Military Tribunals and Legal Culture: What a Difference Sixty Years Makes

J. Goldsmith, C. Sunstein
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引用次数: 183

Abstract

President Bush's Military Order establishing Military Commissions was greeted with impassioned criticism in the press, the legal academy, and Congress. Sixty years earlier, in the midst of World War II, President Roosevelt established a Military Commission to try eight Nazi agents who had covertly entered the United States to commit acts of sabotage and terrorism. Although the Nazis failed in their mission, their aims were similar to those of the 9/11 terrorists. And yet Roosevelt's creation of the Commission, and the subsequent secret trial of the Nazi saboteurs, received widespread praise from the same institutions that protested Bush's action. Our purpose in this paper is not to investigate, except in passing, issues of law and policy. We instead explore three other questions: What explains the dramatically different reactions? What lessons do the different reactions offer about changes, over time, in the legal culture and in culture in general? What lessons do they offer about the evolution of protections for civil liberties in general and during wartime in particular? The most tempting, and common, explanation for the different reactions is that there is a significant difference in law - that President Roosevelt's Order stands on much firmer legal ground than President Bush's order. We show that this and related explanations are weak. The different reactions are best explained in terms of two large differences between the United States of 1942 and the United States of 2001. In 1942, the nation perceived a far greater threat to its own survival; for this reason Americans were far less solicitous of the interests of defendants thought to have participated in a war effort against the United States. But this explanation is inadequate by itself. It must be supplemented with an understanding of the large-scale, post-1960s shift in American attitudes, involving decreased trust of executive authority and military authority. Our general claim is that with respect to these issues, the legal culture is fundamentally different from what it was before, so much so that many previous practices are barely recognizable. We use the different reactions to the Bush and Roosevelt Military Orders as a way of obtaining a window on this shift. After making out these claims, we conclude with some general reflections on the evolution of civil liberties protections during wartime. In particular, we identify a mechanism behind the trend toward greater protection for civil liberties during wartime, namely: A judgment, in hindsight, that past civil liberty intrusions were unnecessary or excessive. We also suggest that this trend is, in a way, an accident of America's distinctive history.
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军事法庭与法律文化:60年的变化
布什总统颁布的设立军事委员会的军事命令受到了新闻界、法律界和国会的激烈批评。60年前,在第二次世界大战期间,罗斯福总统成立了一个军事委员会,审判8名秘密进入美国从事破坏和恐怖主义活动的纳粹特工。虽然纳粹的任务失败了,但他们的目标与9/11恐怖分子相似。然而,罗斯福成立的委员会,以及随后对纳粹破坏者的秘密审判,受到了抗议布什行动的同一机构的广泛赞扬。我们写这篇文章的目的不是为了调查法律和政策问题,只是顺带说说而已。我们转而探讨另外三个问题:如何解释截然不同的反应?随着时间的推移,在法律文化和一般文化中,不同的反应提供了什么教训?它们对保护公民自由的演变提供了什么教训,特别是在战争期间?对于不同的反应,最诱人、最常见的解释是法律上的重大差异——罗斯福总统的命令比布什总统的命令有更坚实的法律基础。我们表明,这和相关的解释是薄弱的。1942年的美国和2001年的美国之间有两个巨大的不同,可以很好地解释这种不同的反应。1942年,这个国家意识到自己的生存面临着更大的威胁;由于这个原因,美国人远不关心被告的利益,他们被认为参与了反对美国的战争。但这种解释本身是不够的。它必须辅以对20世纪60年代后美国态度的大规模转变的理解,包括对行政当局和军事当局信任度的下降。我们的一般主张是,就这些问题而言,法律文化与以前根本不同,以至于许多以前的做法几乎无法辨认。我们利用对布什和罗斯福军事命令的不同反应,作为了解这种转变的一个窗口。在提出这些主张之后,我们总结了一些关于战时公民自由保护演变的一般性思考。特别是,我们确定了在战争期间加强对公民自由保护的趋势背后的机制,即:事后判断,过去对公民自由的侵犯是不必要的或过度的。我们还认为,这种趋势在某种程度上是美国独特历史的偶然产物。
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