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The FY 13 NDAA Keeps Terrorists Off U.S. Soil without Compromising Civil Liberties

Guest post from Rep. Louie Gohmert, Rep. Jeff Landry, and Rep. Scott Rigell

This week, the House will fulfill our most important constitutional duty by debating the FY 13 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). In accordance with the framer’s intent, this act is the primary check that Congress can apply to the Executive Branch on defense and national security policy.

Last year, constitutional conservatives raised the alarm bell about some provisions in the FY 12 NDAA; provisions that many were concerned would grant President Obama far reaching powers to detain American citizens without trial. The bill ultimately passed, but has become the subject of countless town hall meetings, tweets, and Facebook posts in the months since.

The debate has become so heated that many believe that the NDAA is a bill that deals strictly with detaining terrorists. It is much more than that. Aside from dictating how the military can handle any al Qaeda terrorists they capture, the FY13 NDAA deals with the full scope of national security issues. There is much in it, from a rejection of the Obama administration’s effort to raise health care fees on military retirees; to making sure the President doesn’t trade our missile defenses away to the Russians, that Conservatives can be proud of.

The real question before us is how to adjust the language from last year that has made so many so uncomfortable while still ensuring that we can fight and win the War on Terror. The base bill has already made important steps in the right direction. It includes the Rigell / Landry reassertion of the Writ of Habeas Corpus. This language firmly states that the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) and the FY 12 NDAA detainee provisions do not allow for the detention of any person in the United States without the right of redress. Under this provision, all Americans have access to the Writ of Habeas Corpus.

The underlying language is being further strengthened by the Gohmert / Landry / Rigell Amendment which further states that no citizens’s constitutional rights will be denied in an Article III court pursuant to the AUMF. The best way to protect our rights is to put simple and clear language in the NDAA that lays those rights out. Between the new language in the base bill and our amendment, we are confident we have done that.

Rep. Adam Smith (D-MA) and Rep. Justin Amash (R-MI) have a competing amendment that simply goes too far. Their bill extends constitutional protections beyond U.S. citizens to any terrorist who is captured in the United States. We share the concerns of legal experts who worry that by granting terrorists greater rights if they are captured in America than if they are captured overseas, we are actually giving terrorists a profound incentive to attack us here at home. The Smith/Amash amendment grants foreign terrorists or foreign soldiers rights our own military do not have in court under the Constitutional Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Our approach is the better alternative. It protects our constitutional rights, but does not extend them to the very men who have been fighting for a decade to tear that great document down.

COMMENTS

  • Dave_A

    While there is historical precedent for treating Americans captured in active service of an enemy force as EPWs (the Civil War) even on US soil, I would agree that trying those captured on US soil as traitors (or lesser crimes, if we lack the 2 or more witnesses to the same act) is a better route…

    EPW detention is not a punishment, it’s a method of removing surrendered enemy from the fight for the duration – and US citizens who commit treason need to be punished, not detained & protected.

    Any member of an enemy force located OUTSIDE of the US, however, should be a legitimate target for any military or paramilitary force that can bring weapons to bear, citizenship not withstanding…. Like what happened to Al-Awaki – that was absolutely the right move…

    We should be especially careful to make sure that any law passed on the subject extends NO protection beyond the basic rights of detainees under LOAC to enemy forces overseas, regardless of citizenship.

    • http://itsaboutliberty.com/index.php kralizec

      But I’ll bet dollars to doughnuts Harry Reid’s Senate screws this up faster than you can say “hands in the air’!

  • http://itsaboutliberty.com/index.php kralizec

    But I’ll bet dollars to doughnuts Harry Reid’s Senate screws this up faster than you can say “hands in the air’!

    • avgjo

      eager to ‘get something done’.

      • expanding_man

        How could any elected official object to fixing the Act with an amendment that states that United States citizens may not be detained against their will without all the rights of due process? I don’t understand it.

        It won’t happen. Sad.

        • avgjo

          our ‘representatives’ are members of a self-styled ruling class. They are people who have let their libido dominandi overwhelm them.

          What’s frightening is that in some, perhaps many, aspects, they are a reflection of us.

  • natedogg

    I am happy that conservatives are taking on this cause. Civil liberties are not about right and left. I was a big critic of the Bush admin when they were suspending habeas corpus and so were libertarians within the Republican party. My take is that terrorism long predates Sep 11. It has been with us for a very long time, and we have to find ways to deal with it without sacrificing the foundational values of our country. Fear should not drive this process. Otherwise, what are we fighting to preserve?