobs could keep up their prison census, jobless Americans could have the benefit of picnics and free air conditioning, and the Uighurs could taste the freedom they long for. No one need be the wiser.
...on May 31st, 2009 at 11:27 pm
Andy Worthington says...
Great idea, Frances, and TD, thanks for the embellishment. I’d like to point out that I missed this story on Friday, and only picked up on it after TD tore into the Justice Department on his blog:
http://thetalkingdog.com/archives2/001312.html
TD also admitted that he’d only picked up on it after seeing a piece written by Andrew McCarthy in National Review Online, and I loved the following, in which TD explained the frame of reference for a debate between himself and McCarthy:
McCarthy says: “Fie!” “Great Writ, my ass, these are
swarthy Arabnasty Chinese terrrrrorists!” TD says “we are either governed by the rule of law, or we are not.”Brilliant!
...on June 1st, 2009 at 12:03 am
Free The Guantánamo Uighurs! by Andy Worthington « Dandelion Salad says...
[…] Andy Worthington Featured Writer Dandelion Salad http://www.andyworthington.co.uk 1 June […]
...on June 1st, 2009 at 6:59 am
Nury Turkel says...
Looks like the Uyghurs will be the ones turning the lights out at Guantanamo.
...on June 1st, 2009 at 8:29 pm
Paul Siemering says...
Thanks Andy for staying on top of this case- and all the others. You are doing great and absolutely vital work.
...on June 2nd, 2009 at 2:22 am
Andy Worthington says...
Thanks, Paul. Encouragement like that really helps in the morning as I switch on the computer and wonder what new nonsense regarding Guantanamo is about to assail me.
At least Dick Cheney has shut up for a few days — or maybe I’ve just filtered him out …
...on June 2nd, 2009 at 6:36 am
Andy Worthington says...
This from Amy (over on Facebook actually):
Hi Andy,
I always read your articles — as does almost everyone here at the Uyghur Human Rights Project, I think. You are one of the very few people who reports accurately on the Gitmo Uyghurs. The amount of misinformation out there is astounding.
Keep up the good work!
Best,
Amy
...on June 4th, 2009 at 11:35 pm
Andy Worthington says...
And my reply:
Thanks, Amy. Sadly, the fearful rhetoric seems only to be increasing as the months wear on and no one is released. I didn’t think it would be easy when Obama came in, but I didn’t realize it would be this hard.
Best,
Andy
...on June 4th, 2009 at 11:35 pm
Uighur Protest In Guantánamo: Photos by Andy Worthington « Dandelion Salad says...
[…] reactionary appeals court overturned his ruling in February, and last week the Obama administration sought to prevent the Supreme Court from reviewing their case by agreeing with the appeals court […]
...on June 6th, 2009 at 11:22 am
“Model Prisoner” at Guantánamo, Tortured in the “Dark Prison,” Loses Habeas Corpus Petition « freedetainees.org says...
[…] Guantánamo And Paralysis In Government (May 2009), Guantánamo: A Prison Built On Lies (May 2009), Free The Guantánamo Uighurs! (May 2009), Guantánamo And The Courts (Part One): Exposing The Bush Administration’s Lies (July […]
...on December 16th, 2009 at 6:21 am
From Guantánamo To The South Pacific: Is This A Joke? by Andy Worthington « Dandelion Salad says...
[…] the mainland, the administration has, at the same time, been instructing the Justice Department to endorse the views of Judge Randolph in a petition intended to prevent the Supreme Court from reviewing the Uighurs’ surreal and […]
...on June 12th, 2011 at 12:41 am