Senate Panel Approves Rival Plan on Tribunals
A key Senate committee defies President Bush on the question of how to try suspects in the war on terror. With four Republicans joining the Democrats, the Senate Armed Services Committee approved an alternative to the president's proposed rules.
The alternative, offered by Chairman John Warner of Virginia, would restore the suspects' rights under the Geneva Convention and international law.
The vote came after former Secretary of State Colin Powell sent a letter to one of the committee's senior Republican members, Sen. John McCain of Arizona.
The former secretary and retired chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff took strong exception to the president's proposal, saying it would undermine the moral basis for America's war on terror -- and backfire on U.S. troops overseas.
The events interrupted a day when the president had expected to advance his bid for more authority in dealing with terror suspects. President Bush visited House Republicans Thursday to discuss his proposal for trying terrorism suspects held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Discussing his alternative plan, Sen. Warner said that he merely tried to come up with legislation that will pass the scrutiny of the Supreme Court, which the Bush administration's previous court plan failed to do.
Sen. Carl Levin, the panel's top Democrat, said protecting U.S. troops is the chief concern of those who helped craft the alternative legislation.
Powell, Rice Letters on Detainee Legislation

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, left, and her predecessor, Colin Powell, are at odds over detainee legislation.
Following are letters by former Secretary of State Colin Powell and current Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on proposed legislation defining acceptable interrogation and prosecution procedures for terrorism suspects held outside of the regular U.S. legal system. The letters were released Thursday.
Powell's letter:
Dear Senator McCain:
I just returned to town and learned about the debate taking place in Congress to redefine Common Article 3 of the Geneva Convention. I do not support such a step and believe it would be inconsistent with the McCain amendment on torture which I supported last year.
I have read the powerful and eloquent letter sent to you by one (of) my distinguished predecessors as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Jack Vessey. I fully endorse in tone and tint his powerful argument. The world is beginning to doubt the moral basis of our fight against terrorism. To redefine Common Article 3 would add to those doubts. Furthermore, it would put our own troops at risk.
I am as familiar with "The Armed Forces Officer" as is Jack Vessey. It was written after all the horrors World War II and General George C. Marshall, then Secretary of Defense, used it to tell the world and to remind our soldiers of our moral obligations with respect to those in our custody.
Sincerely,
Colin L. Powell
* * *
Rice's letter:
Dear Mr. Chairman (John Warner):
Yesterday we discussed how the Department of State viewed the international legal obligations that flow from Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, in comparison with other relevant legal standards in U.S. law.
Our international partners expect that we will undertake good faith interpretations of the Conventions' text, consistent with their object and purpose. In a case where the treaty's terms are inherently vague, it is appropriate for a state to look to its own legal framework, precedents, concepts and norms in interpreting these terms and carrying out its international obligations. Such practice in the application of a treaty is an accepted reference point in international law. The proposed legislation would strengthen U.S. adherence to Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions because it would add meaningful definition and clarification to vague terms in the treaties.
In the department's view, there is not, and should not be, any inconsistency with respect to the substantive behavior that is prohibited in paragraphs (a) and (c) of Section 1 of Common Article 3 and the behavior that is prohibited as "cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment," as that phrase is defined in the U.S. reservation to the Convention Against Torture. That substantive standard was also utilized by Congress in the Detainee Treatment Act. Thus it is a reasonable, good faith interpretation of Common Article 3 to state, as the proposed legislation does, that the prohibitions found in the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 fully satisfy the obligations of the United States with respect to the standards for detention and treatment established in those paragraphs of Common Article 3.
The Department of State supports this legislation and we believe it will help demonstrate to our international partners that we are committed to compliance with Common Article 3.
Sincerely,
Condoleezza Rice
Source: The Associated Press

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