Originally posted by Weasel
"Citizens who associate themselves with the military arm of the enemy government, and with its aid, [317 U.S. 1, 38] guidance and direction enter this country bent on hostile acts are enemy belligerents within the meaning of the Hague Convention and the law of war."
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Is it guilty by being associated with Al Qaeda which is/was part of the Taliban which ruled Afganistan...a country the US, I thought was at war with.
The key words in there are "military arm of the enemy government". The Al-Qaeda is not an organised standing army; they are a militia. The Taliban was never recognised as the legitimate government of Afghanistan by the United States (and most of the rest of the world). If the Justice Department tries to use this precedent in court, it will fail.
Further, the United States is not at war, despite what Dubya and his cronies tell us every night on the news. The "war" on terrorism is a contrived soundbyte that Dubya has cooked up to bolster his popularity and cover his (unconstitutional) actions. The singular entity which has the power to declare war on another state is the Congress. The President of the United States can't do it, individuals can't do it, the Supreme Court can't do it. Only the Congress is so empowered (Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution).
The president (or anyone else for that matter) can "declare war" on whatever they hell he wants; last I checked we were at "war" with poverty, illiteracy and drugs (to name a few causes). However, none of those are binding to the nation and none of those are actual wars.
As our friend VoodooDali says, I think the government is using this as a way to pump Padilla for everything he knows and let him become the precedent. They know he'll win on appeal and they know that what they're doing is unconsitutional at its very core. However, during that time, they've gleaned whatever they can from him and by the time his case makes its way to the Supreme Court (where it will probably end up), he will have long since ceased to be of any use to them.