Originally
posted by
Angel1:
When the US really decided to pursue a war on terror under the Bush administration, they realized a very serious problem: Terrorists do not fall under either prisoner of war or criminal categories. They're not simply prisoners of war as they don't represent a nation. They're not simply criminals as many (most) are captured by the military on the battlefield. They are simply unlawful enemy combatants. Neiher international nor domestic law covers unlawful enemy combatants.
Sure, those terrorists who have been caught using traditional police work are tried in civilian courts, but that's not because they are criminals but because in certain unique circumstances, terrorists are captured in a way consistent with the methods police would use to capture criminals. They can therefore be tried by the system that handles criminals. However, those terrorists captured on the battlefield can't simply be granted civilian trials as the methods leading to their capture are inconsistent with the methods used to capture simple criminals.
As stated above, the geneva convention applies to those individuals fighting on behalf of a nation. Terrorists don't fight for nations, they fight against nations as individuals and as organizations. International organized crime does not fight nations, it harms individuals, but it doesn't really seek (in most cases) to destabilize and destroy nations. On this note, the drug cartels in Mexico could arguably be called terrorist organizations (let's save that for a different, academic, thread). It might actually be easier for the US to call the terrorists "prisoners of war" as the war on terror will never end and thus the US could hold these people indefinately.
Angel1, you are mixing concepts, namely fighting terrorism with unlawful combatants in a war.
There is a long list of treaties regarding terrorism, and it is nothing really new:
http://www.un.org/terrorism/instruments.shtml
Basically, they go to trial.
Unlawful combatants is Geneva Convention
fluff:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unlawful_combatant
They still do get a trial so that an individual detainee can be found (or not, and this happened tons of times in the war on terror) to be an unlawful combatant. Also, if they are found to be an unlawful combatant, they still should be treated humanely, and if tried sentences must be pronounced by a regularly constituted court.
What doesn`t exist is a legal black hole called unlawful combatant that gives blanch card for people to do whatever the
fluff they want to do to those combatants...