Noted.

Noted.

Marcy Wheeler on indefinite detention for US citizens, Peter Kornbluh on the legacy of US complicity in Chile and the editors on Tony Kushner, winner of the Puffin/Nation Prize for Creative Citizenship.

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MISSION CREEP: On December 1 the Senate voted 93 to 7 to pass the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act, which has been widely criticized by civil libertarians for allowing the government the authority to imprison American citizens accused of terrorism indefinitely, without charge. For two weeks leading up to the vote, however, a related debate pitted Democrats Carl Levin and Dianne Feinstein against each other. At issue? Whether the 2004 Supreme Court decision in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld had already given the government that authority. As Levin repeatedly noted, the plurality decision in Hamdi asserted that “there is no bar to this nation’s holding one of its own citizens as an enemy combatant.”

Ultimately, the Senate decided not to decide, instead inserting language stating, “Nothing in [the detention section of the bill] shall be construed to affect existing law or authorities, relating to the detention of United States citizens” or anyone else.

The debate may have surprised Americans who thought the Bill of Rights guaranteed due process. But while no citizen has been held in military custody without charge since Jose Padilla, both the Bush and Obama administrations have used Hamdi to justify using “war powers” against citizens, including warrantless wiretapping, interrupted communications and the targeted killing of the American-born Yemeni cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

Now Levin claims Americans need not worry about the government abusing indefinite detention, because habeas corpus guarantees court review of the government’s claims. But such assurances ring hollow. A recent DC Circuit Court decision, Latif v. Obama, significantly watered down such review, instructing judges to assume that documents the government submits—even intelligence reports with clear errors, like the central report in that case—are accurate.

The Justice Department has proven far more successful than military commissions at prosecuting accused terrorists. Claims in cases like Latif—and legislative efforts to codify those claims—move us much closer to a dangerous scenario, where the government could use secret intelligence, rather than legal proof, to imprison American citizens.   MARCY WHEELER

CHILE: JUDGMENT DAY ON THE U.S.: In 1982 the poignant Oscar-winning Costa Gavras movie Missing depicted the true story of two US citizens, Charles Horman and Frank Teruggi, seized and executed by the Chilean military after the September 1973 coup. The film focused on the disappearance of Horman, and the desperate attempts by his father and wife to find him in the face of cold indifference, and possible participation, of pro-coup US officials in Chile.

Now, thirty-eight years after they were killed, a Chilean judge, Jorge Zepeda, has issued an indictment in the case that not only vindicates the premise of the film but appears to go well beyond it in asserting US complicity. On November 29 Zepeda indicted a Chilean intelligence officer, as well as the former head of the US Military Group, Navy Capt. Ray Davis, as accomplices to the murders. In a petition to the Chilean Supreme Court to authorize an extradition request, Zepeda stated that Davis was responsible for a “secret intelligence-gathering investigation of US citizens” in Chile. Information casting them as “extremists” was allegedly turned over to the intelligence branch of the Chilean High Command after the coup. Zepeda suggests that intelligence on Teruggi, including his address in Santiago, led to his detention on September 20, 1973.

While the film postulated that Horman was detained because he had inadvertently stumbled across proof of US involvement in the coup, Zepeda’s investigation has produced a different scenario: the military believed that Horman was involved in “subversive” work with a Chilean government film company, Chile Films, that was under surveillance for its pro-Allende media activities. A declassified US document cited in the indictment speculated that Horman may have been killed because he was working on a film about the Allende government at the time of the coup. In its most chilling statement, the indictment alleges that Davis was in a position to “override the will” of the Chilean military to execute Horman—but chose not to.

Captain Davis, as it tragically turns out, has advanced Alzheimer’s disease and is confined to a nursing home in Florida. There will be no extradition, nor will there ever be a courtroom verdict. But if—and it is a big if—the judge can produce evidence to back up his charges, he will finally provide a verdict of history on US complicity in the deaths of two of its young citizens in Chile.   PETER KORNBLUH

CITIZEN KUSHNER: On December 5 in New York City, The Nation Institute’s annual gala dinner featured a special guest, playwright Tony Kushner, winner of the 2011 Puffin/Nation Prize for Creative Citizenship. The award is presented every year to a person “who has challenged the status quo through distinctive, courageous, imaginative and socially responsible work of significance.”

Rather than accept the $100,000 that accompanies the prize, Kushner announced that he will use it to establish an endowed scholarship at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, part of the City University of New York, whose board of trustees sparked outrage this past spring by denying Kushner an honorary degree because of his political views.

“I don’t feel that I should profit from any successes I have as a citizen,” Kushner said. “The whole point of citizenship is that one admits to a personal stake and to the potential derivation of benefit in giving to and sacrificing for the community…. When we step into our citizen selves, we step into that part of our lives, our souls, that exist only in relationship to others.”

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