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Barack Obama’s Guantanamo Debacle

Regular readers of NoQuarter know (or should know) that I believe strongly in the power and competence of the American judicial system to bring justice in every sense of the word to terrorists. There was a time in this country when true political conservatives actually believed in the principles of law and morality laid out in the U.S. Constitution. But no more. During the last year we have been treated to a parade of Republicans crying and shrieking over the alleged surrender to terrorists because we dare to follow established procedures of law and practice.

Now we confront the spectacle of Barack “Surrender Monkey” Obama caving into political pressure to not hold the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed aka KSM in New York City. KSM, in case you forgot, was the mastermind of the 911 attacks. A genuine leader and constitutional scholar could have defended this position to the American People. But not Barack. Nope. He’s incompetent and inept.

Ed Morrissey over at HotAir offers a nice overview of some of the ramifications of the surrender at Pennsylvania Avenue.

By overruling Holder after letting him twist in the wind that way, they will have effectively emasculated him to the DoJ staff and humiliated him on the national stage. Obama may not want to get rid of Holder, but it’s hard to see how he can remain at Justice after such a public setback. Either he leaves with some modicum of dignity, or he stays while tacitly admitting that he’s screwed up the biggest issue he was asked to handle.

This may have some impact on the health-care debate as well. There have been suggestions that Obama would sacrifice his progressives and hoodwink the House into passing the Senate bill without seriously attempting to get the fixes House Democrats want made through reconciliation. After this retreat, Obama won’t dare cross the progressives on ObamaCare now — but they may be angry enough to demand a do-over to restore the public option. Just when Obama needed the Left to sit quietly so he could pass something on health care, he will enrage them on a key cause.

Of course, Obama wouldn’t have gotten into this fix if he had actually studied the logistics of the decision before making it. This is Obama’s failure, and he will live with the consequences, even if he finally comes to the correct conclusion.

What is so infuriating about this entire episode is the failure of many on both sides of the issue to actually consult folks who have had first hand experience (and success) in dealing with terrorist suspects. Ali Soufan in particular merits your attention.

Soufan is an FBI agent, a muslim and an Arabic speaker. He testified before Congress last year. Here is his statement in its entirety. It deserves your attention:

Statement Of FBI Agent Ali Soufan At Torture Hearings
Statement of Ali Soufan:

Mr. Chairman, Committee members, thank you for inviting me to appear before you today. I know that each one of you cares deeply about our nation’s security. It was always a comfort to me during the most dangerous of situations that I faced, from going undercover as an al Qaeda operative, to unraveling terrorist cells, to tracking down the killers of the 17 U.S. sailors murdered in the USS Cole bombing, that those of us on the frontline had your support and the backing of the American people.

So I thank you.

The issue that I am here to discuss today – interrogation methods used to question terrorists – is not, and should not be, a partisan matter. We all share a commitment to using the best interrogation method possible that serves our national security interests and fits squarely within the framework of our nation’s principles.

From my experience – and I speak as someone who has personally interrogated many terrorists and elicited important actionable intelligence– I strongly believe that it is a mistake to use what has become known as the “enhanced interrogation techniques,” a position shared by many professional operatives, including the CIA officers who were present at the initial phases of the Abu Zubaydah interrogation.

These techniques, from an operational perspective, are ineffective, slow and unreliable, and as a result harmful to our efforts to defeat al Qaeda. (This is aside from the important additional considerations that they are un-American and harmful to our reputation and cause.)

My interest in speaking about this issue is not to advocate the prosecution of anyone. People were given misinformation, half-truths, and false claims of successes; and reluctant intelligence officers were given instructions and assurances from higher authorities. Examining a past we cannot change is only worthwhile when it helps guide us towards claiming a better future that is yet within our reach.
And my focus is on the future. I wish to do my part to ensure that we never again use these harmful, slow, ineffective, and unreliable techniques instead of the tried, tested, and successful ones – the ones that are also in sync with our values and moral character. Only by doing this will we defeat the terrorists as effectively and quickly as possible.

Most of my professional career has been spent investigating, studying, and interrogating terrorists. I have had the privilege of working alongside, and learning from, some of the most dedicated and talented men and women our nation has– individuals from the FBI, and other law enforcement, military, and intelligence agencies.

In my capacity as a FBI Agent, I investigated and supervised highly sensitive and complex international terrorism cases, including the East Africa bombings, the USS Cole bombing, and the events surrounding the attacks of 9/11. I also coordinated both domestic and international counter-terrorism operations on the Joint Terrorist Task Force, FBI New York Office.

I personally interrogated many terrorists we have in our custody and elsewhere, and gained confessions, identified terror operatives, their funding, details of potential plots, and information on how al Qaeda operates, along with other actionable intelligence. Because of these successes, I was the government’s main witness in both of the trials we have had so far in Guantanamo Bay – the trial of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, a driver and bodyguard for Osama Bin Laden, and Ali Hamza Al Bahlul, Bin Laden’s propagandist. In addition I am currently helping the prosecution prepare for upcoming trials of other detainees held in Guantanamo Bay.

There are many examples of successful interrogations of terrorists that have taken place before and after 9/11. Many of them are classified, but one that is already public and mirrors the other cases, is the interrogation of al Qaeda terrorist Nasser Ahmad Nasser al-Bahri, known as Abu Jandal. In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, together with my partner Special Agent Robert McFadden, a first-class intelligence operative from the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS), (which, from my experience, is one of the classiest agencies I encountered in the intelligence community), I interrogated Abu Jandal.

Through our interrogation, which was done completely by the book (including advising him of his rights), we obtained a treasure trove of highly significant actionable intelligence. For example, Abu Jandal gave us extensive information on Osama Bin Laden’s terror network, structure, leadership, membership, security details, facilities, family, communication methods, travels, training, ammunitions, and weaponry, including a breakdown of what machine guns, rifles, rocket launchers, and anti-tank missiles they used. He also provided explicit details of the 9/11plot operatives, and identified many terrorists who we later successfully apprehended.

The information was important for the preparation of the war in Afghanistan in 2001. It also provided an important background to the 9/11 Commission report; it provided a foundation for the trials so far held in Guantanamo Bay; and it also has been invaluable in helping to capture and identify top al Qaeda operatives and thus disrupt plots.

The approach used in these successful interrogations can be called the Informed Interrogation Approach. Until the introduction of the “enhanced” technique, it was the sole approach used by our military, intelligence, and law enforcement community.

It is an approach rooted in experiences and lessons learned during World War II and from our Counter-insurgency experience in Vietnam – experiences and lessons that generated the Army Field Manual.

This was then refined over the decades to include how to interrogate terrorism suspects specifically, as experience was gained from interrogations following the first World Trade Center bombing, the East Africa Embassy bombings, and the USS Cole bombing. To sum up, it is an approach derived from the cumulative experiences, wisdom, and successes of the most effective operational people our country has produced.

Before I joined the Bureau, for example, traditional investigative strategies along with intelligence derived from human sources successfully thwarted the 1993 New York City Landmark Bomb Plot (TERRSTOP), a plot by the Blind Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman, to attack the UN Headquarters, the FBI’s New York office, and tunnels and bridges across New York City, — as a follow-up to the 1993 World Trade Center bombings. That remains to this day the largest thwarted attack on our homeland. I had the privilege of working with, and learning from, those who conducted this successful operation.

The Informed Interrogation Approach is based on leveraging our knowledge of the detainee’s culture and mindset, together with using information we already know about him.
The interrogator knows that there are three primary points of influence on the detainee:

First, there is the fear that the detainee feels as a result of his capture and isolation from his support base. People crave human contact, and this is especially true in some cultures more than others. The interrogator turns this knowledge into an advantage by becoming the one person the detainee can talk to and who listens to what he has to say, and uses this to encourage the detainee to open up.
In addition, acting in a non-threatening way isn’t how the detainee is trained to expect a U.S. interrogator to act. This adds to the detainee’s confusion and makes him more likely to cooperate.

Second, and connected, there is the need the detainee feels to sustain a position of respect and value to interrogator. As the interrogator is the one person speaking to and listening to the detainee, a relationship is built – and the detainee doesn’t want to jeopardize it. The interrogator capitalizes on this and compels the detainee to give up more information.

And third, there is the impression the detainee has of the evidence against him. The interrogator has to do his or her homework and become an expert in every detail known to the intelligence community about the detainee. The interrogator then uses that knowledge to impress upon the detainee that everything about him is known and that any lie will be easily caught.

For example, in my first interrogation of the terrorist Abu Zubaydah, who had strong links to al Qaeda’s leaders and who knew the details of the 9/11 plot before it happened, I asked him his name. He replied with his alias. I then asked him, “how about if I call you Hani?” That was the name his mother nicknamed him as a child. He looked at me in shock, said “ok,” and we started talking.

The Army Field Manual is not about being nice or soft. It is a knowledge-based approach. It is about outwitting the detainee by using a combination of interpersonal, cognitive, and emotional strategies to get the information needed. If done correctly it’s an approach that works quickly and effectively because it outwits the detainee using a method that he is not trained, or able, to resist.
This Informed Interrogation Approach is in sharp contrast with the harsh interrogation approach introduced by outside contractors and forced upon CIA officials to use.

The harsh technique method doesn’t use the knowledge we have of the detainee’s history, mindset, vulnerabilities, or culture, and instead tries to subjugate the detainee into submission through humiliation and cruelty. The approach applies a force continuum, each time using harsher and harsher techniques until the detainee submits.

The idea behind the technique is to force the detainee to see the interrogator as the master who controls his pain. It is an exercise in trying to gain compliance rather than eliciting cooperation. A theoretical application of this technique is a situation where the detainee is stripped naked and told: “Tell us what you know.”

If the detainee doesn’t immediately respond by giving information, for example he asks: “what do you want to know?” the interviewer will reply: “you know,” and walk out of the interrogation room. Then the next step on the force continuum is introduced, for example sleep deprivation, and the process will continue until the detainee’s will is broken and he automatically gives up all information he is presumed to know.

There are many problems with this technique.

A major problem is that it is ineffective. Al Qaeda terrorists are trained to resist torture. As shocking as these techniques are to us, the al Qaeda training prepares them for much worse – the torture they would expect to receive if caught by dictatorships for example.

This is why, as we see from the recently released Department of Justice memos on interrogation, the contractors had to keep getting authorization to use harsher and harsher methods, until they reached waterboarding and then there was nothing they could do but use that technique again and again. Abu Zubaydah had to be waterboarded 83 times and Khalid Shaikh Mohammed 183 times. In a democracy there is a glass ceiling of harsh techniques the interrogator cannot breach, and a detainee can eventually call the interrogator’s bluff.

In addition the harsh techniques only serves to reinforce what the detainee has been prepared to expect if captured. This gives him a greater sense of control and predictability about his experience, and strengthens his will to resist.

A second major problem with this technique is that evidence gained from it is unreliable. There is no way to know whether the detainee is being truthful, or just speaking to either mitigate his discomfort or to deliberately provide false information. As the interrogator isn’t an expert on the detainee or the subject matter, nor has he spent time going over the details of the case, the interrogator cannot easily know if the detainee is telling the truth. This unfortunately has happened and we have had problems ranging from agents chasing false leads to the disastrous case of Ibn Sheikh al-Libby who gave false information on Iraq, al Qaeda, and WMD.

A third major problem with this technique is that it is slow. It takes place over a long period of time, for example preventing the detainee from sleeping for 180 hours as the memos detail, or waterboarding 183 times in the case of KSM. When we have an alleged “ticking timebomb” scenario and need to get information quickly, we can’t afford to wait that long.

A fourth problem with this technique is that ignores the end game. In our country we have due process, which requires evidence to be collected in a certain way. The CIA, because of the sensitivity of its operations, by necessity, operates secretly. These two factors mean that by putting the CIA in charge of interrogations, either secrecy is sacrificed for justice and the CIA’s operations are hampered, or justice is not served. Neither is a desirable outcome.

Another disastrous consequence of the use of the harsh techniques was that it reintroduced the “Chinese Wall” between the CIA and FBI – similar to the wall that prevented us from working together to stop 9/11. In addition, the FBI and the CIA officers on the ground during the Abu Zubaydah interrogation were working together closely and effectively, until the contractors’ interferences. Because we in the FBI would not be a part of the harsh techniques, the agents who knew the most about the terrorists could have no part in the investigation. An FBI colleague of mine, for example, who had tracked KSM and knew more about him than anyone in the government, was not allowed to speak to him.

Furthermore, the CIA specializes in collecting, analyzing, and interpreting intelligence. The FBI, on the other hand, has a trained investigative branch. Until that point, we were complimenting each other’s expertise, until the imposition of the “enhanced methods.” As a result people ended doing what they were not trained to do.

It is also important to realize that those behind this technique are outside contractors with no expertise in intelligence operations, investigations, terrorism, or al Qaeda. Nor did the contractors have any experience in the art of interview and interrogation. One of the contractors told me this at the time, and this lack of experience has also now been recently reported on by sources familiar with their backgrounds.

The case of the terrorist Abu Zubaydah is a good example of where the success of the Informed Interrogation Approach can be contrasted with the failure of the harsh technique approach. I have to restrict my remarks to what has been unclassified. (I will note that there is documented evidence supporting everything I will tell you today.)

Immediately after Abu Zubaydah was captured, a fellow FBI agent and I were flown to meet him at an undisclosed location. We were both very familiar with Abu Zubaydah and have successfully interrogated al-Qaeda terrorists. We started interrogating him, supported by CIA officials who were stationed at the location, and within the first hour of the interrogation, using the Informed Interrogation Approach, we gained important actionable intelligence.

The information was so important that, as I later learned from open sources, it went to CIA Director George Tennet who was so impressed that he initially ordered us to be congratulated. That was apparently quickly withdrawn as soon as Mr. Tennet was told that it was FBI agents, who were responsible. He then immediately ordered a CIA CTC interrogation team to leave DC and head to the location to take over from us.

During his capture Abu Zubaydah had been injured. After seeing the extent of his injuries, the CIA medical team supporting us decided they were not equipped to treat him and we had to take him to a hospital or he would die. At the hospital, we continued our questioning as much as possible, while taking into account his medical condition and the need to know all information he might have on existing threats.

We were once again very successful and elicited information regarding the role of KSM as the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, and lots of other information that remains classified. (It is important to remember that before this we had no idea of KSM’s role in 9/11 or his importance in the al Qaeda leadership structure.) All this happened before the CTC team arrived.

A few days after we started questioning Abu Zubaydah, the CTC interrogation team finally arrived from DC with a contractor who was instructing them on how they should conduct the interrogations, and we were removed. Immediately, on the instructions of the contractor, harsh techniques were introduced, starting with nudity. (The harsher techniques mentioned in the memos were not introduced or even discussed at this point.)

The new techniques did not produce results as Abu Zubaydah shut down and stopped talking. At that time nudity and low-level sleep deprivation (between 24 and 48 hours) was being used. After a few days of getting no information, and after repeated inquiries from DC asking why all of sudden no information was being transmitted (when before there had been a steady stream), we again were given control of the interrogation.

We then returned to using the Informed Interrogation Approach. Within a few hours, Abu Zubaydah again started talking and gave us important actionable intelligence.

This included the details of Jose Padilla, the so-called “dirty bomber.” To remind you of how important this information was viewed at the time, the then-Attorney General, John Ashcroft, held a press conference from Moscow to discuss the news. Other important actionable intelligence was also gained that remains classified.

After a few days, the contractor attempted to once again try his untested theory and he started to re-implementing the harsh techniques. He moved this time further along the force continuum, introducing loud noise and then temperature manipulation.

Throughout this time, my fellow FBI agent and I, along with a top CIA interrogator who was working with us, protested, but we were overruled. I should also note that another colleague, an operational psychologist for the CIA, had left the location because he objected to what was being done.
Again, however, the technique wasn’t working and Abu Zubaydah wasn’t revealing any information, so we were once again brought back in to interrogate him. We found it harder to reengage him this time, because of how the techniques had affected him, but eventually, we succeeded, and he re-engaged again.

Once again the contractor insisted on stepping up the notches of his experiment, and this time he requested the authorization to place Abu Zubaydah in a confinement box, as the next stage in the force continuum. While everything I saw to this point were nowhere near the severity later listed in the memos, the evolution of the contractor’s theory, along with what I had seen till then, struck me as “borderline torture.”

As the Department of Justice IG report released last year states, I protested to my superiors in the FBI and refused to be a part of what was happening. The Director of the FBI, Robert Mueller, a man I deeply respect, agreed passing the message that “we don’t do that,” and I was pulled out.
As you can see from this timeline, many of the claims made in the memos about the success of the enhanced techniques are inaccurate. For example, it is untrue to claim Abu Zubaydah wasn’t cooperating before August 1, 2002. The truth is that we got actionable intelligence from him in the first hour of interrogating him.

In addition, simply by putting together dates cited in the memos with claims made, falsehoods are obvious. For example, it has been claimed that waterboarding got Abu Zubaydah to give up information leading to the capture of Jose Padilla. But that doesn’t add up: Waterboarding wasn’t approved until 1August 2002 (verbally it was authorized around mid July 2002), and Padilla was arrested in May 2002.

The same goes for KSM’s involvement in 9/11: That was discovered in April 2002, while waterboarding was not introduced until almost three months later. It speaks volumes that the quoted instances of harsh interrogation methods being a success are false.

Nor can it be said that the harsh techniques were effective, which is why we had to be called back in repeatedly. As we know from the memos, the techniques that were apparently introduced after I left did not appear to work either, which is why the memos granted authorization for harsher techniques. That continued for several months right till waterboarding was introduced, which had to be used 83 times – an indication that Abu Zubaydah had called the interrogator’s bluff knowing the glass ceiling that existed.

Authoritative CIA, FBI, and military sources have also questioned the claims made by the advocates of the techniques. For example, in one of the recently released Justice Department memos, the author, Stephen Bradbury, acknowledged a (still classified) internal CIA Inspector General report that had found it “difficult to determine conclusively whether interrogations have provided information critical to interdicting specific imminent attacks.”

In summary, the Informed Interrogation Approach outlined in the Army Field Manual is the most effective, reliable, and speedy approach we have for interrogating terrorists. It is legal and has worked time and again.

It was a mistake to abandon it in favor of harsh interrogation methods that are harmful, shameful, slower, unreliable, ineffective, and play directly into the enemy’s handbook. It was a mistake to abandon an approach that was working and naively replace it with an untested method. It was a mistake to abandon an approach that is based on the cumulative wisdom and successful tradition of our military, intelligence, and law enforcement community, in favor of techniques advocated by contractors with no relevant experience.

The mistake was so costly precisely because the situation was, and remains, too risky to allow someone to experiment with amateurish, Hollywood style interrogation methods- that in reality- taints sources, risks outcomes, ignores the end game, and diminishes our moral high ground in a battle that is impossible to win without first capturing the hearts and minds around the world. It was one of the worst and most harmful decisions made in our efforts against al Qaeda.

For the last seven years, it was not easy objecting to these methods when they had powerful backers. I stood up then for the same reason I’m willing to take on critics now, because I took an oath swearing to protect this great nation. I could not stand by quietly while our country’s safety was endangered and our moral standing damaged.

I know you are motivated by the same considerations, and I hope you help ensure that these grave mistakes are never made again.

Thank you.

If only Barack Obama had hall the brains of Ali Soufan. Our country would be safer and our system of justice intact. Sadly, we are being led by a bumbling idiot.

  • Yttik

    Larry, I totally agree, torture, inhanced interrogations, a separate justice system. are all abominations, not to mention ineffective.

    However, we did all that. We detained people without charges, we coerced info out of them, we classified them as enemy combatents, we disregarded the rules of evidence and the civil rights that would apply in civilian court. For us to flip at this point is potentially scary. You can’t put these guys through civilian court without changing the rules, making exceptions. If you torture a US citizen suspect or deny him speedy trial rights, case dismissed. If you force him to incriminate himself, case dismissed. If you torture him, case dismissed.

    What’s wrong with this picture is that we’re pretending we can adjust the legal system, adjust civil rights, and practically guarantee a guilty verdict, too. Frankily, I find that chilling. That’s not justice, that’s a sham. Once you change the legal system you set a precedent. How long until we start prosecuting poliitcal prisoners this way? US citizens?

    Justice, the American concept that I believe in, says you’re innocent until proven guilty and it says that if someone coerced, forced, manipulated you into a confession, and detained you without charges, then you are free to walk. Of course we can’t let this particular group of people walk, so we’ve backed ourselves into a corner. But for goodness sakes, don’t pretend we can go back and deliver justice after the fact and make everything all better. We can’t and it’s almost more honorable to not even pretend. We’re lying to ourselves and we’re certainly not fooling the rest of the world, either.

  • devildog666

    Seems to me both sides are trying to work around that pesky “Constitution” and we’re letting them. Time tocall them out on it.

  • getfitnow

    I agree with you Yttik.

    Let’s not forget the interview in which our “Constitutional scholar/lawyer” of a president indicated these guys would be found guilty.

  • Bronwyn

    Larry, do you object to the change of venue from NYC and/or to the apparent switch that Obama will be making from putting KSM through a civilian trial to instead trying him through a military tribunal?  

  • arabella trefoil

    Thank you for this very important post, Larry.

  • creeper

    You nailed it Yttik.  The time to have placed these people in our judicial system is long past.  For that, of course, we may thank George Bush.  I’d feel sorry for Barry on this one but his waffling is almost as bad as Bush’s intransigence. 

    I see no choice but to proceed with military trials.  Try them in military court.  Televise those trials.  At this point that’s the best we can do.

  • Ferd Berfle

    “I see no choice but to proceed with military trials.  Try them in military court.  Televise those trials.  At this point that’s the best we can do.”

    I agree. This administration has so bumbled and stumbled on this that there are no good options left. The incomptence of this administration is truly stupefying in its breadth and depth.

  • creeper

    Barry’s Rasmussen ratings are hitting the skids again as Americans sober up from that overdose of kool-aid last week.  -17 today, down five from the -12 he managed to claw his way up to after the HC deform summit.  How many more times can he drag them out of the cellar with meaningless hopey-changey speeches?

    What’s funny is that the “new”, tougher Barry isn’t doing any better than the old one.  I think Americans would love to believe in him.  They just don’t know what HE believes in.

  • oldone

    The federal courts, criminal or civil, have NEVER allowed cameras during a trial.  Tomy knowledge, neither have military tribunals. Ocasionally, war crimes tribunals have done so, in a limited
    The theory is that, if fully opened to the press, the trial becomes a circus, al la OJ
    Should these guys be tried by the military, please consider keeping to this prohibition.  The “world” does not have to see and hear the detainees’ political arguments for jihad.

  • AC

    The OJ trial became a circus because the judge was a clown.  Sunlight is the best disinfectant–our Constitution demands openness.
    It’s the 21st century.

  • arabella trefoil

    creeper – This comment of yours is brilliant:

    “What’s funny is that the ‘new’, tougher Barry isn’t doing any better than the old one.  I think Americans would love to believe in him.  They just don’t know what HE believes in.”

    You hit the nail on the head. Obama has no core, stands for nothing, and isn’t even proud to be an American. Who is he? What does he stand for? There’s nothing to grab onto.

    Just goes to show the price you pay for abandoning your moral compass. The fact that Obama no character (in the old fashoined sense of the word) is finally starting to catch up with him.

  • carol haka

    Not one foot on US soil, not one dime spent here, not one minute of inconvenience should be spent on these Murderers.

    We have nothing to prove to the rest of the world.

    Try them at Gitmo. Kill them at Gitmo.  Send them deep into the bowels of the ocean. 

    Enough.  People are sick of it.  Every minute spent on them is a minute wasted.

    Again, we have nothing to prove to the rest of the world.  That ship sailed years ago.

    >:o

  • carol haka

    Here’s an idea:

    All Gitmo Detainee sympathizers can have a free ticket down for the trial.

    Load em up, ship em out, just make sure they have a country ready to take them afterwards.

    Enough.

    >:o

  • AC

    Couldn’t agree more, Yttik.

  • AC

    Larry,
    “If only Barack Obama had hall the brains of Ali Soufani. I’m sure you meant “half the brains..”
    if not , my bad.

  • Docelder

    There is a lot of truth there. I remember the judge always having his laptop open logo showing as well. I don’t know that anybody really dug into what was really going on there with that. OJ’s trial happened before we had the Internet commonly everywhere. I don’t know why the guy would need his laptop to be on to the bench during the trial to start with… unless it was some advertising agreement. But yes, how would we know that the judge wouldn’t sieze the chance for stardom from this trial. Chances are they would do that. Chances are the jury would also do that. Then we have the chance of retribution against the jury, even moreso if they are out there publicizing themselves. I wish we could believe in the system to work too. I wish a lot of things actually, doesn’t make them so. We really need to get our ducks in a row here. Really.

  • getfitnow

    arabella, did he ever have a moral compass? How many buses in his fleet now? :)

  • AC

    Larry,
    “If only Barack Obama had hall the brains of Ali Soufani.”
    I’m sure you meant “half the brains..” 
    if not , my bad.

    By the way,  your on the mark by closing/concluding with “Sadly, we are being led by a bumbling idiot.”

  • Docelder

    That is easy though. He wants deeply to be loved. His seeming overconfidence is the result of him convincing himself that he is worthy of that. In short, he has issues. And, now we do as well. I don’t think people reacted to him so much as to the “notion” that there was some bipartisanship going on. Now, that the people see that isn’t the case, they will go right back where hey started… which is a state of disillusionment.

  • Tricia

    Thanks for providing the statement of Ali Soufani.  Very interesting and persuasive. 

  • AC

    Yttik, you posed this rhetorical question: “Once you change the legal system you set a precedent. How long until we start prosecuting poliitcal [sic] prisoners this way? US citizens?”

    Briefly reading an article in The Atlantic your question may be answered.

    THE ENEMY BELLIGERENT INTERROGATION, DETENTION, AND PROSECUTION ACT OF 2010

    “A close reading of the bill suggests it would allow the U.S. military to detain U.S. citizens without trial indefinitely in the U.S. based on suspected activity.”
    Furthermore, “(There is no distinction between U.S. persons–visa holders or citizens–and non-U.S. persons.)”

    What new word would Katmoon use to describe this.

  • Jackie

    There is much to be criticized over Obama’s handling of the KSM trial. 

    However, you can see much of the problem in the very comments of this post.  How many of your readers, Larry, delighted in calling Obama a sellout to “Islamofascism” and a traitor to his country for attempting to try KSM in NYC?  How many ads were run by GOP operatives saying the same thing?  How many talking points have filtered in the public’s consciousness that Obama is “soft on terrorists” because he trusts the American justice system?  How much did that political pressure lead to crippling Obama’s ability to try KSM in NYC?  Was he supposed to overrule Bloomberg and Schumer in their own backyard, once public pressure turned them against a plan they originally supported?  You can say that Obama has left Holder twisting in the wind, but I think it is Obama who has also been left twisting by ostensible “allies” in Congress, NYC, and in the media.  All the supportive posts in the world by Glenn Greenwald on the matter won’t change that.

    And naturally, after all that, all you can do is turn your guns on your personal nemesis: Barack Obama.  Even though it is the opposition that has made trying KSM in NYC impossible.

  • Ferd Berfle

    AC:

    I don’t know about Katmoon, but I’m sick to death of our Constitution and collecetive rights being shredded because a few bozos in DC can’t come up with a real plan to deal with terrorists and instead punish the American public. Her’s an idea: Concentrate on the terrorists and leave the Constitution alone.

  • Ferd Berfle

    AC: 
     
    I don’t know about Katmoon, but I’m sick to death of our Constitution and collecetive rights being shredded because a few bozos in DC can’t come up with a real plan to deal with terrorists and instead punish the American public. Here’s an idea: Concentrate on the terrorists and leave the Constitution alone.

  • HARP

    Politics is a blood sport. Just ask Hillary.If Obummer is twisting in the wind, it is his own fault.

  • Ferd Berfle

    AC: 
     
    I don’t know about Katmoon, but I’m sick to death of our Constitution and collective rights being shredded because a few bozos in DC can’t come up with a real plan to deal with terrorists and instead punish the American public. Her’s an idea: Concentrate on the terrorists and leave the Constitution alone.

  • Ferd Berfle

    AC:  
      
    I don’t know about Katmoon, but I’m sick to death of our Constitution and collective rights being shredded because a few bozos in DC can’t come up with a real plan to deal with terrorists and instead punish the American public. 
     
    Politician A: Gee, I understand than Hassan bin Sober is on the loose again making terrorist threats. Politician B: I’ve got it, let’s put a tap on every phone in the country.
     
    Here’s another idea: Concentrate on the terrorists and leave the Constitution alone.

  • Ferd Berfle

    AC:  
      
    I don’t know about Katmoon, but I’m sick to death of our Constitution and collective rights being shredded because a few bozos in DC can’t come up with a real plan to deal with terrorists and instead punish the American public. 
     
    Politician A: Gee, I understand than Hassan bin Sober is on the loose again making terrorist threats. Politician B: I’ve got it, let’s put a tap on every phone in the country.
     
    Oh, yeah. In lieu of going after the culprits, they’re spying on citizens and perhaps thinking about rounding up everyone but the terrorists in order to “keep us safe”. Sounds stupid, huh? Well that appears to be end sequence in this idiot process.
     
    Here’s a much simpler idea: Concentrate on the terrorists and leave US citizens and the Constitution alone.

  • Docelder

    Let’s not forget the most important thing… he did “win”. The media leaving Obama to twist in the wind… how exactly? What part of broadcasting health reform live from the White House has abandoned him? The media has done everything possible that could be hoped and dreamed for the guy. The media has been shameless in enabling the guy. There is just nothing there but the facade.

  • Jackie

    Politics is a blood sport. Just ask Hillary.If Obummer is twisting in the wind, it is his own fault.”

    You’re right.  But politics is also the process by which people encourage elected representatives to carry out their wishes.  They do this by offering support for politicians in exchange for those politicians carrying out the policies they support.  If any people at NQ are upset that Obama is caving on a KSM trial in NYC, perhaps they should reflect on their scorched-earth campaign of unrelenting hostility towards and criticism of Obama over the last 2 yrs.  Some support for the man and his policy might have gotten you what you wanted. 

    The KSM trial represents a failure of Obama, certainly, but it also represents a failure of public will.  If it was there, so would be the KSM trial.

  • oowawa

    At a certain poiint the awe-inspiring brilliance of his divine radiance will morph into the harsh glare of reality, and the mass-hypnosis induced “Yes We Can!” will change into “Huh? Can What?”

  • Hokma

    Obama and Holder never bothered to check with anyone in NYC about holding the KSM trial there. Instead they made their big announcement and forced NYC and NYS into trying to figure out how to do it.

    There are two reasons why it should never have been considered. The first is the overall cost. Whether you believe the $100 million or the $200 million cost it is money neither the Federal government or the NYS government has. NYS is going through a severe budget crisis like most states and the last thing needed was the cost of security for this trial.

    The second reason is more important and that is how it would affect lower Manhattan life and business. It took a long time for lower Manhattan to return to normal and to redevelop business – particularly small businesses that service the area. The security required for this would literally shut down many businesses – putting these people out of work.

    Had Obama ever held a real job he might have considered the implications of this trial before announcing it in the first place.

  • MyThomsonGitmo

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    Hi Larry,

    I respectfully submit to you that this post is a very good example of one point not following another. You assert that the US judicial system is sufficient to hold terrorists accountable and you present Soufani’s testimony to support your point. However, Soufani’s testimony, if anything, rebuts your case because if Soufani had read any of his subjects their rights, then they would not have said “boo” to him at all.

    If you want to treat terrorists as common criminals, then you should go whole hog. But it’s logically inconsistent to argue that our system can try terrorists <em>after</em> the FBI and the CIA have bled them for everything they know.

    So much for the presumption of innocence

  • MyThomsonGitmo

    Hi Larry,

    I respectfully submit to you that this post is a very good example of one point not following another. You assert that the US judicial system is sufficient to hold terrorists accountable and you present Soufani’s testimony to support your point. However, Soufani’s testimony, if anything, rebuts your case because if Soufani had read any of his subjects their rights, then they would not have said “boo” to him at all.

    If you want to treat terrorists as common criminals, then you should go whole hog. But it’s logically inconsistent to argue that our system can try terrorists after the FBI and the CIA have bled them for everything they know.

    So much for the presumption of innocence.

  • truthtelling007

    don’t know about LJ, but I would say moving the trial is one thing, switching the format because of the Lindsey Graham dramatics…is another.

  • Binky

    Thank you Carol.  You said just what I was thinking!

  • Jillie

    one point that has not been mentioned is that ksm had already pleaded guilty to his crimes.  why in the world would you want to try a man in the criminal courts when he was ready to be punished by the military?

    there are two distinct issues about these cases…(1)methods and personnel for interrogation and (2)system for trials and punishment.

    could terrorist suspects be interrogated by the fbi and then be tried by military tribunals?  are these two events mutually exclusive? 

    i’ve asked this question before, and it’s never been answered. 

  • carol haka

    That is 100′s of mi$$ions a year. And God only knows how long this BS would go on.

    We don’t need to drag every terrorist into the American Court system.  It is overloaded as it is.

    I remember how “free” I felt when McVeigh was executed.  We have not had to hear much of anything about him since then.

    I don’t want an hourly reminder for years of the NY terrorist act.  I have been traumatized for years without having even been near the site on 9/11.

    Enough.

    :*

  • stodghie

    we had a way of trying terrorists(geman) after ww2. that worked well.

    and i don’t see why we can’t do that. i think the grandiosity of this administration and their putting americans at risk for a show trial in new york is about the sillest thing i have ever heard.

    now i may be shot down on this and that’s ok. but did they not have military tribunals in the psst and that wasn’t a misuse of the Constitution then. i am working my way through this so please understand.

  • carol haka

    million$

    Sorry, getting old.

  • carol haka

    “million$”

  • Diana L. C.

    I believe that interrogations go on in the criminal system even after a person has been read his/her rights.  

    What saddens me most is the mockery that is being made of the American justice system by this squabbling.  We come off sounding like a third world country, with all factions trying to get even with each other.  

    I want this done now and I want it done in such a manner that it shows a sane society with solid procedures in place.  Of course, that’s impossible at this point, with everyone under the sun giving his/her “expert” opinion.

    The Bush/Cheney crowd hold much of the blame for this for not having done this right in the first place.  Obama is now continuing the trend of building distrust in our legal system.

    I am just frustrated and angry that this issue still exists.  My heart and my loyalty to the country whose principles I used to believe in says Larry is completely right on this issue—especially when he suggested that Obama’s fault lies in making a decision without first having the logistics ironed out.  (Same way he’s treated health care and other important issues.)

  • buzzlatte

    Did they ever iron out the difference between enemy combatant and religious zealot?  Isn’t that one issue that got this all mucked up in the first place?  

    I need more coffee.

  • TeakWoodKite

    @Jackie How many talking points have filtered in the public’s consciousness that Obama is “soft on terrorists” because he trusts the American justice system?

    It isn’t that he trusts or not , it is that does not defend it. I remind you, Jackie that is what he took an Oath to do.  I believe that if BO and his AG, went down this road, then
    1) they should have done their homework.
    2) BO should have carried out and defended the position of his AG,regardless.
    3) hBO should have confered with any stakeholders in NYC

    The list can go on and on, yet the bottomline is BO is not a constitutional anything. Common sense is not a tool he is familar with. (exhibit A “boneheaded”)

    He forever gonna be labeled “Backtrack Barry”.  The buck may stop on his desk but he has no idea what to do do with it other than spend it.

    From the published accounts, it is his own minions at 1600 that are telling him to reverse course. At this point, it is not a legal opinion put the political ones that are driving this.
    Sadly, BO handed over the “weak on terrorism” meme with a full tank of gas to his opposition.
    No, it will repotedly drag on for “months” in legal limbo”. Me thinks until after November.

  • AnnieCarmel

    Eh, I think the people living in the neighborhoods of NYC had something to do with that.  And who could blame them?  They’ve been through enough.  Now they’re supposed to take another hit on their economy and security?  No.  He should never have supported the idea of closing Gitmo.  That’s where they belong.  No “enhanced” interrogation, military tribunals and carrying out sentences right there.  Never should they be allowed on our soil again.

  • AnnieCarmel

    I wondered the same.  Any terrorist given a lawyer first wouldn’t say a thing. 

  • Breeze
  • Breeze
  • Onofre’s arm

    While Mr. Soufani provides compelling reasons for his style of interrogation, I’m not sure such methods would be effective without at least the possibility of much harsher treatment hanging over the suspect’s head. His techniques might NOT be effective in isolation. 

    If we publicly acknowledge and advertise the fact that terrorist suspects will be afforded all of the rights given American citizens in our judicial system, doesn’t it seem reasonable to assume that the terrorist “handbook” will simply be amended to adapt to this? “‘Terrorist Handbook’: Chapter 6, paragraph 13: When captured alive by any American agents, remain silent. Be certain that you are read the Miranda rights, for if you are not, you may get off on a technicality. DEMAND A LAWYER!! Have no fear of being tortured, the infidels don’t have the testicles to torture or expose you to uncomfortable situations anymore, due to our effective propaganda campaign that made them look really, really mean when they did so in the past. Ha Ha Ha! However If you willingly DO give information without being horribly treated, your Muslim brothers will find this out and the repercussions to your family will be severe, as you and your entire family will be considered traitors to Islam. As is always the case, continued efforts to kill yourself and any infidels while in captivity is mandated by Allah, glory be his name! P.S. Save your future martyred brothers some virgins, word from on high suggests they’re running low on them up there.”

    In our efforts to bring worldwide terrorism under control, doesn’t it seem ridiculous to scour the globe for terrorists that we will, by policy, have to bring stateside for processing through our judicial system? How about a happy middle ground. Bring them ALL to a place offshore, like……….oh………someplace like…….Gitmo! Interrogate them using Mr. Soufani’s techniques, but don’t let the rest of the world know we’re being so nice. After a period of time, once the information they may provide becomes no longer temporally useful, let the military try them without any fanfare, then quietly carry out whatever sentence they receive. 

    While I understand the usefulness of advertising the capture and prosecution of assholes like KSM, it is counterproductive to give him celebrity status by continually parading him and his pals across the headlines. Dispose of him as quickly as such garbage deserves, and move on to the next piece of garbage. 

  • candymarl

    stodghie,

    Not just the Germans but the Japanese as well (see the Rape of Nanking in China).  

    I know it seems like a 100 years ago but it wasn’t  There was no internet, no cell phones, no string of satellites ringing the planet.

    There were public trials that were recorded for prosperity.  Many people listened via radio to the trials.  The world did not end and civilization survived.

    Sometimes I think, and have said so, that the terrorists have already won. Why?  When we pervert or subvert our system of laws because of a thirst for revenge or fear we become no better than those we are fighting. That is a very slippery slope.

    Do I blame Obama for this? NO. It started before he entered the Oval Office. What does worry me about Obama is that he has neither the experience, core values, or real political savvy to navigate a situation such as this. 

    I do hope that someone, anyone, can help us out this tangled mess so that the 9/11 victims and other victims of this group’s crimes receive justice.

    Gladstone: “Justice delayed is justice denied.”

  • carol haka

    I heard somewhere that the terrorists are happy to give up the info.  Their religion requires them to hold back until they can’t take it and then let “er rip”.

    WELL ??????????????/////

  • AC

    “… I’m sick to death of our Constitution and collective rights being shredded because a few bozos in DC can’t come up with a real plan to deal with terrorists and instead punish the American public.”

    Sound good to me Ferd, I agree (harmonic resonance).

    Maybe it’s because of the clowns and bozos have no ringmaster.

    Good day to all.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Ali Soufans testimony is a good teaching moment about the effectiveness of different interrogation methods. It says nothing about whether terrorists should be tried in military or civilian courts.

    Members of the miitary are subjected to the UCMJ every day. Does anyone say that they are not getting justice because they are in a Military Court, and not Civilian? Well, some might, but it does not change the face that there is equal justice in a miliary setting.

    Terrorists can be be tried in a military setting and get the same justice as a civilian setting. There just would not be the public media circus. And the military base already has the security needed to try infamous terrorists. There would be no added security details as there would need to be for a civilian setting.

    Harsh interrigation methods are not efficient at gaining information of value. But, isolation, and justice in a military setting, rather than a civilian setting do get better intellegence.

    Read what Ali says about his succeesful interregations. The suspects were “read their rights”, but there were no lawyers present when the suspect was being interrogated.

    In fact, Ali says to elicit good information, he must be the only person the supect talks to.

    Ali Soufan says this about the “three primary points of influence on the detainee”:

    First, People crave human contact, and this is especially true in some cultures more than others. The interrogator turns this knowledge into an advantage by becoming the one person the detainee can talk to…

    Second, “there is the need the detainee feels to sustain a position of respect and value to interrogator. As the interrogator is the one person speaking to and listening to the detainee, a relationship is built – and the detainee doesn’t want to jeopardize it.

    If a lawyer or advocate were involved, the lawyer would be the only person the suspect could build a relationship with. The interrogator could not question the suspect out of the presence of a lawyer. And if he did, that evidence could easily be inadmissable, even if the suspect said he understood his rights.

    What understanding does a suspect from a foriegn nation or terrorist organization have of US Justice? Ali Soufan says the “Al Qaeda terrorists are trained to resist torture. As shocking as these techniques are to us, the al Qaeda training prepares them for much worse”.

    The suspect terrorist’s understandng is that he will be treated badly. Simply telling the suspect his “rights” is not going to instantaneously wipe out all of the suspects training and knowlege that he will not have rights.

    If the suspect is questioned without an advocate present, all of his training is going to tell him that he will be subjected to harsh conditions.  Merely telling the suspect he has “rights” is not going to alter that impression.

    Based on Ali Soufans testimony, isolated interrogations, and military tribunals are the best way to give terrorists their due process and day in court.

    And, the US Constitution gives the power of determining how terrorists “Enemy Combatants” will be treated to Congress, not POTUS. If idiot were a Constitutional Scholar he would know that.

  • Mark

    Obama believes in Black Libertion Theology, he studied it under Wright for 20 years.  It may be all he believes in and all he knows.

  • Mark

    What brains Obama did not fry with drugs have been indoctrinated with Wright’s BS.

  • Jackie

    I think it is important to remind people that NO DECISION HAS YET BEEN MADE.  It is still a possibility that KSM will be tried under the regular system.  In fact, it is probably likely that the story floated Thursday about switching to military commissions was a trial balloon to gauge reaction.  When the reaction from the progressive side (yes, those evil progressives!) was so strongly negative, the administration took note, and announced the delay.  So stay tuned, and for those of you who want to keep this a regular criminal trial, keep yourselves heard.  They appear to be listening.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Obama must first lick his hinger an hold it to the wind.

    That is because Obama calls himself a “blank canvas”, an empty suit, a lump of clay that can be molded into anything. Anyone nearhim can infuence and change him from one moment to the next.

    It all stems from him still needing approval from the father that abandoned him. He can keep changoing his mind with a lack of conviction until the father figure he seeks nods a knowing approval.

    Obama prays night after night, O Wright, O Wright, were art thou in my need tonight?

  • elaine

    Larry, I respect your position. You’ve stayed true to this cause for a very long time, however yttik’s argument re: setting precedent in civilian court is poignant & I hope you respond to it. MyThomsonGitmo also makes an excelent point re: Miranda & the subsequent lawyering-up & the possible chilling effect that may have on interogation, again I’m most interested in your response. This was a very thoughtful thread. Thanks everybody.

  • foxyladi14

    candy is dandy but liquer is quicker

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “”I see no choice but to proceed with military trials.  Try them in military court.  Televise those trials.  At this point that’s the best we can do.”

    Sounds like you wanted the tribunals in the fist place. There are other choices and its only a matter of where to hold the civil type trials. What I am saying is that if your such a federalist or constitutionalist then you know that holding military tribunals for terrorists is nothing more than smoke and mirrors.  We would hold them to hide our faults that “might” be challenged in a criminal court and maybe we deserve it. Besides military tribunals are not any fairer than civil trials. So lets not hide the dirty laundry that everyone knows about anyway.

    I believe that we can handle these trials in a civil court room as we have done in the past. The smoke over disrupting lower Manhattan is also pure Texas bullshit and should not have any standing in any criminal trials no matter who it is. Yes there is a matter of funding for the additional security but I am sure that the USG would cough up the cash needed.

    We can still have our cake and east it too. Civil trial in NYC held on Rikers Island…

    So cut the bull and remember if you cave to these stupid asinine excuses and to the stupid asinine Republicans grandstanding with the flip flopping of the spineless Democrats then your no better than the people who are and have been pissing on our Constitution.

    So stop pissing on it…..

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “”I see no choice but to proceed with military trials.  Try them in military court.  Televise those trials.  At this point that’s the best we can do.”  
     
    Sounds like you wanted the tribunals in the first place. There are other choices and its only a matter of where to hold the civil type trials. What I am saying is that if your such a federalist or constitutionalist then you know that holding military tribunals for terrorists is nothing more than smoke and mirrors.  We would hold them to hide our faults that “might” be challenged in a criminal court and maybe we deserve it. Besides military tribunals are not any fairer than civil trials. So lets not hide the dirty laundry that everyone knows about anyway.  
     
    I believe that we can handle these trials in a civil court room as we have done in the past. The smoke over disrupting lower Manhattan is also pure Texas bullshit and should not have any standing in any criminal trials no matter who it is. Yes there is a matter of funding for the additional security but I am sure that the USG would cough up the cash needed.  
     
    We can still have our cake and east it too. Civil trial in NYC held on Rikers Island…  
     
    So cut the bull and remember if you cave to these stupid asinine excuses and to the stupid asinine Republicans grandstanding with the flip flopping of the spineless Democrats then your no better than the people who are and have been pissing on our Constitution.  
     
    So stop pissing on it…..

  • SeriouslySickOfObama

    You know what I fear more than these killers, a new generation of Bill Ayers hating on government!! Look at the news and read the blogs.  I fear an American Revolution that will set it sights on killing innocent Americans for where they work.  I fear the mindset of people like Tim McVay (ck spelling on last name)-the bomber who rebelled against the government and others that are tired of what Obama is doing to America and will go to great lengths to demonstrate their anger.  I no longer look for the color of the day if its orange or red, I am looking at my neighbors that are unemployed, my church members who have lost their jobs and can’t find new one’s and say they are worth more dead than alive to their families, I fear the terror that is coming within our own soil by American’s who have lost faith in government and man kind.  We have seen a few already, I believe there will be many more to come.  Prayer is my only solution, bc we know that government is not going to do a damn thing for We the People.  I am sad to see my country come to this state of mind where we have no voice, no jobs and no peace!  I have a man friend that stands in the food line at the food bank bc no one will hire him at his age of 55 even though he has the experience to work most every job, but they hire the 19 yr. old that calls in and works for less, but my man friend would work for $5 an hour if someone would give him the job.  We no longer stand UNITED! I no longer worry over where trials will be held or who should live or die,  I worry for my country and the way of life we no longer have.  It’s about America now and no solution in sight!  Just saying my thought of the day, I know off topic, sorry, Larry!! Your piece is brilliant as always!!

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Our Constitution speaks of fairness and equality…. where does it demand openness?

  • carol haka

    I’ve been unemployed now for a year and a week.

    We can make it through.

    America is the greatest!  We can take a hit but we will survive.

    Help your relatives and neighbors the best you can.

    :-D

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Mark

    If this is the best argument you can make, then there is a town missing a village idiot! Or maybe your his brother…. 

  • Babs

    A few months ago I watched a documentary on line called, I think, “The Falling Man”. It was the story of the “jumpers” on 9/11, those poor souls who had to make the horrific choice between burning to death or jumping to their deaths. And it was also the story of attempting to identify the man whose image will remain with me forever, the upside-down man with his leg cocked, that my local paper printed on a full half page on 9/12.

    When I heard Holder announce that the KSM trial would be in NYC, and boast that it would be the “trial of the century”, I was stunned. How many people whose family members and loved ones died on 9/11 want to revisit those horrific days of immeasurable pain? How many people want to walk backwards to that time, when many of them are still living with the memories and at the same time trying to get on with their lives? What if any of us were among those who have to spend the rest of their lives wondering how their loved ones died, was it quick, did they suffer, were they among the 300 or so “jumpers”?

    Not only is this administration tone deaf to the shouts of the American people on the economy and health care, they are also unbelievably callous and insensitive to the people of lower Manhattan and the tens of thousands of people who may not have died on 9/11 but remain victims nevertheless. But for Holder, the notion of the “trial of the century” trumps any sensitivity to the nightmare these people have already lived through. For me, it doesn’t.

  • AC

    The sixth Amendment doofus.

  • AC

    The sixth Amendment.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Man you have a serous problem.  Your continued diatribe about  Black Liberation Theology junk speaks volumes about your thought process.

  • carol haka

    If you didn’t see the NY Police Officers that rescued 6 survivors in Haiti on Huckabee tonight, make sure you see the re-run tomorrow night.

    These people and their peers deserve “Parades of the Century” in their honor.

    Obama, Holder and the rest of the creeps can kiss me ex-Democrat ass!

    >:o

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Let’s be careful with using the word “openness” with the 6th Amendment or in the legal sense. There are certain “stringent test” that must be upheld as to say that closure of a hearing would violate a defendnats rights or predjudice his case. If your referiing to TV Cameras in the court room that cat ain’t going to purr, especially if their is a pool camera or boat load of reporters allowed in. 

    As far as I am concerned there should be NO cameras for live feed allowed in these trials.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    They should re-ban you from beantown… You and your kind are the ones who are pissing on our Constitution. You are clueless my friend…..

  • Mark

    Captain Jackass,

    I did not follow Black Liberation Theology like you and your hero did.  It’s all a bunch of crap, just like what is inside your head, Obama’s, and Wright’s.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

     Guess who said this Beanbrain? Like I said keep pissing on the Constitution for your own political agenda and then note the less free part….

    “The Founders well understood the difficult tradeoff between safety and freedom. “Safety from external danger,” Hamilton declared, “is the most powerful director of national conduct. Even the ardent love of liberty will, after a time, give way to its dictates. The violent destruction of life and property incident to war; the continual effort and alarm attendant on a state of continual danger, will compel nations the most attached to liberty, to resort for repose and security to institutions which have a tendency to destroy their civil and political rights. To be more safe, they, at length, become willing to run the risk of being less free.” The Federalist No. 8, p. 33.

  • Mark

    Captain Jackass,

    If there is a town missing a village idiot and you can find it then you will finally have a job.

  • graywolf

    Very interesting. Until reading this I thought the FBI approach of cookies
    and milk and treating terrorists like embezzlers was wrong and stupid.
    Now, I’m a lot less certain that “24″ works.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Hey Mark… I am no Obama supporter but you can take your race baiting crap to another website. People like you degrade sites like this. If this is the best arguement you can make I guess your are the village idiot! ASSHOLE!

  • John of johnwsmart.com

    It amazes me how inept the Obama WH is. And I never thought Obama would be good at this job – even so he’s WORSE than i expected, which, I promise you, is an achievement. 
    I am an agnostic on the venue for these trials. But I know WHERE they should not be held – lower Manhattan. THe moment this story broke last year I thought “that’s a really bad decision”. It was amazing to me that Holder/Obama didn’t think the choice through. It reminded me of the Gitmo decision in Jan 09. No thought. No plan. Boneheaded. Inept. 

    Obama simply does not understand a good 50% of his job. The political component baffles him. It’s so weird. It SEEMS like he should be good at that part. Any average political watcher in the country would have told Obama Manhattan was a bad choice.
    The part of the job he nominally “gets” – being an executive – he is just bad at. He makes the wrong decisions left and right. He shows his cards when he should bluff. He plays defense when offense is needed. He sets deadline after deadline then forgets he set a deadline. I’ve seen green soccer mom coaches with better managerial skills. In fact, ALL the soccer mom/dad coaches I’ve seen have better managerial skills. 
    My big question – and this latest flip flop makes it clearer – is not how many Dems will follow him going forward – but why any Dems would? 

  • Onofre’s arm

    I would prefer to see a trial of the New Black Panther thugs that threatened voters in Philly. Oooops, Holder let ‘em go. Holder let other people go didn’t he? You know, many of the Clinton Pardons. The one thing all of these dropped or excused cases have in common, is that the perps represented various minority voter blocks that were being assuaged by Holder for their political support.

    Of course, political theater was actually what the KSM trials were going to be all about. Holder (and Obama) relished the chance to whip up Progressive support by publicizing the perceived atrocities conducted by the previous administration in their attempt to keep this country safe, with a sensational circus trial. Justice and security are the last motives driving these trials, it was never more than tossing red meat to the progressive left to shore up their faltering support.    

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Your fuuny Mark! Don’t quite your day job at flipping burgers at McDonalds we already have tough enough unemployment problem….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Hey Mark… I am no Obama supporter but you can take your race baiting crap to another website. People like you degrade sites like this. Moron!

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “Obama and Holder never bothered to check with anyone in NYC about holding the KSM trial there. Instead they made their big announcement and forced NYC and NYS into trying to figure out how to do it.”

    Since when does any Attorney General have to ask any State or City if its ok to hold a trial there? Your also full of bean about the USG leaving it up to NYS/NYC to fingue it out. Gosh people like you are the constitutional danger….Not the terrorists….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Obama and Holder never bothered to check with anyone in NYC about holding the KSM trial there. Instead they made their big announcement and forced NYC and NYS into trying to figure out how to do it.” 
     
    Since when does any Attorney General have to ask any State or City if its ok to hold a trial there? Your also full of beans about the USG leaving it up to NYS/NYC to fingue it out. Gosh people like you are the constitutional danger….Not the terrorists….

    Talk about real jobs? Try getting a real life first!

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Your fuuny Mark! Don’t quite your day job flipping burgers at McDonalds we already have tough enough unemployment problem….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Obama and Holder never bothered to check with anyone in NYC about holding the KSM trial there. Instead they made their big announcement and forced NYC and NYS into trying to figure out how to do it.”  
      
    Since when does any Attorney General have to ask any State or City if its ok to hold a trial there? Your also full of beans about the USG leaving it up to NYS/NYC to fingue it out. Gosh people like you are the constitutional danger….Not the terrorists….

    Try living up to your name your sure not showing wisdom or any skills with this post.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “I remember how “free” I felt when McVeigh was executed.  We have not had to hear much of anything about him since then. ”

    Sad note here by someone who takes a pseudonym that means wisdom and life skills…. Hell they should be the pirate!

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    “24″ would be a bad comic book, if marvel didn’t reject it’s premis and characters.

    I know a lot of people watch that show, my brother in law and his wife never miss it. But it is horribly outlandish, and just not entertaining.

    I like NCIS. It’s not realistic either, but the characters are very entertaining. That show has some great writing.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    The middle class and the working stiffs have been getting screwed.

    The middle class and working folks are the backbone of the US. 200 years ago these were the folks on the small farms, toiling away and feeding the towns along with their families.

    These are the people Jefferson refered to as Yeoman Farmers. Madison and Jefferson wrote the Constitution to protect the rights the the yeoman, the commoners that work hard and contribute positively to the community.

    Jefferson and Madison loathed the merchants, bankers, and big money. The new country was not to be ruled by a new aristocracy.

    There would be a new revolution if those men were alive to see what Goldman Sachs, GM, Fannie Mae and a corrupted government have done to our country.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    There you go. Liquer up the terrorists and they will talk till the sun comes up.

  • Babs

    He “gets” flying around in Air Force 1, and all the parties he can have on the taxpayer’s dime, though, doesn’t he? The most classless, arrogant President in my lifetime, and I don’t buy that “most intelligent” meme they have been promoting, either. I am too old to be wishing my life away, but if I could I would click my little red shoes together. and we’d be in 2012. The great “uniter” is destroying this country, setting rich against poor, black against white, young against old, and I pray I live long enough to see him gone in a landslide victory for his opponent.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Captain Sparrow Brain, You call me a beanbrain, and then quote Hamilton to show agreement with me. You are an odd fellow.

    “The Founders well understood the difficult tradeoff between safety and freedom”

    Yes they did. And they certainly did not trust one man, the President, with making the decision to make that trade during times of war. Which is exactly why that power went to Congress andnot POTUS. US Constitution, Article I, Section 8, Clause 10, and 11.

    Hamilton as you may not be aware, was a Federalist. And in the Federalist # 8 Hamilton was arguing for two concepts.

    1) that the federal government should control the military, because armies among the states would cause less populated states to be overtaken by more populous states. If the states had separate standing armies ”our liberties would be a prey to the means of defending ourselves against the ambition and jealousy of each other.”

    2) That there was a need for a standing Navy to protect trade, and a small federally controlled Army. “Europe is at a great distance from us. Her colonies in our vicinity will be likely to continue too much disproportioned in strength to be able to give us any dangerous annoyance”.

    And, the world is much smaller now is it not? The US can be threatened from anywhere on the globe. And indeed it was on 9/11.

    Another concept that Hamilton argues for is that the military must be subserviant to civlian authority. That concept is drilled into every boot in their first days of Military service.

    I get a warm fuzzy everytime I see Generals testify before Congress and give total respect and deferance to members of Congress. Ramrod straight and squared away men and women yes sirring and yes maming the Congress.

    My favorite C-Span moment was watching a couple of two star generals being questioned by a congressman from Hawaii. The congressman was a scruffy fellow with an unkempt beard, hawaiian shirt and looked like he just woke up on the beach.

    That congressman recieved absolute respect from both generals, as they were trained that the congressman out ranked their two stars.

    It made me proud of my Country and my Military. Thank you Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison and Jay.

  • Guest

    Well, he did renew the Patriot Act, didn’t he?

  • Khan Krum

    Hey Larry!

    Great work as usual.  Check out the last part of this article about John Brennan and Analysis Corporation:

    http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/what_i_learned_from_obamas_pop.html

    This seems to explain a lot about why Brennan got the job and why he’s keeping it.  You’re the man to take this and run with it!

  • Doc99

    Riveting testimony, Mr. Johnson.

    One observation: Since the Pentagon was also attacked, Obama would have had ample justification to try KSM via Military Tribunal. I’m actually thankful for the strong response of my fellow New Yorkers over what would have been a total farce, resulting in the lockdown of lower Manhattan, causing almost as much damage to NY as happened on 9-11. IMHO, Holder should be removed asap.

  • Judy L. in NC

    Thank you for reprinting al Soufani’s testimony. 

    KSM should be terminated with extreme prejudice.  I will be so relieved to have this settled and I don’t have to look at that same old creepy photo of KSM and his hairy back.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    I am glad your proud of our Country. That is a good thing. Too bad that does not mean you understand it though. That is the bad part and the real crime here…apathy. So you think my posting proved you right?

    So…. Braindead in Beantown….. this is what I want you to do. Try reading Justice Scalia in his desenting opinion in the Hamdi v. Rumsfield case. Then try reading the rest of the decisions by the Supreme’s. Then try and fire off those nurons of yours and understand that the term “enemy combatant” was never meant to describe terrorists who are nothing more than common murderous criminals and should be tries as such.

    In basics we have a civilian criminal court system that is the primary venue for these matters… By the way. most JAG Officers agree…..Braindead in Beantown…

    So while your proud of your Country your pride is pissing on our Constitution.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    I am glad your proud of our Country. That is a good thing. Too bad that does not mean you understand it though. That is the bad part and the real crime here…apathy , which you actually prove a very strong case for. So you think my posting proved you right?  
     
    So…. Braindead in Beantown….. this is what I want you to do. Try reading Justice Scalia in his desenting opinion in the Hamdi v. Rumsfield case. Then try reading the rest of the decisions by the Supreme’s. Then try and fire off those nurons of yours and understand that the term “enemy combatant” was never meant to describe terrorists who are nothing more than common murderous criminals and should be tried as such.  
     
    In basics we have a civilian criminal court system that is the primary venue for these matters… By the way. most JAG Officers agree that these folk should be tried in our civilan courts…..Braindead….in Beantown…  
     
    So while your proud of your Country your pride and apathy is pissing on our Constitution.

    Now I now your more intelligent than this. But then again you can prove me wrong.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Our Founding Fathers would also not be too impressed with the apathy of many of our citizens either….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Clueless….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    God Bless our Constitution! People like this even get to vote…. scary….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Carol…
      
    “By far the most dangerous foe we have to fight is apathy – indifference from whatever cause, not from a lack of knowledge, but from carelessness, from absorption in other pursuits, from a contempt bred of self satisfaction.”

    There is no reason why these murdering criminals can’t be tried in our civilian court system… None!

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “By far the most dangerous foe we have to fight is apathy – indifference from whatever cause, not from a lack of knowledge, but from carelessness, from absorption in other pursuits, from a contempt bred of self satisfaction.”

    Must be a member of the apathy choir….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “I heard somewhere that the terrorists are happy to give up the info.  Their religion requires them to hold back until they can’t take it and then let “er rip”. 
     
    WELL ??????????????/////”

    Well I don’t know if I am more frightened by people who make statements like this or those terrorists we are hunting….or maybe both…. just scary….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    MyThomsonGitmo… here one for you kid….

    “The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and undernourishment.” ……Robert M. Hutchins

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “one point that has not been mentioned is that ksm had already pleaded guilty to his crimes.  why in the world would you want to try a man in the criminal courts when he was ready to be punished by the military?

    Eh ok I’ll bite…. First KSM has not plead anything to anyone yet. Second, the FBI is a “federal law enforcement agency” and responsible for national security and if directed to can investigate and also assist with crimes on military instiliations.  Most of the times if its a terrorism case they operate through the Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTF)

  • carol haka

    There is no reason they should be other than “show trials”. The military tribunals were set up to handle this problem – That’s good enough for more than 80% of polled Americans.

    It’s not apathy to come to a conclusion and move on.

    >:o

  • Hokma

    Hey Captain Zero – your comment is almost unintelligable as unintelligent. There is just no way of responding to something as friggin’ stupid as this. try Daily Koz – you might get a trophy for something as ignorant as this comment Captain Zero.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    PS: Guess you never heard either of, Article 31, UCMJ, and/or United States v. Tempia…. But its does not matter because if the arguement is going to be made on rights violated it can be made in both the civilian courts as well as a military tribunal.

  • carol haka

    …. nor it’s agitators.

    We aren’t apathetic, we are resolved.

    Go away little birdy.

    >:o

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero – Hutchins was a left wing extremist who did not believe in fundamental American ideals.

  • Hokma

    Hey Captain Zero – KSM DID already plead guilty and Holder admitted that he did not know if KSM still held that position. Apparently Holder is as stupid as you are. Second the FBI handles domestic law inforcement – not war crimes.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    “we had a way of trying terrorists(geman) after ww2. that worked well. ”

    Gosh! Its either apathy or stupidity and worse some folk are plainly “stuck on stupid”……

  • Hokma

    Hey Captain Zero -

    “In basics we have a civilian criminal court system that is the primary venue for these matters”

    No we don’t. Not in times of war and never in American history has a President taken foreign enemy combatents off the battlefield and tried them in a civilian court before this war – not even FDR.

    If you had a shred of a brain you would have learned that by now rather than ape what is on Daily Koz.

    We are all that much dumber for having read and responded to your uninformed and mindless comments.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero – you have not understanding of any of the founding fathers because every single one of them is rolling around in their respective graves by the size and scale of government control in this country. None would agree with any of  your comments. You might try Lenin in the future for support.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero to the rescue.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero probably never read the Constitution and certainly from his comments never read anything by the founders or the philosophers behind the founding of this country. His idea of founding fathers was Marx and Lenin.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero – get an education about the history of military tribunals and war criminals we capture. Then spout your uneducated B.S.

  • Hokma

    Hey Captain Zero – you are clearly the contented look of ignorance. First read (books etc.) on how FDR handled WWII war criminals and then go away. How many years did you sepnd in the third grade before you could learn to read?

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Agitators? What part of the pirates flag you ain’t getting? But I rather think of it as being apathy’s worse nightmare….. ;)

  • Hokma

    Hey Captain Zero – once again another ignorant remark. Good job of googling but the references you spoke about refer ONLY to people in the U.S. military – not foreign enemy combatents you commit war crimes. Try actually reading books and articles instead of  doing drive-by googling that has no relevance to the subject moron.

  • Hokma

    Mark – his name is Captain Zero to relfect his lack of intelligence. His comments are inane , lack any support, and are not worth responding to.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Hokma

    This diatribe coming for you is hysterical. I will enjoy saying this…. You resemble your own remarks…  

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero – making comments is one thing. Abusing this privilege by calling people morons, brainless, etc. places you in the positon of being treated as the village idiot. If all you can do it come with ignorant unsupported crap and name calling then you deserve what you get.

  • Docelder

    It reminds me something of the Air Force One flyover of NYC. Nobody in the administration seems to give a rat’s ass about regular people whether they be in NYC, Las Vegas or rural America. This is all just one big reality based TV show about them. Because ever since Obama “won” all his cronies “won” as well. Party time for the boys from Chicago and anybody who enables them and anybody who generally doesn’t care all so much for America to begin with. It isn’t even candy coated.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Hokma…  You better get with history the real history not yours. So I guess your always right and even Larry Johnson is wrong here?  But since your such a military expert (in your mind) here this ones for you….

    JOHN HUTSON:  “For me, there’s absolutely no question that the best place to try terrorists is in federal court.”

    I guess Admiral Hudson does not know what he is talking about either. Or is the Admiral a traitor to your cause? ….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    That’s it Carol! Yeah lets do mob trials next!  If 80% of Americans don’t like the legal system lets just hang people by mob!

    You are part of the problem with this Country …..

  • Docelder

    He needs to be loved. What we perceive as narcissism is the guy trying to sell himself to himself. We are probably in worse trouble than we even thought possible. “The One” my ass. I don’t think he has his own stuff together.

  • Hokma

    Hutson was referring only the the progress of military tribunals and civilian courts since 9/11 – NOT to the constitutional and historic precendent of trying foreign enemy combatents. The reason for the lack of progress of miltary tribunals was because Bush was not in a hurry to try these terrorist and wanted to take as much time to get information. the other reason was that efforts were being stymied by civil rights lawyers constantly blokcing efforts in court. So get the context straight before recklessly using your google search.

    And, yes, in this case I have not agreed with LJ. And i never used the word traitor anywhere moron. Agains, it might be worth getting fully educated before bloviating.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Really Hokma? So when are you going to post something intelligent and factual? Lets roll! Take me on! Or are you afraid? A coward? Or just a big mouth? I am ready to be taught a lesson by you! I am ready to have my ass whooped by you! Hell maybe I am wrong and you can educate me. Or maybe you prove the fact that there are more horses asses than horses.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    He may have been. But he was also very correct with that statement and even a leftie gets it right sometimes….. Of course your colored by your own political agenda.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero – So far, from what I read from you, your facts are wrong or out of context or non-existent. Your bmost intelligent words are “moron, bean brain, idiot, horses ass” etc. Get a brain and a life.

  • Onofre’s arm

    Hokma, last night I wasn’t particularly in the mood to post anything, however, I was getting a real kick watching this clown, Captain Zero, bouncing around from one comment to another with such ignorant and non sequitur responses, that I thought I would just watch him commit rhetorical suicide. He was obviously just running around challenging ANYONE to knock the BIG chip off his skinny shoulders, and he was getting frustrated that nobody wanted to play his game. I knew it would only be a matter of time before he hit on my posts, but I had already decided that even if he did, I wouldn’t exchange fire, for me it would have been like taking down popgun wielding child with a howitzer.

    He was doing a spectacularly effective job of proving himself to be a fool all by himself, and I felt it was not worth a speck of my time to to help him in a job with which he obviously needs no help.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Hokma

    Since you always deal with facts.  Please post and show me the COURT and/or TRIBUNAL: record where KSM stood in front of a Civilian/Military Judge and plead guilty?  Not sent a note with a desire, but did in fact plead quilty????

    By the way please educate me on the war crimes charges as well you mentioned? That’s not what the charge sheets says.

    Don’t you just hate facts.

    Its simple he is a mass murderer and needs to be judged that way. Unfortunately the only one who is clueless is YOU! Thanks for proving the apathy part as well.

    Oh yes I stand ready to be corrected…. Please do so….but use facts….and link to them….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    I am waiting for you facts to shut me up. All iI see is mouth. Do you walk the walk or talk the talk?

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Mouth! I am waiting for you to shut me down? Big tough guy….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    I am waiting for your facts to shut me up. All iI see is mouth. Do you walk the walk or talk the talk?

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    You just can’t be this dense? What the hell is wrong with you? You are really stuck on stupid! My god man you need to get real. 

    Once again I do not read Daily kos or what ever its called and I am waiting for you to show me the facts, just the facts and so far your not just blowing smoke, but there is a forest fire coming out your ass.

  • TeakWoodKite

    LJ, I have had this thread and Mr. Goodmans playing in my head like hearing two different compositions in sympathetic keys. They make for an interesting way ro frame this current parade.
    The variables in this prism are increasingly atrophied.

    Why is BS (aka BO) so discordant? His indifference; his feckless indecision . He has ceded or defered to every political force, be they small or great.
    Back when those stories of BO having a friendly card game will voting present. Me thinks he folded when anyone called his bluff.

  • TeakWoodKite

    Captian Jack, This country has a Race baiter in chief for POTUS, and this isn’t Treasure Island.

  • Hokma

    “At last clearing those obstacles, the government initiated Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s military trial in Guantanamo in September 2008. In December, KSM pleaded guilty and asked to be executed.”
    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/11/20/holders_true_motive_99239.html
     Now go back to Daily Koz.

  • Hokma

    Heh Cap Zero – Well spoken. Boy you really got me there. Wow. Read a book and save your breath.

  • Hokma

    Another brilliant remark. As I said previously, either clean up your act, bring something intelligent ot the table, or just keep wasting your time.

  • Hokma

    Cap Zero – get a book and go away.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Sparrow Boy, you are an odd one indeed. You make statements that I should read Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, and then make statemets to prove you have not read or understood that case yourself.

    You say that I do not understand the workings of our goverment, and then cite a dissenting opinion by the Supreme Court to prove that I am wrong.

    The Supreme Court is not one man. Only a majority ruling can validate an opinion. Try finding a Majority Opinion that agrees terrorists must be tied in Civilian Courts and not Military Courts.

    In Hamdi v. Rumsfeld the Supreme Court ruled that  Hamdi, and terrorists, COULD be tried in a military tribunal rather than a civilian court.

    That was not even the question before the court. There was never a question whether terrorists were “Enemy Combatants”. Hamdi’s own lawyers acknowledge that he is an “Enemy Combatant”.

    The question before the court was whether Hamdi could be tried in a system set up by the Executive, or if the UCMJ and Geneva Convention applied.

    The court ruled that the UCMJ and Geneva Convention applied to Hamdi. It further cited cases where even US Citizens who were enemy combatants were tried in military courts.

    What the Supreme Court found is that the courts set up by Bush II did not meet the requirements of the UCMJ and Geneva Convention.

    The dissenting opinion by Scalia was that the Supreme Court did not have jusrisdiction to rule over Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, per the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005. The majority on the court obviously disagreed and ruled in the case.

  • karen for Clinton

    This sparrow is as clueless as the lark was.  Birds of a feather.

  • No Longer Banned in Beantown

    Yes, it is scary that Sparrows and Larks get to vote.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Well now finally discourse….

    Now you have me confused. Explain this ” constitutional and historic precedent of trying foreign enemy combatents” as it pertains to terrorists not Nazi spy’s?

    And your both right and wrong with Hudson. Yes the statement you posted has merit. But Hudson still strongly believes that terrorists should be tried in criminal courts and not tribunals.

    “I stand here today greatly troubled by the use of military commissions to prosecute Guantanamo detainees – troubled because we could do so much better.” He still stand by his testimony…. and supports the usage of the US Criminal Court System to try these guys. But don’t take my word for it, ask the Admiral yourself.  I have! And as of December 2009 he still supports trying these guys in Criminal Court.

    But back to the ” constitutional and historic precedent of trying foreign enemy combatents” part. Maybe I am too old and only go back to TWA Flight 841 and guys like Al-Jawary. Funny I do not remember any historic precedent for trying this guy in Brooklyn… Oh yeah NYC…Or the others we have in supermax jails here in the States.

    But its just not Larry Johnson who you are disagreeing with. I would conservatively say your opposing 65% of the counterterrorism community and 70% of the JAG community.

    But I am open to new details if you can educate me and or that I am not oerhaps aware of.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Bloviating? That’s funny as shit! So far you been blowing it out your ass and with no reference to fact at all. Once again show me, don’t tell me. Gosh your dense! 

    Explain this ” constitutional and historic precedent of trying foreign enemy combatents” as it pertains to terrorists not Nazi spy’s?  
     
    And your both right and wrong with Hudson. Yes the statement you posted has some merit. But Hudson still strongly believes that terrorists should be tried in criminal courts and not tribunals.  
     
    But don’t take my word for it, ask the Admiral yourself. If you have the guts that is and I doubt you do.  But I have and as of December 2009 he still supports trying these guys in Criminal Court.  
     
    But back to the ” constitutional and historic precedent of trying foreign enemy combatents” part. Maybe I am too old and only go back to TWA Flight 841 and guys like Al-Jawary. Funny I do not remember any historic precedent for trying this guy outside a Brooklyn Criminal Court room… Oh yeah Brooklyn …that’s …NYC…Or the others we have convicted and who are in supermax jails here in the States.  
     
    But its just not Larry Johnson who you are disagreeing with. I would conservatively say your opposing 65% of the counterterrorism community and 70% of the JAG community. 
     
    But I am open to new details if you can educate me and or that I am not oerhaps aware of. But I doubt that too….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    You are kidding? Real Clear Politics? This is your fact base? Please why not quote the RNC? The hearing this dopy doodle reporter is talking about was KSM’s combatant status review tribunals which my uneducated and emotionally distrubed firiend is something like a Civilian Grand Jury. All that hearing was suppose to decide was whether KSM should be designated and tried as an enemy combatant or not. They do not even follow the rules of evidence for goodness sake.

    And your tellig me to get educated?

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    WWII ? What the hel does WWII have to do with terrorism you idiot?” Reading is one thing comprehending what one reads is another. Your must have been in special class because your stuck on stupid. My grandchild knows better that this. Simply put you are the village idiot and whats wrong with America these days.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    By the way jackass. If you summons the guts and I doubt you will, to email Admiral Hudson try and write something intelligent and ask him why WWII does not matter with unlawful belligerents and terrorists…

    Idiot!

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Google my ass… you have my challenge..  gutless….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Your an asshole stupid go impress your mother and those minions of yours who are just as braindead as you are.

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Hokma… oyour a legend in your own mind…. Go play with momma…

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    vHokma… your a legend in your own mind…. Go play with momma..

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Get lost loser….

  • Captain Jack Sparrow

    Here Hokma

    Another guy who I guess you would consider an idiot….. “Enemy Combatants” and “Military Commissions”

    Sad state of affairs when apathy rules….

  • Hokma

    You really have to dig down into the deepest depths of dumb to find someone like Lang. Lang has not only shown himself to be a little off but he is the classic anti-Semite as well, which would then make you one as well.

    Apparently you are one of those left over ’60s peacenuts who is anti-American.

  • Hokma

    Please vent at Daily Koz – you’ll find more people who just make up facts like yours.

  • Hokma

    World War II was a war. Our fight with radical islamists is a war. 1+1=2.

    Again, you’ll find a commnity of the willingfully ignorant at Daily Koz and with the same language as you.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero said, “Your an asshole stupid go impress your mother and those minions of yours who are just as braindead as you are.”

    I wish I could, but my mother died when I was young.

  • Hokma

    Captain Zero said, “Go play with momma” 

    I wish i could but my mother died when I was young.

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