Entry: What Did We Learn from the Moussaoui Trial? Saturday, May 06, 2006



Zacarias Moussaoui deserved to die far more than any of the innocent victims of 9/11. Instead, he was tried in a civilian court and sentenced to live a long and healthy life at taxpayer expense, if not a comfortable one. As far as I'm concerned, the minute he said, "I am a member of al-Qaeda," he should have been taken out back and shot without another word. Unfortunately, membership in an organisation dedicated to the deliberate mass murder of innocent people in order to enslave the world under a twisted religious dictatorship doesn't happen to be grounds for immediate execution. Meanwhile, French Foreign Ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei has already spoken of a "possible demand for transferring Zacarias Moussaoui" to France. That's what happens when we treat terrorism as a matter of law enforcement rather than an act of war.

In June 1942, eight German agents entered the United States in two groups of four, landing by submarine in Florida and New York. They carried "enough explosives, primers, and incendiaries to support an expected two-year career in the sabotage of American defense-related production." George John Dasch, the leader of one group, apparently lost his nerve. He called the FBI and surrendered. Dasch convinced another man, Ernest Peter Burger, to talk to the FBI as well. Because of the information they gave under interrogation, the others were rounded up within days.

The eight saboteurs were tried before a military tribunal and sentenced to death. In ex parte Quirin, the Supreme Court decided that the eight men had violated the rules of war by wearing civilian clothing during a military operation. President Roosevelt commuted Dasch's sentence to 30 years and Burger's to life imprisonment. The other six were executed within a few days of sentencing. They never got a chance to commit even a single act of sabotage. The Nazis were so stunned by the utter failure that they never tried another such operation. That's the proper way to handle enemy agents in a time of war.

Moussaoui, on the other hand, was sent through our criminal justice system. He had foreknowledge of a terrorist act that cost the lives of nearly 3,000 innocents. He confessed that he had planned to fly a plane into the White House in a separate operation. He was in FBI custody before 9/11, yet deliberately lied to prevent anyone from discovering the plot before the attack took place. As an agent of a foreign power intent on committing terrorist acts in the US, surely he deserved the same fate as those long-dead Nazi agents who only planned to blow up defense installations. But because he was tried by a civilian court instead of a military tribunal, Moussaoui was allowed to live.

We've all heard the reasons for not sentencing Moussaoui to death. "He had a rough childhood" is one of my favorites. Lots of people have rough childhoods; it's no excuse for becoming a terrorist. "He didn't actually kill anyone" is another. Neither did those Nazi saboteurs; the only crimes they actually committed were immigration violation and conspiracy. There's also the smug "he wanted to die, and we denied him his wish." Next time I get stopped for speeding, I'm going to tell the cop that I really want a ticket, and the best punishment would be to deny me my wish. Maybe I can get away while he's laughing.

Some might think that by showing "mercy" to Moussaoui, we've made some sort of point with either our enemies or our allies. A trial is supposed to be about law and justice. Sometimes it's about retribution and punishment. One thing a trial should never be is a world popularity contest. Our allies don't need to be reminded who we are and what we stand for, and there isn't a single enemy who will think, "Gee, maybe the Great Satan isn't so bad after all." On the contrary, we've shown the world that we don't take this war seriously by allowing Moussaoui to live.

Our enemies will take the Moussaoui sentence as a sign of the same weakness of will that led them to plan 9/11 in the first place, and maybe they have a point. We treated terrorism as a law enforcement problem all through the nineties, while our enemies were at war with us. The response to the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, for instance, was a trial. Few dared to look beyond the immediate perpetrators to seek those who sent them. The entire fiction of "stateless terrorism" was created just to avoid confrontation with Iraq over the bombing.

Ramzi Yousef, the "mastermind" of the 1993 bombing, sits in the same Supermax prison for which Moussaoui is destined. Did Yousef's trial and incarceration stop our enemies, the way executing Nazi saboteurs did? On the contrary, Bin Laden and his kind saw that we arbitrarily bound ourselves in ways that gave them freedom to act, and let them take the initiative against us. They saw that we would not act without clear evidence and court orders. Yousef got to watch 9/11 unfold in his cell while reading his Qur'an. What future attacks might Moussaoui get to witness?

War has different rules than catching crooks, for obvious reasons. Common criminals generally aren't trying to destroy our civilisation; they're trying to live off it. Soldiers on a battlefield don't have to collect evidence or conduct a trial before shooting an enemy. But in this kind of war, the battlefield is everywhere, and enemies hide among our own people. Captured enemies should be brought before a military tribunal and executed without long delays. If we return to the law enforcement mindset when dealing with terrorists, we return to the sort of willful blindness that let our enemies plot to kill thousands.

One can only hope that we learn a lesson from this whole Moussaoui trial: civilian criminals are one thing, and enemies another.

   8 comments

Paladin
May 6, 2006   12:39 PM PDT
 
WTF do you have to do these days to get the death penalty?? BY THE GODS people. it really pisses me off to think that my tax money is going to pay for the well being of such filth as these men. They say it's worse to put people in jail and make them suffer the lose of freedom.the say it's HUMANE to do that instead of barbarically kill them. But in doing that we cost those people who have suffered at their hands an untold amount of suffering and pain. For what?? For being a victim of an animal that has little or no regard for innocent life. The mere fact that they say there are NO innocents in their war on america that we are ALL evil and should die simply means that it SHOULD BE easier to try them in ANY court. They're sole purpose for living is to KILL americans ANY americans. you,me, the little kid playing on the street ANY american. So what do we do?? We imprison them for a life of NO hard labor three meals a day,shelter,and clothing. BOY are we showing them.The people here need to stop just talking about how outraged they are about what has happened and actually DO something about it. The right thing about it would be to remove from exsistance these monsters who wear human skin. My tax money could be put to MUCH better use then paying for their imprisonment. Like giving him what he wants. Strap his ass into an airplane and fly him into a building. Say one FULL of terrorist. THAT would make me feel better about spending the money.
HARDCASe
May 6, 2006   08:15 PM PDT
 
Much as I would like to see the sucker burn in hell for what he did, I'll be damned if we should make that piece of trash a martyr to the Islamic cause. Better he should take his chances in the general population of his prison. Or just be by himself for all eternity. (We do have a habit of ignoring the trash we have removed.)
Letsgetallofthem
May 7, 2006   12:28 AM PDT
 
Wait a minute! Why is nobody bringing up the valid point of the traitorous bastards in the F.B.I.? There were at least two F.B.I. agents (remember the one in Arizona who said she had forwarded info regarding flight training to the main office and the F.B.I. agent who on the witness stand admitted his superiors should be on trial for at least criminal negligence!)who gave info to their bosses and it was summarily dismissed. And if the administration was able to get such information about the W.M.D., why couldn't they get info on this attack if they wanted?For your information, I am a conservative republican. I just like to see justice done, not lynching.
Shoe
May 8, 2006   06:41 AM PDT
 
I'm not sure there is such a thing as a "martyr to the Islamic cause" any more. The propaganda that is fed to these people by their leaders is piled so high that the scum of the earth is made to appear saintly on a regular basis. The spin our enemies will put on our justice is no reason for us not to dispense it unflinchingly. Virtually every other nation in the world will look down its nose at America regardless of what we do, so let's do the right thing and let the chips fall where they may.
LC
May 8, 2006   08:14 AM PDT
 
Until we become as dedicated to the preservation of our Country as Al Qaeda is to destroying us we are going to lose. We can not be appeasers and remain strong.
Rational Pete
May 8, 2006   10:47 AM PDT
 
I think all of you are missing the point. We win both ways by putting him in jail for life (and try to stay calm until you see my point instead of dismissing it as a pinko-liberal which I am certainly not). On one hand we get the ability to say to the international community, see our system works, we went with the "fair" verdict. On the other hand, as soon as that piece of human refuse hits the general prison population he's going to get killed. Jeffrey Dahmer lasted 2 years 9 months before a fellow inmate killed him and I bet that Moussaoui doesn't even last that long. When he dies in prison we can wash our hands of the situation and say "it wasn't us, we just gave him life in jail."

If you look at the situation rationally, he's going to die anyway, and we might as well let our criminals do the dirty work for us.
Maureen
May 8, 2006   11:11 PM PDT
 
Pete, What makes you so sure that he will be put in General Population??? Don't you think his attorney will fight to have him in protective????
Rational Pete
May 8, 2006   11:49 PM PDT
 
Because if I can think of this then there's no doubt that our government has. They may be slow to help but they always know all the dirty tricks to get at somebody. Sure, he may not end up in general population immediately, that would look bad in the news. But mark my words as soon as media attention dies down they'll slip him in and then it's only a matter of time. There's no chance in hell he's getting sent to France either. Mark my words.

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