Omar Khadr Jury Hammers the Final Nail Into the Coffin of American Justice

by: Andy Worthington, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Omar Khadr Jury Hammers the Final Nail Into the Coffin of American Justice
Omar Khadr. (Photo: 4WardEver UK)

On Sunday, a military jury at Guantánamo handed down a 40-year sentence to Omar Khadr, the Canadian citizen who was just 15 years old when he was seized after a firefight in Afghanistan. The decision brought to an end a week of hearings that began when Khadr, now 24, accepted a plea deal giving him an eight-year sentence in exchange for agreeing that he was guilty of murder in violation of the laws of war, spying, conspiracy, providing material support to terrorism and attempted murder, with one year to be served in Guantánamo and the remaining seven in Canada.

Because the sentence negotiated as part of the plea deal is less than the one delivered by the military jury, the latter will stand only as a symbolic conviction, but it will be seized upon by those who have long wished to have Khadr convicted as a dangerous terrorist. In addition, the 40-year sentence confirms that, since last Monday, when Khadr accepted his plea deal at Guantánamo, two worlds - and two wildly divergent views of American justice - have coexisted unhappily.

In the first, Khadr's acceptance that he threw the grenade that killed Delta Force Sgt. Christopher Speer, at the end of a four-hour firefight in Afghanistan on July 27, 2002, and his acceptance that he was a member of al-Qaeda and an "alien unprivileged enemy belligerent," who did not have "any legal basis to commit any war-like acts," was a vindication of the system of trials by military commission at Guantánamo that was revived last year by President Obama.

In the other, everything about the last week's events has been a travesty of justice that heaps shame upon the United States and convicting Khadr for being an "alien unprivileged enemy combatant," who was not even allowed to legitimately be in any kind of combat situation whatsoever, is an almost incomprehensible farce.

Moreover, the analysis of the last week's events as a disturbing travesty of justice is supported by the United States' ratification, in December 2002, of the UN Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict and also by analyses of the legislation authorizing the military commissions, which reveals that the war crimes that Khadr agreed to committing as part of his plea deal are not war crimes at all.

Under the terms of the UN Optional Protocol, which deals with prisoners who are under 18 when their alleged crimes take place, signatories are obliged to "[r]ecogniz[e] the special needs of those children who are particularly vulnerable to recruitment or use in hostilities," and are also called upon to ensure "the physical and psychosocial rehabilitation and social reintegration of children who are victims of armed conflict."

In Khadr's case, however, his conviction in a war crimes trial under President Obama only serves to reinforce the melancholy truth that little has changed since it was revealed in 2003 that juvenile prisoners - as many as 22 in total - were being held at Guantánamo and defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld responded to reporters' concerns with the memorable quip, "these are not children."

As for the war crimes, even putting aside for a moment any reasonable doubts that Khadr may only have agreed to the charges in order to secure his release, the crimes in question are only recognized as war crimes by the Obama administration and by Congress, as Lt. Col. David Frakt, a law professor and the former military defense attorney for two Guantánamo prisoners, has explained.

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Back in April, Lieutenant Colonel Frakt made it clear that, when it came to the central charge of "murder in violation of the law of war," even if Khadr did throw the grenade, "there is no evidence that he violated the law of war in doing so."

This confusion first arose because the Bush administration wanted to find a way to ensure that "any attempt to fight Americans or coalition forces was a war crime," and, in 2006 and, disturbingly, last year under Obama, Congress maintained this unjustifiable position by refusing to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate actions during wartime.

Lieutenant Colonel Frakt explained that the Bush administration's original invented charge for the commissions - "Murder by an Unprivileged Belligerent" - was, essentially, replaced by the Congress-endorsed "Murder in Violation of the Law of War," even though it "conflated two different concepts - unprivileged belligerents and war criminals."

He continued:

Under Article 4 of the Geneva Prisoner of War Convention, it is clear that while a member of an organized resistance movement or militia may be an unprivileged belligerent (because of not wearing a uniform or failing to carry arms openly, for example) he may still comply with the laws and customs of war, so not all hostile acts committed by unprivileged belligerents are war crimes. Attacks by unprivileged belligerents which comply with the law of war (in that they attack lawful military targets with lawful weapons) may only be tried in domestic courts. In Iraq, for example, insurgents who try to kill Americans by implanting roadside bombs are properly arrested and tried before the Central Criminal Court of Iraq as common criminals. Attacks by unprivileged belligerents which violate the law of war, such as attacks on civilians or soldiers attempting to surrender, or using prohibited weapons like poison gas, can be tried in a war crimes tribunal.

Furthermore, in a cynical attempt to overcome this glaring contradiction between legitimate and illegitimate actions in wartime, the Obama administration added the following "official comment" to the explanation of the offense of "Murder in Violation of the Law of War" in the new military commissions Manual:

[A]n accused may be convicted in a military commission ... if the commission finds that the accused engaged in conduct traditionally triable by military commission (e.g., spying; murder committed while the accused did not meet the requirements of privileged belligerency) even if such conduct does not violate the international law of war.

As Lieutenant Colonel Frakt commented, "Astoundingly, according to the Pentagon, a detainee may be convicted of murder in violation of the law of war even if they did not actually violate the law of war."

In other words, then, a former child prisoner, who should have been rehabilitated rather than punished, because the responsibility for his actions lay with his militant father, was convicted on war crimes charges that were invented by Congress and were then reworked by the Obama administration so that the glaring contradiction between real war crimes and invented war crimes could be papered over with a veneer of legitimacy.

Small wonder then that, in the "Statement of Fact" that Khadr signed as part of his plea deal, he was also obliged to waive his right to appeal, in a passage that stated that he "does not have any legal defense to any of the offenses to which he is pleading guilty."

With such grotesque distortions of justice taking place over the last week, it is easy to forget that the judge, Army Col. Patrick Parrish, had also prevented Khadr's lawyers from drawing on their client's well-chronicled reports of his torture and abuse in US custody. As a result, claims that Khadr was subjected to abusive treatment in Bagram - and was later subjected to variations on the reverse-engineered torture techniques used in Guantánamo and derived from the US military's Survival Evasion Resistance Escape program (SERE) - were not even mentioned until the final day of his sentencing hearing,

In their closing comments, his lawyers managed to introduce a statement, written by Khadr, referring to the terror he felt when an interrogator, Sgt. Joshua Claus, threatened him with being sent to a US jail where he would be raped by "four big black guys."

Claus served a five-month prison sentence for the abuse of an unidentified prisoner at Bagram and for his part in the murder of Dilawar, an Afghan taxi driver who was murdered in Bagram in December 2002, but this was a relatively mild anecdote, compared to other claims made by Khadr over the years - that on one occasion in Guantánamo, for example, he was used as a human mop after urinating on himself while being held in isolation and subjected to painful short-shackling and that he was regularly threatened with rape and with being transferred to another country where he could be raped.

In conclusion, while those who exult in the depths to which America has sunk over the last nine years, since "the gloves came off" following the 9/11 attacks, will rejoice in Khadr's 40-year sentence (and will complain that his real sentence is only eight years), anyone who retains a shred of decency and respect for the rule of law will be more inclined to accept the words of Dennis Edney, one of Khadr's long-term Canadian civilian lawyers, who stated after the military jury announced its sentence:

The fact that the trial of a child soldier, Omar Khadr, has ended with a guilty plea in exchange for his eventual release to Canada does not change the fact that fundamental principles of law and due process were long since abandoned in Omar's case. Politics also played a role. To date, there have been in excess of 1,200 US troops killed in Afghanistan, yet it is only Omar who has been put on trial.

Edney followed up by referring to those two polarized worlds of opinion that I mentioned at the start of this article, saying that those watching the military commission "may choose to believe that through his plea Omar finally came clean and accepted his involvement in a firefight when he was 15 years of age," or, conversely, that they may have concluded that "this was one final coerced confession from a victimized young man who was in the wrong place at the wrong time because his father placed him there.''

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Andy Worthington is a journalist and the author of "The Guantanamo Files" (Pluto Press), the first book to tell the stories of all the prisoners in Guantanamo. He maintains a blog here.


Comments

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The United States has truly

The United States has truly fallen into the depths of Hell.



"The United States has truly

"The United States has truly fallen into the depths of Hell."

No, not yet. But it's coming. Soon we will all be Omar Khadrs -- except the plutocrats, that is.



Bad kids, bad governments.

Bad kids, bad governments. Let's face it, this kid should not have left Canada to go kill people in some other country. He did so to kill American soldiers.Of course, American "kids" leave America and go kill people in other countries. Many of them are guilty of war crimes, but they won't be put on trial. Instead they're treated as heroes "defending our freedoms." This kid (now 24) volunteered to go shed blood. So do our US soldiers. They all have blood on their hands, whether they wear a uniform or not...they are all killers. Deal with it.



I agree completely with

I agree completely with David, the previous poster. The only difference between this kid and American soldiers is this kid was only 15. Most American troops are at least 17. Our military, just like other nations', wants them as young as possible so they can be easily indoctrinated.



The fact that a brutal and

The fact that a brutal and sadistic US soldier was sentenced to just 5 months for torturing to death an innocent Afghani cab driver and that not one US official has been held to account for the war crimes and crimes against humanity that took place during the illegal and on-going invasion and occupation of Iraq, says far more about US "justice" and "rule of law" than anything else that has transpired at the Stalinist show trial we just witnessed.

America is one truly ugly nation.



Omar Khadr did not volunteer

Omar Khadr did not volunteer to leave Canada to fight in Afghanistan -- he was taken there by his father at 12 or 13 years of age.

Also, he most likely did not throw the grenade that killed Speer. Watch the documentary "U.S. vs. Omar Khadr" at http://www.cbc.ca/video/#/News/1221258968/ID=1233753588 and learn that the US military altered official reports to suit its purposes, and that it was probably a US grenade that killed Speer in a friendly fire incident.



My respect for American

My respect for American Decency and American Justice has slowly waned during the last 10 years, and now all I have is bottomless contempt.



It's shit like this that has

It's shit like this that has made me ashamed to be an American.



What was that about America

What was that about America being the "Great Satan"?



Boy goes to far-off land at

Boy goes to far-off land at his fathers insistence to fight-off foreign invaders.. Takes on the most powerful nation in the world.A nation that has the most advanced weaponry in the world. Gets badly shot-up (in the back)loses sight in one eye.Gets locked up for years..Tortured......
Well now if that boy was a US citizen he'd be on Oprah and there'd be a movie made before you could say Audie Murphey.



No words to describe the

No words to describe the hypocrisy and appaling nature that has become the US. Either go by international laws and rules of engagement in a war you created out of greed and take respeonsibility or get the hell out of the war business. As a citizen of the US i am ashamed and embarrassed by the country of my birth. We are no better than nazi germany at this point.



The popular press reports

The popular press reports how extravagant were the words of blame from Ms. Speer. Sympathy for her, no doubt, pressured the "jury" to refuse to allow time served for Kahdr, to refuse to hear ameliorating circumstances, to refuse to consider torture, to refuse to consider comparative justice.

If I were undergoing an attack by Delta Force and managed to take one down, I'd think myself a hero. Any Afghani would also. Who's the aggressor in Afghanistan?

Let Omar Kahdr begin his life outside the prison system. Give him time served. And do not gloat on his signing away his rights of redress under such onerous pressure as only Guantanamo can create.



There need to be protests in

There need to be protests in the streets for this! Why isn't anyone protesting. This kid can be set free if we lend our voices! C'mon people!



So right, everyone who has

So right, everyone who has said so, this entire matter is absolutely disgusting, appalling and unconscionable. I'm sure it could be legally argued that NO ONE can legally sign away their right(s) to appeal, particularly under the duress of "Gitmo-like" conditions; in this case not just "like" Gitmo, but actually under the conditions of Gitmo itself.

Khadr did not willingly agree to the plea negotiation without duress. There is no way it could have been without duress, especially after he's been tortured, sexually threatened, knows that the people at Gitmo hold his very life in their hands and could very likely murder him at any moment, and has to live every day in fear that they will harm him.

This is all the darkest periods in this world's history rolled into one. It's degenerating back into barbarism where all accused were treated as if they had no rights. People in sovereign countries have a right and a duty to fight off foreign invaders who are carrying out "the supreme international crime" of wars of aggression against them.

But no, under this "new" system of (in)justice, those being held supposedly have no rights but to accept being railroaded under duress. They are people put in the position of having little or no choice, much like the "slaves" who were given no choice but to be eaten by lions in the Coliseum. They are being held in a place, under conditions that are similar, where they cannot fight back...



...I am so appalled and

...I am so appalled and disgusted, that it is overflowing, just as it should be with all people of conscience. But, even having a conscience is being outlawed and called "hate crimes", "aiding the enemy", etc. We have entered another dimension of hell on earth that is more and more coming to know little or no bounds, and we've got to fight back while we can, before there is and/or are very soon no opportunities to fight back.

We are all being turned into slaves. Omar Khadr is far from being the only one. Those who go along with their enslavement may be made "privileged slaves", though they will remain slaves nevertheless, but those who stand up for the rights of liberty and freedom that are innate, and that they are born with, will be crushed under the jackbooted heel of a boot stomping on a human face forever. And thus corporate-fascism wins and gains ever-increasing power at the expense, and to the grave detriment, of all freedom and liberty...

...Unless we fight back.



His lawyer did him a solid

His lawyer did him a solid by telling him to plea bargon with the US prosecutors so that he can get the hell out of the US and into Canada.

Where he will be treated as if he were a human being.

He will never get that in USA ... never



As a Canadian I'm not at all

As a Canadian I'm not at all sure he will be treated as he should be; remember we have a con government in power & our Liberal party is run by a man who was living in the USA at the time Bush started the Iraq war & agreed with it. We used to be a lot more humane country; the health care was better, we owned some of our own resources & industry, a quality university education could be obtained for $1500 a year but we have had the same con, cut the corporate taxes mantra, sell off the publics property mantra. Read Naomi Kline s book "Shock Doctrine" if you want to know how & why the corporate kleptocracy is able to take over the world with in many cases the help of the very people they hurt & in other places where the people fight back, with brutal military force. I grieve for my country & for the hard working American people who just don't see what is being done to them; good luck to us all, we will need it.



It will be interesting to

It will be interesting to see what happens when he's back under Canadian jurisdiction, where the Supreme Court has ruled that he was tortured, and where the sentence imposed on him will therefore be legally of no account.



Just curious to know if

Just curious to know if anyone has read up on the Khadr family. Don't let yourselves be fooled. Omar Khadr is nothing more than a terrorist, murderer and traitor who should be charged with treason. His family members are anti-western yet sit on welfare outside of Toronto using their Canadian citizenship for convenience only. What Canadian citizen deliberately kills an ally?



Anonymous 3:31 - Khadr

Anonymous 3:31 - Khadr likely did not kill Speer. See Anonymous 22:06 above.



If any of you have read

If any of you have read Murat Kurnaz's account of being held captive by the US in Guantanamo, a book entitled Five Years of My Life, you know exactly what sort of fear led Khadr to "admit" to crimes he likely did not commit. The US troops that we're all supposed to worship regularly beat and tortured crippled people, octogenarians, teens like Khadr, and others, almost all of whom were innocent of any wrongdoing but were hated by the sacred troops for being Arab. Electric torture was normal, doctors and dentists amputating limbs, performing unnecessary surgeries unanesthetized, and pulling teeth out of sheer sadism and "South Park"-style humor was also normal. No wonder Khadr pled as he did. The US is indeed a hell for the world.



http://www.childsoldiersgloba

http://www.childsoldiersglobalreport.org/preface



Parrish & Claus... hunt them

Parrish & Claus... hunt them down & kill them, wives, children & the family dog. You are on the list & we will find you.



Gosh, and he only will serve

Gosh, and he only will serve 8 years for killing someone. Seems terrible after he received that 40 year sentence that he would have to serve any time at all. We Americans are so terrible, we deserve to be killed. You people and this author are nuts. .



They should have just hung

They should have just hung the little prick, he's no canadian citizen



The US lost it's integrity

The US lost it's integrity when Bush came into office and then slipped further into the abyss when torture became common practice.
Getting a confession from a young man and sentencing him to 40 years imprisonment is no achievement to be proud of. Cowards...



Because Americans have a lot

Because Americans have a lot of legal basis to commit "war like acts" in Afghanistan. I mean, to all the retards that think killing a soldier in a war, by anyone, is murder, I hope you're ready to convict half your army.



This is the same idiocy as

This is the same idiocy as people thinking killing a cop is a bigger crime than a cop killing a civilian. Americans are a bit fucked up in the head.



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