One could hardly ask for a worse example of 9/10 thinking, nor a more understated headline:
Not Right The Obama administration grants Miranda rights to detainees in Afghanistan.
by Stephen F. Hayes
06/10/2009 2:05:00 PM
The Weekly Standard
When 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad was captured on March 1, 2003, he was not cooperative. “I’ll talk to
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You err when you state that the Geneva Conventions codify the Customary Laws of Warfare. The Geneva Conventions are a formalization of the Customary Laws of Warfare as they pertain to Prisoners of War. They are thus a subset of the Customary Laws of Warfare, but by no means a codification of the whole of the Customary Laws of Warfare.
You should also note that Geneva IV pertains to non-combatants. Terrorists are indeed combatants, and thus fall under Geneva III.
Further note Article 4 of Geneva IV which reads:
Nationals of a State which is not bound by the Convention are not protected by it.
As combatants operating on behalf of NGO's (Non-Governmental Organizations, viz al Qaeda, the Taleban, et al) they represent and are protected by no state, and thus would not be protected by Geneva IV even were they not combatants.
As regards the UN, let them pluck the beam from the eyes of the worst offenders (Iran, North Korea, Sudan, etc.), before undertaking to remove the mote you decry.
I'll get to the other issues when I have more time.
Real Life becons.
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The Geneva Conventions are meant to specifically cover conflict, but they augment rather than supersede international law, which forbids indefinite detention and torture in all cases.
I totally agree with you that other countries are far worse offenders than the US, which I might add has a pretty damn good human rights record, but that is irrelevant to our particular debate, which is focused on your original post. US activities do not become acceptable or lower priority simply because other states are worse offenders. Any state that violates human rights should be criticized and pressured to stop immediately.
And perhaps what leaves such a bad taste, is that the worst violators of human rights usually do not enshrine human rights as pillar of their foreign policy like the United States.
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They (the NGO's) have arrogated unto themselves the powers of a nation state by waging war against the United States. Sadly for them, since they are not a nation state and do not observe the laws of warfare themselves, that makes them illegal combatants and de facto and de jure war criminals.
The indefinite nature of the conflict is also a by product of their arrogation of the powers of a nation state. It's a foreseeable consequence, and it sucks to be them.
The Customary Laws of Warfare are neither that hard to understand nor that hard to observe. Those who cannot or will not observe them and who nonetheless choose to wage war, deserve to be treated as wolves are.
Decoupling war crimes from the traditional punishments for committing those war crimes (to especially include being an illegal combatant, who were customarily shot out of hand) is to return warfare to the practices of Tamerlane. I, for one, do not view that as an improvement.
Terrorists, who are a wholly contained subset of illegal combatants and war criminals, have but two rights: The right to become dead and the right to remain dead.
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So basically you think that terrorists have no claim whatsoever to basic human rights? If this is so, our debate will merely go in circles.
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