Do military tribunals provide fair trials to detainees?

2013-12-08 5:16 am
For example, the people put into the Abu Ghraib camp got no free trial, and they were just tortured and interrogated without any evidence of them being a terrorist.
Should detainees be tried within their own country? Or tried by the civilian law?
What do you guys suggest is right?
THANKS! :D

回答 (5)

2013-12-08 5:27 am
✔ 最佳答案
Since they aren't US citizens, they don't fall under the same laws and liberties.
2013-12-08 1:55 pm
Neither. They're tried under the our military code of justice like they should be. They're not U.S citizens, and they committed crimes against our nation and are terrorists. They do not deserve any basic rights that citizens have. THEY ARE TERROISTS
2013-12-08 2:02 pm
The people at Abu Ghraib were removed from the battlefield as armed combatants. That's a pretty fair indication they were "bad guys."

People captured onthe field of combat who are not in uniform and/or not a member of a national military force can LEGALLY be summarily executed without trial. We're being nice to them.

You really don't have the foggiest notion what you are talking about.

Go become informed before you post another "question" that is so embarrassing to you.
參考: 100% Disabled Vietnam Veteran - Navy Airborne Electronic Warfare Officer
2013-12-08 1:44 pm
Its kind of a gray area. I personally think that they would get a "fairer" trial than they would at home.

Their native governments would probably just throw them under the bus and execute them to prove that they are on the same team as the US.
2013-12-08 1:26 pm
i believe they are being help as POW's.

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