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he
opponents of military commissions have argued that John Walker is
a U.S. citizen, and therefore President Bush's military order doesn't
apply to him. This point has even been repeated by Attorney General
John Ashcroft and others who surely must know that Walker's U.S.
citizenship can be challenged.
And Monday
night on his MSNBC debut, Alan Keyes made the point that the separation-of-powers
doctrine set forth in the Constitution is violated when the executive
branch assumes judicial functions born from a war without an apparent
end, such as the war on terrorism. Military commissions are objectionable,
therefore, as they blur the lines between executive and judicial
functions.
I'll respond
seriatim. As to Attorney General Ashcroft's contention, the U.S.
government had every reason to challenge Walker's citizenship, and
it should have. Title 8, Section 1481 (a)(3)(A) of the United States
Code states:
A person
who is a national of the United States whether by birth or naturalization,
shall lose his nationality by voluntarily performing any of the
following acts with the intention of relinquishing United States
nationality entering into, or serving in, the armed forces
of a foreign state if such armed forces are engaged in hostilities
against the United States ...
If Walker had
been charged with renouncing his U.S. citizenship, Section 1481(b)
provides, in relevant part:
... Any person
who commits or performs, or who has committed or performed, any
act of expatriation under the provisions of this chapter or any
other Act shall be presumed to have done so voluntarily, but such
presumption may be rebutted upon a showing, by a preponderance
of the evidence that the act or acts committed or performed were
not done voluntarily.
The government's
criminal complaint spells out in exquisite detail not only facts
demonstrating Walker's conspiracy to kill Americans abroad, but
the case for his renunciation of his citizenship. In fact, the same
body of evidence the government has assembled to prove Walker's
guilt would have demonstrated his renunciation.
Of course,
Walker has a defense, as mentioned above. For the government to
concede that Walker remains a citizen, however, without even raising
the issue in court, concedes too much. The man is a traitor who
took up arms against Americans. If Walker wanted to mount a legal
fight to retain his citizenship, and explain to a court and the
public why he never intended to relinquish it, that would be a fight
worth having and an argument worth hearing.
The government's
decision to avoid this confrontation cannot be explained persuasively
on legal grounds. It is, however, perfectly in line with the government's
weakening resolve to use military commissions, so that if Walker
is said to be a U.S. citizen, he's not subject to justice dispensed
by military commission.
As for the
argument by Mr. Keyes that the Constitution's separation-of-powers
doctrine should preclude generally the use of military commissions,
in this there can be no doubt. However, while the Constitution creates
three separate branches of government, Article I, Section 8 empowers
Congress "To constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court."
It is under
this constitutional authority that Congress crafted the Uniform
Code of Military Justice, which is not part of the usual civilian-court
system. Presidents have used the statutory authority set forth by
Congress as the basis for establishing military commissions. If
Congress concludes that the president has abused or misused this
authority, it has the power to change the law. Thus far, it has
not.
Article I,
Section 8 also empowers Congress "To define and punish piracies
and felonies committed on the high seas, and offenses against the
law of nations." For purposes of interpreting the Constitution,
it is perfectly legitimate to equate yesterday's pirates with today's
foreign terrorists.
Military commissions
have been upheld as constitutional by earlier Supreme Courts. And
despite the president's military order, which does not provide for
judicial review by the Supreme Court of decisions made by his military
commissions, there is no doubt that the Supreme Court retains the
authority to review decisions by these inferior courts.
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