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David Axelrod: Obama
Undecided on KSM Trial Venue
February 1, 2010
The Obama administration says no decision has been reached on where to
hold trials for accused terrorists, including the self-proclaimed
mastermind of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. The
issue resurfaced after the administration backed away from plans to hold
civilian trials in New York City.
Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed,center, and co-defendant Walid Bin Attash,left,
attending a pre-trial session Monday,Dec. 8, 2008, at the Guantanamo Bay
Naval Base, Cuba .
Last year, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder made headlines when he
announced Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other high-profile terror suspects
would be tried in federal court just blocks from where the World Trade
Center twin towers once stood. In the months since, New York City
authorities have expressed opposition to the idea, based on security
concerns and the costs that would be incurred.
Now, the Obama administration says the matter is under review. Senior
White House advisor David Axelrod spoke on NBC's Meet the Press
television program.
"We have made no decisions on that yet," he said. "The president
believes that we need to take into consideration what the local
authorities are saying. But he also believes that we ought to bring
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and all others who are involved in terrorist acts
to justice, swift and sure."
The proposed New York venue has run into opposition from some members of
President Obama's Democratic Party. Indiana Senator Evan Bayh spoke on
the Fox News Sunday television program.
"I do not think we should spend any more money than is absolutely
necessary to try these guys [terror suspects]," he said. "We ought to
try them quickly. We ought to impose harsh sentences, including the
death penalty for people who have killed Americans. Those are my
criteria."
Other Democrats say that costs should not be the determining factor when
deciding a trial location.
But it is not just the proposed venue that is generating debate. Many
Republicans say accused terrorists who have been classified as enemy
combatants should face justice at military, rather than civilian trials.
Also appearing on Fox News Sunday, Wisconsin Representative Paul Ryan
was critical of Attorney General Holder's handling of the matter.
"[Holder] is making the wrong decisions," he said. "And he is going to
give Khalid Sheikh Mohammed a propaganda tool that is going to help the
terrorists and not help U.S. citizens."
Ryan and other Republicans have argued that civilian trials for accused
terrorists would invite sensationalized media coverage and allow
defendants to manipulate and exploit constitutional and procedural
safeguards that are built into America's legal system. But Democrats
accuse Republicans of a double standard, noting the former Bush
administration also tried terror suspects in federal court. Maryland
Congressman Chris Van Hollen on Fox News Sunday:
"Under the Bush administration, we used federal courts and we used
military commissions. Under the Obama administration, we are using
federal courts and military commissions," he responded.
The latest high-profile terror suspect is a Nigerian man accused of
attempting to blow up a U.S.-bound jet with explosives hidden under his
clothing on Christmas Day. Republicans have been critical of the Obama
administration's handling of the case after media reports surfaced that
the suspect had been advised of his right to refuse to answer U.S.
interrogators' questions less than an hour after the interrogation
began.
"We
need to find out from terrorists, like the Christmas Day bomber, what
else he knows [about terror plots]," said Tennessee Senator Lamar
Alexander on Fox News Sunday.
The Obama administration maintains that advising the Nigerian suspect of
his rights did not prevent interrogators from obtaining useful
information.
"He has given very valuable information to the government about
activities in Yemen and some of his experiences there," added White
House Advisor David Axelrod. "And we have not lost anything as a result
of how his case has been handled."
Last week saw the first appeal of a military commission conviction of a
Guantanamo Bay detainee, top al-Qaida propagandist Ali al-Bahlul. A
three-judge panel heard oral arguments in Washington, but did not
specify when a decision would be forthcoming. |