SteveSy wrote:Cobalt Shiva wrote:Oh I agree....so that means no trials and we should take the government's allegation of "State secrets" at face value?
Absent very convincing evidence (i.e., medical examinations that identify specific bodily injury, testimony "against interest" by persons alleged to have performed the acts in question and who were actually in a position to have engaged in such actions, etc.) presented by the person claiming "torture," yes.
The government as far as I know has not made any claims to the contrary, they've only claimed state secrets would be divulged so therefore he should be forbidden, regardless if he was tortured or not.
Stevie, whoever asserts must provide evidence to support the assertion. The non-asserting party (in this case, the government) need not make any claims at all, which is why they didn't.
Maybe he is making it up, he probably is, but what about someone else?
That "someone else" may seek judicial relief and present evidence to support his case. Policy cannot be made on the basis of hypothetical cases not filed.
Exactly what qualifies these days as a "State secret" anyway
Classified information is identified in three grades:
CONFIDENTIAL--material that, if disclosed to unauthorized parties, would cause identifiable damage to the national security of the United States. Information of this nature includes tactical call signs for units forward deployed, airlift mission plans in theater, etc.
Come on thats purely subjective....who makes that determination if it will cause "identifiable damage to the national security". What exactly does that mean? What is damage?
All that is laid out in mind-numbing detail in a bunch of laws, regulations, and military instructions & orders--who has the authority to classify information, what information may be classified, what information gets classified at what level, when it may be declassified, and who may authorize declassification. Just because they don't consult you, Stevie, doesn't mean that it is to be presumed illegitimate.
the executive branch has already claimed that exposing corruption in the Iraqi government is a matter of national security and have refused to answer questions in a public forum.
Because it's the
Iraqi government in question, not the US government. You see, what information we have on Iraqi government corruption is the product of intelligence gathering efforts. (Yes, we spy on allied nations, always have, always will. It's called "international relations" because it usually involves nations attempting to screw each other.)
If the source of the information is technical collection (i.e., intercepted Iraqi government communications), then disclosure of what we know in a public forum will end up shutting off access to that information. If the source is a person, disclosure could very well get that person executed for espionage (the Iraqis are far less squeamish about these things than we are).
Maybe someone knows the names of CIA agents or where their secret base is because they were tortured there. Having you on trial might expose this even though they brutally tortured you and violated many of your constitutional rights (not referring to the German citizen, this is a purely hypothetical).
Stevie, you have this amazing preference for the utterly unobserved hypothetical case over the observed actual case.
Generally, that sort of obsession is an insight into how the obsessor will treat those whom he dislikes.