When the terrorists attack again - as Homeland Security has repeatedly
warned us they will - how many survivors will be consoled because the
Supreme Court and the State Department looked out for the "rights" of
terrorists before the rights of their dead loved ones?
Will the dead be wrapped in a copy of the Supreme Court's 5-4 ruling
granting foreign detainees, whose mission is to destroy our Constitution,
our country and way of life, the right to appeal to U.S. civilian courts to
challenge their detention, a right that should be reserved only for American
citizens? Perhaps inside the caskets can go a statement by the State
Department refusing to close Islamic schools underwritten by the government
of Saudi Arabia, which teach visceral hatred of Jews, Christians and all
things Western.
To the second issue first. Despite the recommendation from a federal panel
that the Islamic Saudi Academy in Alexandria, Va., be closed for promoting
hate, the State Department won't go along. State has jurisdiction because as
part of the Saudi government, the school is subject to the Foreign Missions
Act. A local Democratic politician running for Congress won't support the
closing of the school, either. He is Fairfax County Board of Supervisors
Chairman Gerry Connolly, who has reportedly called critics of the academy
"bigots." Perhaps his position is related to a $2.2 million check he
accepted from the Saudi Embassy to extend its lease.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom looked into reports
that the school was teaching hate. The school promised to clean up the
textbooks. The commission looked again to see if the school had done so and
concluded it had not. In addition to vilifying Jews, children are taught it
is permissible for a Muslim to kill a non-Muslim and those who convert from
Islam. We are allowing a training ground for future terrorists on American
soil.
In addition to whatever harm is caused by terrorists who manage to win their
freedom, the Supreme Court decision will cause collateral damage. Granting
terrorists seized on the battlefield access to civilian courts also sends
another message; America is not serious about winning the war. It tells them
they can "game" the system, demanding rights and protections unknown in
their countries of origin. According to Justice Antonin Scalia, 30 former
detainees have "allegedly" returned to the battlefield to kill American
troops and others. On whose hands should be their blood? Who should be held
accountable for the blood of Americans killed by terrorists who have gained
their freedom courtesy of a federal judge, a judge who has usurped the
authority and judgment of the executive branch and the military? This is
bound to demoralize our soldiers who will wonder why they should bother to
seize terrorists at all if they are just going to be released. They might
kill them all in the field, but then they would probably be court-martialed.
The U.S. Constitution (Article 1, Section 9) says, "The privilege of the
Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of
rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it." Justice Anthony
Kennedy, one of Ronald Reagan's biggest mistakes (Justice David Souter being
George H.W. Bush's even bigger mistake) wrote that the same rights granted
to American citizens also cover non-citizens by virtue of their presence on
land controlled by the U.S. military, even though that land is Cuba.
Have we not been invaded? Didn't the 9/11 terrorists "invade" America for
the specific purpose of harming us? What is the purpose of the Saudi Islamic
Academy and similar religious sites around the country if not to serve as
cover for terrorists intent on endangering the public safety?
The next attack probably won't come by airplane. It will come in a shopping
mall, or a school, or on Wall Street, or possibly all three. It will occur
simultaneously in many places and probably kill more than the nearly 3,000
who died in 2001. Perhaps someone who manages to extricate himself from
Guantanamo, thanks to a liberal judge, will lead the attack. What will the
Supreme Court and State Department say to cleanse the blood from their
hands?
|