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In Selling Its Version of the "War on Terror," Obama Is Adopting Bush's Playbook

By Andy Worthington, AlterNet. Posted March 17, 2009.


Under Obama's Justice Department, "change" means nothing more than turning "enemy combatants" to "Nobodies Formerly Known As Enemy Combatants."

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This article was originally published at Future of Freedom Foundation.

Changing the names of things was a ploy that was used by the Bush administration in an attempt to justify some of its least palatable activities. In response to the 9/11 attacks, for instance, the nation was not involved in a limited pursuit of a group of criminals responsible for the attacks, but instead embarked on an open-ended “War on Terror.” In keeping with this “new paradigm,” prisoners seized in this “war” were referred to as “detainees,” and held neither as criminal suspects nor as prisoners of war, protected by the Geneva Conventions, but as “enemy combatants,” without any rights whatsoever. Later, when the administration sought new ways in which to interrogate some of these men, the techniques it endorsed were not referred to as torture -- even though many of them clearly were -- but were instead described as “enhanced interrogation techniques.”

The Obama administration has clearly learned a trick or two from its predecessors. In its response to a court request for clarification of the meaning of the term “enemy combatant,” for use in the Guantánamo prisoners’ habeas corpus reviews (which were triggered by a momentous Supreme Court decision last June), the new government has responded to the challenge with a cunning sleight of hand. In a press release, the Department of Justice announced that it had dropped the use of the term “enemy combatant,” and that it had adjusted its definition of those who can be detained so that, instead of holding people who were “part of, or supporting, Taliban or al-Qaeda forces or associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners,” individuals who supported al-Qaeda or the Taliban “are detainable only if the support was substantial.”

As benign-sounding propaganda, in contrast to the Bush administration’s arrogant version, which almost always manifested a tangible disdain for Congress and the judiciary, this announcement has the alluring veneer of the “change” that Barack Obama promised throughout his election campaign, but in practical terms nothing has actually changed. The prisoners are now nobodies, with no label whatsoever to define their peculiar extra-legal existence, and the entire rationale for holding them without charge or trial -- and the egregious errors made along the way -- remain unaddressed.

In its filing with the District Court (PDF), delivered in response to a deadline of March 13, the government made clear that it was largely business as usual. In its opening salvo, the Justice Department claimed that the laws of war, which “include a series of prohibitions and obligations … developed over time,” and which “have periodically been codified in treaties such as the Geneva Conventions,” or have otherwise “become customary international law,” are nonetheless “less well-codified with respect to our current, novel type of armed conflict against armed groups such as al-Qaeda and the Taliban.”

With this “current, novel type of armed conflict” standing in as a more palatable version of the Bush administration’s “War on Terror,” the Justice Department proceeded to defend the President’s authority, under the terms of the Authorization for Use of Military Force, which was passed by Congress within days of the attacks, “to detain persons who he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, and persons who harbored those responsible” for the attacks, as well as “persons whose relationship to al-Qaeda or the Taliban would, in appropriately analogous circumstances in a traditional international armed conflict, render them detainable.”


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See more stories tagged with: habeas corpus, afghanistan, barack obama, department of justice, enemy combatants, taliban, al-qaeda, salim hamdan, guantánamo, authorization for use of , richard leon, ghaleb nasser al-bihani

Andy Worthington is a writer and historian, and author of The Guantánamo Files.

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View:
Mr. Obama, who have YOU determined perpetrated the 9/11 attacks?
Posted by: LeftWright on Mar 18, 2009 3:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How did you determine this?

Why has no credible evidence ever been presented to the public?

The American people would like to know and your own FBI has yet to complete a real investigation into the events of 9/11/01.

This is what every journalist should be asking Mr. Obama at every press conference and photo op.

Well, Alternet?

Until we get a real investigation into the events of 9/11, the American people will continue to lose confidence in the federal government and revolutionary change will be the people's only recourse.

The truth shall set us free. Love is the only way forward.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Not so easy.
Posted by: talkville on Mar 18, 2009 4:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That carefully and precisely crafted ideological and literary construction, the "Global War on Terror", will not so easily be tossed into the trash-bin. It serves quite a few of the 'state-within-the-state' with excellent cover and pretext for many a policy and action.

Unlike many of our retail stores and businesses, Pandora has never been known for taking returns.

Word-smiths, public-relations firms, and image-makers of all kinds are in a comfy "recession-proof" sector these days, especially in Government Employment, especially those that adapt and tailor their ethics to the vicissitudes of money- and profit-making. Obama seems to be keeping a whole lotta bottles -- just pouring new wine in them; or, alternatively, keeping the old wine and purchasing new bottles.

Either way, they'll milk that cow named GWOT for all she's worth!

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Indeed
Posted by: eruditeogre on Mar 18, 2009 7:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, it's funny how the new administration is trying to maintain a number of Bush-era powers under a new name, and with new rhetoric. Sad, cruel, yet funny. . . .

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

whats new
Posted by: grkjr on Mar 18, 2009 10:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If by now, liberals and "old democrats"; those that still beleive in the constitution and the "rule of law".. if they still choose to support this administration fueled by "hope" and "yes we can".. then surely we are getting our just desserts. It was all to plain that on most of the significant issues.. war on terrorism, constitutional powers or the lack of respect for them, wall steet bail-outs (the economy)... this administration who has surrounded itself with the same people/ experts who got us into this melt down...thus no change can be expected... this was pointed out by so many in the lead up to election.. just how long will the view that "we just must keep the pressure on congress and this administration for them to do the right thing" or to "keep the promises of the primaries".... i would laugh if it was't too hard to bare the self destruction of this nation, that we the people are hell bent on accomplishing through our "faith" or naiveness in this administration and congress. Goodness, if the majority of voters cried for the end of war, the end of constitutional abuses, and now the end of these bailouts.. yet congress and the president simply ignore us.. what change do you expect to take place????

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He's desperate to avoid the fate of Jimmy Carter
Posted by: greenknight on Mar 19, 2009 5:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Carter did the right thing over and over - eliminated wasteful weapons programs, used diplomacy to damp down tensions, cut support for dictatorships - and the right wing used this to convince voters that he had weakened the country and left us vulnerable. Perhaps it wouldn't have worked without the Iran hostage crisis but who's to say that something similar couldn't be arranged in order to bring down Obama?

The neo-cons are using that kind of rhetoric anyway, crying that Obama is making us more vulnerable to terrorist attack. It isn't working, though, because he's not giving them an opening.

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