Terror Trials Are Our Defining Moment
“We (should) wrap him in bacon and deep fry him at a state fair while Lee Greenwood stabs him in the face.” — Jon Stewart of “The Daily Show” on confessed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed.
And seriously now, who doesn’t agree?
You’d have to be defective in your humanity not to. Mohammed plotted the greatest act of mass murder in American history. Who among us wouldn’t like a piece of this guy?
Indeed, if critics of Attorney General Eric Holder’s decision to try him and his terrorist confederates in a New York City courtroom would be honest with themselves, they’d admit that this is what drives their condemnation, not questions of security, fears of acquittal or other obfuscatory concerns they’ve raised.
No, the baseline here is the understandable belief that these thugs, these gangsters of Islam, have no right to a trial, that the American legal system, with all its protections for the accused, all its rights and procedures and niceties, is more than they deserve.
Americans have always been ambivalent about the ability of our justice system to give bad people what they’ve got coming. That’s why the action movie almost always ends with the bad guy shot, impaled or fed into a wood chipper: seeing him led away in handcuffs simply doesn’t impart the same visceral sense of just deserts.
But you have to wonder: are our emotional needs the most important consideration here?
It’s worth remembering that even the architects of the greatest barbarism in history had their day in court. After burning away 11 million lives, the leaders of the Nazi regime found themselves facing not summary execution, but a trial before a military tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany.
As prosecutor Robert Jackson put it: “That four great nations, flushed with victory and stung with injury, stay the hand of vengeance and voluntarily submit their captive enemies to the judgment of the law is one of the most significant tributes that power has ever paid to reason.”
And when the trials were over and the verdicts delivered — death or imprisonment for most, three were acquitted — the New York Times editorialized as follows: “These sentences can neither atone for all the evil these men have brought into the world nor undo any part of it. But they help to assuage the conscience of mankind and to restore to honor the concept of the dignity of man which cannot be violated with impunity.”
Compare that with the Bush administration’s original, Supreme Court-rebuked vision of justice — minimal rights for the accused, torture allowed, the government’s thumb on justice’s scale — and maybe you’ll agree: we need this trial more than Mohammed does. For all its risks — and they are real — it offers a prize worth risking for: the promise of feeling like Americans again.
That feeling is arguably the most significant casualty of Sept. 11. On that day, we elevated a mob of stateless criminals, a mafia in cleric’s clothing, to the exalted level of rogue nation. But they were never that, never a threat to our national existence; they lacked the forces to take even one square inch of American soil. What they could threaten — and take — was our sense of ourselves as a brave, reasonable and civilized people, inhabiting a nation of laws. They beckoned us into the mud with them, and we leapt.
It’s not the first time. Periodically, we have shed the burden of bravery, reason, civilization, laws. Always, it happens in moments of national stress, moments of overwhelming confusion, anger or fear, moments that make us prey to demons of expedience and moral compromise. Moments when we wonder if we can still afford to act like America.
But we face a band of bloodthirsty hoodlums whose dearest wish is to make us just like them. So maybe the better question is this:
Can we afford not to?
(c) 2009 The Miami Herald Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Read more by Leonard Pitts Jr.
- Luster Is Off Obama’s ‘High Moral Ground’ – September 1st, 2009
- The Chimera of Total Security – May 26th, 2009
- Liberty City Case Leaves Bitter Aftertaste – May 20th, 2009
- Pelosi’s Torture Stance Is Pure Partisanship – May 18th, 2009
- Torture and Fool’s Gold – April 5th, 2009





hardtruth
November 21st, 2009 at 12:45 pm
"Terror trials are your defining moment"? Oh puhleaze. There's a million corpses in Iraq "defining" you already. There are DU birth deformities "defining" you on a daily basis. "You" are already defined, calibrated, and disgusting.
ZionismIsRacism
November 21st, 2009 at 9:25 pm
Not only that, KSM also claimed that he was responsible for a litany of other offenses that wouldn't have even been possible or him to be involved in! Im not saying he's a "good guy" but he was tortured to extract the "confession" from him, also quoted using an american colloquialism that does not even exist in his foreign tongue "I was responsible from A to Z" they do not use that expression and an equivalent expression does NOT exist. The history of torture has only proven ONE thing, it will force the victim to say whatever needs to be said to get the barbaric treatment to end. It's a total farce the obama has the audacity to lecture ANY country on human rights records when our nation TORTURES people. This show trial is a joke and the only thing it defines is the further decline of this once great nation.
The longer antiwar toes the pathetic, irresponsible "official" conspiracy theory of 9-11, the more irrelevant your website will become. Thinking individuals know the official story holds less water than a thimble. antiwar.com what has happened to you? The pressure get to be too much to bear to avoid the uncomfortable truth staring you right in the face? AL-CIA-DUH does NOT exist and never has. Get with the program.
rwe2late
November 21st, 2009 at 3:13 pm
"defining moment"? What a load of crap.
These show trials are politically designed to whip up fear and anger in support of US military escalation in Afghanistan and Iran.
The claim that respect for our judicial system will be increased is nonsense. The trials will either (A) set bad legal precedent for venue, impartial juries, speedy trials, torture of prisoners, etc.
or
(B) in the unlikely event of dismissal, stoke public prejudices against impartial justice.
jack
November 21st, 2009 at 10:36 pm
what's this about wahibeism being the perfect manchurian canidate according to petroleum CORPERATION projections,too close for comfert & three's a crowd ,,,OO , thanks for playing sucker,i mean pawn tool
doalive
November 22nd, 2009 at 3:12 am
on the night of yer shared gay twilight were you or were ya not a tool,manchurian canidate for an imaganary office/rank or just a manson style mind f_ck exspeirament,aka pawn,bought and sold,by others,right here , present now, in this hollow chambered dome/hall,can ya please point them out for the arrayed juried ghouls
braulio_
November 22nd, 2009 at 4:55 am
Were the 183 times Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was waterboarded not defining moments? Were the torture memos of Alberto Gonzalez and John Yoo not defining moments? Were the countless self-righteous talk show confessions of Dick Cheney praising torture to the high heavens not defining moments?
The notion a New York City show trial of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed could offer the promise of feeling like Americans again is shallow beyond belief.
MvGuy
November 22nd, 2009 at 3:32 pm
The Neocon Cabal knows how to put on a show… The video of the cowboy reading My Pet Goat as the show unfolded is the priceless moment for me.. And to know that it will be preserved for ALL TIME as long as the human race endures… Whatever happened on that day remains a mystery obfuscated by the very intelligence agencies who allowed the attack to succeed… There has not been any real investigation of what happened, only the Kissinger then Zelikow show with NO ACTORS to speak…
No, they were being tortured AND surprise…the commission cannot even question the interrogators…
There was the ersatz Bin Laden, taking the blame on tape leaked to Al Jezeera.. And there is the wanton destruction of evidence including but not limited to the actual 911 air traffic controller after incident tapes, recordings of the interrogations of the suspects…and the debris of the WTC… Did I mention the Pentagon tapes?? The most camera-ed building (in the world?) but NOT ONE tape of the plane…..just from the obscured parking cheat camera…Yes, It has been quite a show so far but not everyone has been convinced to the official presentation. Orchestrating the show is much easier at a military base in Cuba than it will be in the Southern District of New York so I take heart that we may get a glimpse at a few more pieces of the puzzle..
Mike D.
November 22nd, 2009 at 3:36 pm
Leonard Pitts Jr,
It is apparent you have not succeeded here.
It has become obvious that the official 9/11 narrative is a load of bollocks.
Antiwar, what are you doing?
Paul
November 22nd, 2009 at 3:53 pm
Show Trials will be a fitting way to define the empire. Hollywood should not be far behind in bringing it to the big screen. Then all Americans can rest assured again at how great they are.
kenny
November 22nd, 2009 at 4:04 pm
Americas defining moment, will not be in some show trial in NY,but when your empire begins to visibly crumble, as spoken off by ABRAHAM LINCOLN the american system has become so politically diseased and debase that this so called exercise in american justice cannot save it from its own self destruction.