Charge
against two Guantanamo detainees
A
question of international law
Frederic
L. Kirgis
On February 24, 2004, the United States charged two detainees at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, with conspiracy "to commit the following offences triable
by military commission: attacking civilians; attacking civilian objects;
murder by an unprivileged belligerent; destruction of property by an
unprivileged belligerent; and terrorism, said conduct being in the context
of and associated with armed conflict. The charges do not allege violation
of any specific statutory or treaty provisions. To be within the jurisdiction
of the military commission established by the Department of Defense,
the alleged acts must be "violations of the laws of war [or] other
offences triable by military commission. In the past, military commissions
have tried cases involving war crimes, espionage, sabotage and various
offences committed by persons in occupied territory against the occupying
forces.
The acts charged
against one of the detainees, Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi, include
becoming a member of al Qaida, passing information between terrorist
cells, serving as an accountant and deputy chief financial officer for
al Qaida, assisting in transporting weapons, acting as an armed bodyguard
for Usama bin Laden, and assisting bin Laden and other al Qaida members
in avoiding capture before, during and after the attacks of September
11, 2001. The acts charged against the other detainee, Ali Hamza Ahmad
Sulayman al Bahlul, include participating in al Qaida military training,
pledging to protect bin Laden from all harm, creating recruiting video
tapes for al Qaida (including one glorifying the October 2000 attack
on the USS Cole inYemen), acting as an armed bodyguard for bin Laden,
and assisting him and other al Qaida members in avoiding capture. The
United States does not intend to seek the death penalty for either detainee.
This Insight focuses
on certain international law issues raised by the charges and by the
use of a military commission. It does not address United States constitutional
or statutory law issues, nor does it attempt to determine what constitutes
a conspiracy under US military law.
As a matter of international
law, one might look to the Statute of the International Criminal Court
(ICC) for guidance regarding the acts that would amount to participation
in a conspiracy. Some provisions of that Statute are controversial,
but the provisions relating to conspiracy appear to be generally accepted.
In this connection, ICC Statute article 25(3)(d) says that a person
commits a crime within the ICC's jurisdiction if he or she "contributes
to the commission or attempted commission of [a punishable crime] by
a group of persons acting with a common purpose. Such contribution shall
be intentional and shall either:
"(i) Be made
with the aim of furthering the criminal activity or criminal purpose
of the group, where such activity or purpose involves the commission
of a crime within the jurisdiction of the Court; or
"(ii) Be made
in the knowledge of the intention of the group to commit the crime .
. . ."
A Chamber of the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda has dealt with allegations
of conspiracy to commit genocide. Genocide is not involved in the Guantanamo
cases, but the Rwanda Chamber's approach might nevertheless be relevant
as evidence of the meaning of "conspiracy" in international
law. The Chamber has said that the offence of conspiracy requires the
existence of an agreement, but it need not be formal or express. It
could be inferred from concerted action. According to the Chamber, a
tacit understanding of the criminal purpose would be sufficient, and
the existence of a conspiracy could be based on circumstantial evidence.
Moreover, a conspiracy to commit genocide could be comprised of individuals
acting in an institutional capacity, even in the absence of personal
links with each other.
Some guidance may
also be found in the post-World War II Nuremberg prosecutions. Article
6 of the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal criminalised conspiracy to
commit the offences set out in that article, particularly the planning,
preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression. Conspiracy
was not defined in the Charter. The Tribunal said that "the conspiracy
must be clearly outlined in its criminal purpose. It must not be too
far removed from the time of decision and action. The Tribunal must
examine whether a concrete plan to wage war existed, and determine the
participants in that concrete plan. In determining guilt or innocence
of individuals, the Tribunal said that actual knowledge of the Nazi
aggressive plans was an "all-important question.
In any event, the
burden will be on the prosecution to prove the conspiracy.
Transposed to the
context of the military commission, the crime resulting from a conspiracy
would not necessarily have to be within the jurisdiction of the ICC
or of any other international tribunal. Nevertheless, one could look
to the ICC Statute, as well as the Statutes of the International Criminal
Tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, to identify the acts
normally considered crimes under international law. They include genocide,
crimes against humanity, and war crimes.
Neither of the Guantanamo
detainees is charged with conspiracy to commit genocide or crimes against
humanity. But they are charged with conspiracy to attack civilians and
civilian objects in the context of armed conflict. The charges do not
identify these attacks as war crimes, perhaps to relieve the commission
from having to determine whether the attacks come within the prohibitions
of the Geneva Conventions of 1949. It is worth noting, though, that
war crimes under the Statutes mentioned above include wilful killing,
willfully causing serious injury, and extensive, wanton destruction
of property, if the acts are directed against persons or property protected
by the Geneva Conventions. Protected persons under Geneva Convention
IV (concerning civilians) are those who in the case of a conflict or
occupation find themselves in the hands of a party of which they are
not nationals. The ICC Statute goes further, reflecting provisions in
Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions. In the context of international
armed conflict, it criminalises such acts as intentionally directing
attacks against civilians and civilian objects, intentionally launching
an attack knowing that it will cause incidental and excessive loss of
life or injury to civilians or damage to civilian objects, and attacking
undefended buildings that are not military objectives. The United States
is not a party to the ICC Statute or to Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions,
but it is likely that the provisions just mentioned are embodied in
existing customary international law.
The military commission
may have to decide whether terrorist acts directed against the United
States or against US interests were conducted in the context of international
armed conflict, and if so, whether the conflict began on September 11,
2001, or perhaps on October 7, 2001 (when the US bombing campaign in
Afghanistan began). The conflict has not been a traditional war between
sovereign states. Nevertheless, the Counsel to the President of the
United States has said that since at least September 11, 2001, the United
States has been at war with al Qaida. If the United States is engaged
in an international armed conflict as of a given date, it does not necessarily
follow that the commission would be precluded from considering earlier
conspiratorial acts if they led to the conflict.
The remaining offences
charged against the detainees-murder by an unprivileged belligerent,
destruction of property by an unprivileged belligerent, and terrorism--do
not expressly appear in the Geneva Conventions or in the Statutes mentioned
above. Nor does the term "unprivileged belligerent." International
law does not criminalise "ordinary" murder or destruction
of property, and there is no generally accepted definition of terrorism
in international law. Nevertheless, there is a strong multinational
consensus that acts such as the bombing of the USS Cole and the attacks
of September 11, 2001, amount to terrorism.
The detainees may
claim to be prisoners of war and thus entitled to the rights that Geneva
Convention III accords to POWs. This is an important issue, primarily
because Convention III, article 102 says that a POW can be validly sentenced
only by the same courts and by the same procedure as in the case of
members of the armed forces of the detaining power and if the provisions
of the relevant chapter of the Convention have been observed. (Among
those provisions is article 99, which says that no POW may be tried
or sentenced for an act that is not forbidden by the law of the detaining
power or by international law, in force when the act was committed.)
The military commission's rules do not track those of US court-martials.
In particular, the rules of admissible evidence do not supply all of
the reliability safeguards found in the Uniform Code of Military Justice
(UCMJ), and there is no right of appeal to any court. Under the Military
Commission Order, the only appeal is to a Review Panel consisting of
three military officers, only one of whom must have experience as a
judge. Under the UCMJ, the accused has a right of appeal to the Court
of Criminal Appeals of the service involved (army, air force, or navy/marines).
After that, the US Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces may elect to
review the case, and there is even a possibility that the US Supreme
Court could review it.
Unless the detainees
were acting for the government of Afghanistan (at that time, the Taliban)
or of some other country that could be said to be a party to a conflict
with the United States, it does not appear that they would be entitled
to prisoner-of-war status. Geneva Convention III, article 4(A)(2) gives
that status to members of militias and other corps not in the service
of a state party to the conflict, only if they are commanded by a person
responsible for his subordinates, they have a fixed distinctive sign
recognisable at a distance, they carry arms openly, and they conduct
their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war. Al
Qaida operatives would not meet those conditions if they acted independently
from a government.
Even if the detainees
are not entitled to POW status, they are entitled to certain basic human
rights under international law. The United States is a party to the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (the Covenant),
which is a multilateral treaty. Article 14 of the Covenant sets forth
certain minimum guarantees designed to ensure that anyone charged with
a crime has a fair trial. Article 15 says that no one shall be held
guilty of any criminal offence for any act that did not constitute a
criminal offence under national or international law at the time it
was committed. Article 4 of the Covenant says, "[i]n time of public
emergency which threatens the life of the nation and the existence of
which is officially proclaimed," states parties may derogate from
certain provisions, including article 14, but only to the extent strictly
required by the exigencies of the situation. It does not appear, however,
that the United States is relying on article 4. There is no right to
derogate from article 15 in any event.
Under article 2(1)
of the Covenant, a state party (such as the United States) "undertakes
to respect and to ensure to all individuals within its territory and
subject to its jurisdiction the rights recognised in the present Covenant,
without distinction of any kind . . . ." On its face, this appears
to apply only to individuals who are within the state party's own territory
as well as subject to its jurisdiction. One seasoned observer has concluded,
though, that it would be contrary to the purpose of the Covenant if
states parties were not held responsible when they take actions on foreign
territory that violate the rights of persons subject to their sovereign
authority. A federal court in the United States, on the other hand,
has interpreted article 2(1) literally.
The Guantanamo detainees
are subject to US jurisdiction, but the Guantanamo base is not literally
within US territory. It is leased from Cuba. Under the 1903 lease and
a 1934 treaty, the United States has "complete jurisdiction and
control" over the base for an indefinite duration. No international
tribunal has determined whether that is equivalent to saying that the
base is part of US territory. There is a split in US federal courts
over whether the US jurisdiction and control is equivalent to full US
sovereignty over the base. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has held
that, for habeas corpus purposes, the United States has both territorial
jurisdiction and sovereignty over Guantanamo. The District of Columbia
Circuit, however, has held that the Guantanamo base is not within any
territory over which the United States is sovereign. This, too, is an
issue that the military commission may have to decide, at least if the
United States Supreme Court does not decide it first.
Finally, the military
commission might take the position that it should not consider any limits
on its decision-making powers beyond the President's Military Order
of November 13, 2001 (authorising military commissions), Department
of Defence Military Commission Order No. 114 and the terms of the charges
against the two detainees. Under international law, a nation-state is
responsible for any official acts that would violate its obligations,
whether or not the acts are done in compliance with domestic executive
or military orders.
Frederic
L. Kirgis is Law Alumni Association Professor at Washington and Lee
University School of Law and is an honorary editor of the American Journal
of International Law.
Source:
American Society for International Law ( ASIL).