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brayton_headshot_wre_1443.jpg Ed Brayton is a journalist, commentator and speaker. He is the co-founder and president of Michigan Citizens for Science and co-founder of The Panda's Thumb. He has written for such publications as The Bard, Skeptic and Reports of the National Center for Science Education, spoken in front of many organizations and conferences, and appeared on nationally syndicated radio shows and on C-SPAN. Ed is also a Fellow with the Center for Independent Media and the host of Declaring Independence, a one hour weekly political talk show on WPRR in Grand Rapids, Michigan.(static)

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Gitmo Prosecutor Speaks Out

Posted on: October 20, 2008 9:16 AM, by Ed Brayton

Lt. Col. Darrel Vandeveld, the 4th Gitmo prosecutor to resign in protest of what they consider unjust military tribunals, exchanged some emails with the LA Times, which you can read about here. What he tells them should be a wake up call for everyone who still supports the Bush administration's unconstitutional and unjust policies. First they quote an email that he sent to a priest when he began to doubt what was going on:

Even if he had no doubt about the guilt of the accused, he wrote in an August e-mail, "I am beginning to have grave misgivings about what I am doing, and what we are doing as a country. . . .

"I no longer want to participate in the system, but I lack the courage to quit. I am married, with children, and not only will they suffer, I'll lose a lot of friends."

He managed to find the courage to quit. He not only resigned as a JAG prosecutor at Gitmo, he resigned from active duty as well.

In a declaration and subsequent testimony, he said the U.S. government was not providing defense lawyers with the evidence it had against their clients, including exculpatory information -- material considered helpful to the defense.

Saying that the accused enemy combatants were more likely to be wrongly convicted without that evidence, Vandeveld testified that he went from being a "true believer to someone who felt truly deceived" by the tribunals. The system in place at the U.S. military facility in Cuba, he wrote in his declaration, was so dysfunctional that it deprived "the accused of basic due process and subject[ed] the well-intentioned prosecutor to claims of ethical misconduct."

Here's some of what he said to the Times:

Vandeveld, who was prosecuting seven tribunal cases -- nearly a third of pending cases -- has declined to be interviewed about the particulars of the Jawad case. But he did engage in a series of e-mails with The Times about his general concerns, before being "reminded" last week that he could not talk to the press until his release from active duty was final. In the future, he said, he plans to speak out.

"I don't know how else the creeping rot of the commissions and the politics that fostered and continued to surround them could be exposed to the curative powers of the sunlight," he said. "I care not for myself; our enemies deserve nothing less than what we would expect from them were the situations reversed. More than anything, I hope we can rediscover some of our American values."

Some tribunal defense lawyers are preparing to call Vandeveld as a witness, saying that his claims of systemic problems at Guantanamo, if true, could alter the outcome of every pending case there -- and force the turnover of long-sought information on coercive interrogation tactics and other controversial measures used against their clients in the war on terrorism.

For years, defense lawyers and human rights organizations have raised similar concerns in individual cases. "But we never had anyone on the inside who could validate those claims," said Michael J. Berrigan, the deputy chief defense counsel for the commissions.

Naturally, the Pentagon is now making it sound as though he's disgruntled and crazy. They just can't imagine why he's now saying all of this. But his reviews say all that needsto be said:

Vandeveld, called to active duty after 9/11, received glowing evaluations as a Pentagon legal advisor and judge advocate in Bosnia, the Horn of Africa and Iraq. "An absolutely outstanding, first-class performance by an extraordinarily gifted, intelligent, knowledgeable and experienced judge advocate, whose potential is utterly unlimited," his commanding officer, Gen. Charles J. Barr, wrote in his June 2006 evaluation. "One of the corps' best and brightest. Save the very toughest jobs in the corps for him."

They're not going to be able to paint this guy as crazy.

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Comments

1

"They're not going to be able to paint this guy as crazy."

Clearly, Ed, you are not pessimistic enough.

Posted by: Eric | October 20, 2008 10:27 AM

2

Yeah, just create a rumour that he is an atheist, and that will be that.

Posted by: Valhar2000 | October 20, 2008 12:47 PM

3

http://www.torturingdemocracy.org/ pbs won't air it, but you can view it online. we're driving men literally insane. yeah, that's what democracy and freedom are all about.

Posted by: arin | October 20, 2008 1:45 PM

4

We are fighting for freedom!

The freedom to shoot GLBT citizens in the head and dump the bodies, so other queers get the message.

The freedom to harass christian families and drive them from their homes.

Iraq today.

Freedom like that is certainly worth the blood of 4000+ Americans and billions and billions of dollars.

Posted by: SharonB | October 20, 2008 2:00 PM

5

If they do try to paint Lt. Col Vandeveld as crazy, then this would show a significant lack of judgment by The Powers That Be in selecting him for such a high-profile position, wouldn't it? Not to mention being promoted to Lt. Col. in the first place - none of the services pick names for field-grade officers out of a hat.

Besides - FOUR prosecutors? Perhaps OSHA needs to get involved - apparently something in the air down there drives prosecutors to madness.

Posted by: BobApril | October 20, 2008 3:27 PM

6

The whole situation is a travesty. Uncharged prisoners face torture. If they're lucky they'll eventually be charged with something, only to end up in a kangaroo court, whose ruling Pentagon is all too happy to ignore anyway. Where is our outrage America? Why are we not marching in the streets? Why aren't we... Hey, Madonna's getting a divorce. That's a shame. I really thought she'd finally found her match in Guy. Did you know she's 50 now? Man, I'm getting old.

Posted by: Abby Normal | October 20, 2008 3:58 PM

7

That was just beautiful Abby (I do have to call the IT boys for a new monitor, thought).

Posted by: Scott Reese | October 21, 2008 9:10 AM

8

Jesuit Fr. John Dear writes about his conversation with Darrel Vandeveld in his weekly column for National Catholic Reporter: http://ncrcafe.org/node/2215

Posted by: Dennis Coday | October 21, 2008 11:19 AM

9

Yep, you're fighting for freedom all right. Valuable freedom. So valuable, in fact, you'd best lock it up, before someone takes it from you!
You'd better spread your form of freedom to other places. But is it really freedom when it's given at the point of a gun?

Posted by: Alchemist | October 22, 2008 12:36 AM

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