Washington Post (March 19, 2010)
The best trial option for KSM: Nothing
By Benjamin Wittes and Jack L.
Goldsmith
The Obama administration and its
critics are locked in a standoff over whether to try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and the other alleged Sept.
11 conspirators in a military commission or in federal court. Both
sides are busily ignoring the obvious solution: Don't bother trying them at
all.
Mohammed has already spent more than
seven years in military detention. Both the Obama administration and the
Republicans who object to trying him in federal court accept the legitimacy of
such detention as a traditional incident of war for those in the command
structure of al-Qaeda, and perhaps for associated forces as well. In general
outline, so do the courts. Given these facts, the politically draining fight
about civilian vs. military trials is not worth the costs. It also distracts
from more important questions in the legal war against terrorism.
The question of trial forum is
important in certain cases. Before the Obama administration embraced the
propriety of military detention, it was important for Mohammed, too. If one
intends to hold people only pursuant to criminal charges, as some in the Obama
administration once suggested, the nature of those charges and the forum for
them matter a lot.
But these issues matter much less
since President Obama made clear -- to the anger of the left and to assenting
nods from everyone else -- that he reserves the right to detain people outside
of the criminal justice system. The administration has said that it will continue to hold around 50 Guantanamo detainees
without bringing charges against them. That number is a low-ball fiction,
because a large additional group of Yemenis is not going anywhere anytime soon.
It also holds hundreds of alleged terrorists in military detention at Bagram
air base in Afghanistan and other overseas bases. It even reserves the right to
hold in military detention terrorists who are
acquitted at trial.
In light of the common ground about
military detention between the administration and the Republican Party, what
value might a criminal trial in a civilian or a military forum add? Detention
already serves to incapacitate high-value suspects. A trial potentially adds
three things: the option of the death penalty; enhanced legitimacy in some
quarters, especially abroad; and a certain catharsis and historical judgment in
the form of a criminal verdict.
These are not trivial benefits, but
as the political battle over the past few months has shown, they come at great
cost. Domestically, the political costs of trying high-level terrorists in
federal courts have become exorbitant for the administration -- unaffordably
high, it seems to be turning out.
The legal and political risks of using the ill-fated
military commission system are also significant. Since the Supreme
Court offered a road map for a legally defensible system, Congress has twice
given its blessing. But serious legal issues remain unresolved, including the validity
of the nontraditional criminal charges that will be central to the commissions'
success and the role of the Geneva Conventions. Sorting out these and dozens of
other novel legal issues raised by commissions will take years and might render
them ineffectual. Such foundational uncertainty makes commissions a less than
ideal forum for trying Mohammed.
Moreover, the public relations and
related legitimacy benefits of trying Mohammed in a commission are not that
great, especially because the administration insists that he will remain in
detention even if acquitted. The possibility that the administration might try
him in a commission has been met with anger and disdain by the American left
and many European elites, who think commissions are as illegitimate as they
believe the underlying detention system to be. They will work hard to
delegitimize those proceedings, too.
In short, a military commission
trial might achieve slight public relations and legitimacy benefits over
continued military detention of Mohammed, and it might facilitate his martyrdom
by ultimately allowing the government to put him to death. But this would add
so little to the military detention that the administration already regards as
legitimate that a trial isn't worth the effort, cost and political fight it
would take.
Eight and a half years after the
Sept. 11 attacks, it is time to be realistic about terrorist detention. The
number of Guantanamo trials will not, under the best of circumstances, be
large. Instead of expending great energy on a battle over the proper forum for
an unnecessary trial of Mohammed and his associates, both sides would do well
instead to define the contours of the detention system that will, for some time
to come, continue to do the heavy lifting in incapacitating terrorists.
Benjamin Wittes is a senior fellow
and research director in public law at the Brookings Institution. Jack Goldsmith
teaches at Harvard Law School and served as an
assistant attorney general in the Bush administration. Both are members of the Hoover Institution's Task Force on National Security
and Law.