6 years is a lot of interpretation......Kmarion wrote:
That's certainly left open for interpretation .
I can't imagine the prisoners have been promptly informed of the charges against them either.
6 years is a lot of interpretation......Kmarion wrote:
That's certainly left open for interpretation .
That's why you deal with concrete numbers when drawing up a contract. But yea they should close that hole.Bertster7 wrote:
6 years is a lot of interpretation......Kmarion wrote:
That's certainly left open for interpretation .
I can't imagine the prisoners have been promptly informed of the charges against them either.
Indeed. But in legal scenarios like this is it not customary for a judge to decide whether the law has been followed - and from what the judge in your earlier link was saying (which I thoroughly agree with) it doesn't sound like he thinks they've been brought to trial as rapidly as possible. Whenever there is ambiguity in law, judicial descrection picks up the slack.Kmarion wrote:
That's why you deal with concrete numbers when drawing up a contract. But yea they should close that hole.Bertster7 wrote:
6 years is a lot of interpretation......Kmarion wrote:
That's certainly left open for interpretation .
I can't imagine the prisoners have been promptly informed of the charges against them either.
Damn straight.Kmarion wrote:
Ftr, Close that place down and burn it.
Your not at war with any nation. Legal loophole that can't be closed.Kmarion wrote:
We are at war with Iran?
Legal black hole..check it.
My buddy was stationed there for awhile. Watching detainees jump off the cliffs is not a strategic position (fl is all but a skip away). He was there long before the "war on terror". The Detainees used to pick up rocks and throw it at them. He asked his superior what they should do.. he said throw them back .TheAussieReaper wrote:
Problems is as a Naval Base it does have uses and is in a strategic location.
Did they release people who had been captured on the battlefield? I thought they were mostly people who had been sold to the US for a nice reward. The Afghans were using us to settle scores and make a nice profit.usmarine wrote:
so the same fuckers who shot at me were captured, then released
Last edited by Reciprocity (2008-11-10 19:01:29)
lolReciprocity wrote:
Did they release people who had been captured on the battlefield? I thought they were mostly people who had been sold to the US for a nice reward. The Afghans were using us to settle scores and make a nice profit.usmarine wrote:
so the same fuckers who shot at me were captured, then released
For Iran specifically, but there are detainees from countries other than Iran there.Bertster7 wrote:
Or has no diplomatic relations with said signatory country, which is the case here.FEOS wrote:
Only so long as the US is engaged in combat with said signatory country...which is not the case here.Bertster7 wrote:
So long as the terrorists in question are nationals of a state that is signatory, that is not an issue. However, since most states involved have normal diplomatic relations with the US which means they are not covered (except in the case of Iran, as I've outlined).
What's strange about it? It contains the articles that are under discussion re GITMO.Berster7 wrote:
Fair enough. Strange you linked to that page in that case. Maybe you should update that.FEOS wrote:
Don't be pedantic. I'm talking about reading all the applicable agreements that are collectively referred to as "the Geneva Convention".Berster7 wrote:
There's more than one. Also all the commentaries.
And it wasn't just one terrorist Indonesia executed, they shot three of them at the same time.Spark wrote:
In the same time Indonesia executes terrorists, including appeal after appeal after appeal after appeal, America has finished ONE trial.
Laziness.
Last edited by TheAussieReaper (2008-11-10 21:27:08)
Probably, those repercussions being none as no-one there has yet been proven to be any danger to anyone.Sealxo wrote:
Obama wants to close gitmo. Shit.... Does he have any idea of the repercussions?
The war is long over.Lavadisk wrote:
in a war you're going to have to take prisioners
There was a fair bit of that.Reciprocity wrote:
Did they release people who had been captured on the battlefield? I thought they were mostly people who had been sold to the US for a nice reward. The Afghans were using us to settle scores and make a nice profit.
Link plz, I've only heard of one.USM wrote:
over 200 were released from gitmo. about 50 were found to have been back on the battlefield because they were killed or wounded and we could get the dna. thats the only ones we know about....so far.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2008-11-11 03:41:53)
Hiding behind legal loopholes doesn't change the fact that the Gitmo detainees have not been charged with any crime and are held illegally without the option for a trial.FEOS wrote:
Extremely.oug wrote:
How else would you two describe a prison where a trial is not an option and where one is kept without any charges pressed against him?
I call that a concentration camp. How naive am I.
How many POWs are tried or charged? None.
These people are being held as unlawful combatants, and are being treated better than they have to be treated under the GC. In fact, according to Part I, Article II, the US isn't even bound to follow the strictures of the Convention because the non-signatory (those would be the terrorists) did not follow the strictures of the Convention.How ya like them apples?Part I, Article II, Third Geneva Convention wrote:
That the relationship between the "High Contracting Parties" and a non-signatory, the party will remain bound until the non-signatory no longer acts under the strictures of the convention.
Look at usmarine's posts and see who's trying to end it. I said what I had to say and got no proper response from either of you.SgtHeihn wrote:
So you decide to try and end it on a insult. Good call.oug wrote:
ok I think this topic is over. We've said everything there was to be told. Arguments vs insults and pure denial just doesn't cut it.
It's like I said before. Labeling them illegal combatants just like that won't do. They have to be properly tried and found by the court of law to be illegal combatants - whatever that means. Because frankly I take that characterization as something made up by the US gov. and the puppet Iraqi gov. - whose decisions mean jack shit to me as we all know who put them there and who they work for.Parker wrote:
lets assume i am right...ILLEGAL COMBATANTS.oug wrote:
assuming you're right, doesn't that mean that you fall into the same category with your enemies?Parker wrote:
to deal with people that are no ordinary/legitimate soldiers.
now, i will assume that when you said that i fall into that category, you meant my nations military.
nope, not even close to the same category.
Go back and read my post again. You call it a legal loophole. Lawyers call it "the law". Are you a lawyer?oug wrote:
Hiding behind legal loopholes doesn't change the fact that the Gitmo detainees have not been charged with any crime and are held illegally without the option for a trial.
International convention, for one. Pretty sure there aren't any Iraqis at GITMO. I could be mistaken, but I think the detainees at GITMO belong to countries we are not engaged in conflict with. Who have chosen to fight in the manner they did, rendering them unprotected under the GC.oug wrote:
And who called them terrorists anyway? Your government did. And their buddies. For all I know the US invaded Iraq and some Iraqis are fighting for their freedom. One man's terrorist is another's freedom fighter etc etc.
No, their actions change the way they are required to be treated under the GC. The US is actually treating them far better than we are required to under the GC.oug wrote:
Labeling them "terrorists" doesn't change the way you're supposed to treat them. The law is the same for everyone. First get them on trial, and if they're guilty, send them to a proper prison or kill them like you do in the US, I don't care.
That's not what you were fighting for then.USM wrote:
"freedom and democracy" bwap!
"one mans terrorist...." bwap!
I thought your Supreme Court had corrected you on that.FEOS wrote:
There's no requirement for a trial at all absent extenuating circumstances...why can you not understand that? It's really not difficult.
never said i was did i? no. never. so shut it. some politician says it so you actually beleive what they say because it fits your agenda. how cute.Dilbert_X wrote:
That's not what you were fighting for then.USM wrote:
"freedom and democracy" bwap!
"one mans terrorist...." bwap!
So on the one hand there is a war that has not yet ended, but on the other, the people you caught are not from countries you're at war with. With my logic, it's as if you caught some tourist in the US doing a crime and you jail him without pressing charges.FEOS wrote:
And again, there's no charging of crimes or trials in warfare until after hostilities are over. They're not. The only reason one is required to hold a tribunal in war is to determine GC status of a given individual if necessary. That's it. Once hostilities are over, those detained must either be released or tried for war crimes. THERE IS NO REQUIREMENT UNDER THE APPLICABLE STATUTES TO TRY THEM.
FEOS wrote:
International convention, for one. Pretty sure there aren't any Iraqis at GITMO. I could be mistaken, but I think the detainees at GITMO belong to countries we are not engaged in conflict with. Who have chosen to fight in the manner they did, rendering them unprotected under the GC.
And what actions are those? What manner of fighting? How on earth can you talk about actions these people have committed when they have not been charged with anything?FEOS wrote:
No, their actions change the way they are required to be treated under the GC.
LOL!!!!usmarine wrote:
propaganda...lol BWAP!
only dumb fucks listen to the govt. are you a dumb fuck?