September 1, 2008 • Vol. 13, No. 47 Download Now! (pdf)

 

EDITORIAL
The Thin Man
by William Kristol

SCRAPBOOK
Bob Herbert's History Lesson

ARTICLES
Don't Cry for Russia
by Cathy Young

Keynote Kalamities
by Matthew Continetti

Would You Hire Barack Obama?
by Dean Barnett

An Awkward Alliance
by Stephen F. Hayes

Unsuper Delegate
by Richard Burr

Hillary Supporters for McCain
by Salena Zito

FEATURES
Misfortunes of War
by Noemie Emery

The New Jews?
by Jennifer Rubin

Faith-Based Campaign
by Terry Eastland

BOOKS & ARTS
No Way Out
by Christopher J. Walker

The Texas Way
by William McKenzie

Crime Pays
by Steven J. Lenzner

Hef's Cold War
by Cynthia Grenier

Le Film Mediocre
by John Podhoretz

CASUAL
A Summer Car
by Joseph Bottum

PARODY
The Podestionary


« Cheney to Speak at Republican Convention | Main | Required Reading: 'hammer Time »

Hamdan's "Stunningly Unjust" Sentence

Andy McCarthy writes:

In Hamdan’s case, we thus have a double problem. First, the jury of military officers somehow decided that material support to our enemies, by a guy who actually protected bin Laden and transported weapons for al-Qaeda, was worth only five-and-a-half years in jail. Second, the judge then made matters incalculably worse by effectively giving Hamdan what everyone (including the judge) must know will be taken as a get-out-of-jail card: i.e., full credit for the five years Hamdan has already been in custody as an enemy combatant. That turns the 66 months into six months.

Understand: there is no requirement to try captured enemy combatants for war crimes. As the laws of war have long provided, and as the Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed, wartime enemy combatants may be held without trial for the duration of hostilities. War crimes charges are an additional measure against combatants who commit egregious law-of-war violations.

Yet, that distinction has been lost in the media’s coverage. Absurdly, Hamdan is now in a better position as a convicted war-criminal than those who have merely been detained as enemy combatants without war crimes charges. The American military has managed to value terrorist war crimes as a less serious impropriety than terrorist war participation. Instead of highlighting Hamdan’s conviction, the government will now spend its time explaining why he is still being held after his sentence is over.

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