Skipjack wrote:I am trying to see your point, but I can not. I think there are many ways to rationalize human rights violations. People have historically done it and they still do it all the time. It may seem justified to some americans, but I think much of the rest of the world does not agree...
Quite honestly being married to an american and still having the US as my future place to live (if I ever get to), I am worried about the way the rest of the world is loosing respect for the US. I talk to a lot of people here, from all over the world and it is defending the US is NOT easy.
Things got a bit better for a brief period after Obama was elected, but that did not last long. Things are brewing here in Europe and there may be a time coming very soon when US military is not welcome here anymore. E.g. I was reading a german computer game forum recently and people here were openly discussing the ongoing occupation by US forces and that they are not happy about that. 20 years ago, that was not an issue.
I understand your concerns for universal human rights. However, the reality of today's world, not tomorrow's is what we must deal with.
The problem I see today is to many folks arguing with partial knowledge and loud voices in arenas they do not fully get. I agree that this provides pressure to make things better for tomorrow, and am fully in support of it (free speech).
However, case in point, please show me where any of the Geneva Conventions address the term "unlawful combatant", and where in the Geneva conventions, does the idea of sovereignty and state's rights get over ridden. In fact, the conventions address that the rights of detained persons reside in two tenants, 1) Universal Human Rights - not defined and 2) The laws of the detaining state (that are hopefully in line with Universal Human Rights). The Conventions do not spell out Human Universal Rights as the core idea, but do hint at it clearly.
The point is all about Just War and its conduct. I agree that Guantanamo has been handling very badly in the PR realm. I do not agree that it or somethign like it is not neccessary. These people operate outside the rule of civilization, and in that have their strength. If you put them in a position to use civilization against itself, that is their intent and desire, because they know they will be able to use the system against itself for their goals. How many detainees have been released only to go right back to the conflict at hand, only to get rolled up again by someone. More than one.
If you put these folks on trial, IAW with US standards, chances are they will be jailed and released in a short amount of time, if at all. Our legal system currenlty goes to great lengths courtesy of the left, and its fuzzy views of right and wrong, to protect the rights of criminals over victims. The idea of victim's rights in US law is very obscure, and pruposely kept so by the left. They feel it would color "impartial" legal proceedings. The other really big deal about bringing these folks to civilian trial is the precedence it would set inthe US regarding the military, war, and legal liability. The US is one of the few countries that maintains a seperation between civil liability and military crimes. We do not try our soldiers in civilian courts unlike elsewhere. This is based is the Just War principle as well, and maintains the status of combatants verses non-combatants. It is an important principle.
I think Diog has a point, if you think your system is better, then you take custody of them and deal with them. But when they come back later and burn down your court and blow up the girl's school across the street, how will your legal system explain that? As their Universal Human Right?