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International News Title: Bush Signs Detainee Legislation WASHINGTON -- President Bush signed new legislation Tuesday providing for the detention and prosecution of terrorism suspects, and the Justice Department moved immediately to request the dismissal of dozens of lawsuits filed by detainees challenging their incarceration. Bush signed the legislation in an elaborate East Room ceremony, calling it a "vital tool" in the administration's war on terrorism, while Republican Party officials immediately unleashed campaign broadsides, charging that the measure's Democratic critics advocate freeing terrorists. The new law thus became both part of the administration's final campaign push to preserve its congressional majority in the midterm election and the beginning of a new chapter in fashioning a judicial process for those captured around the world in U.S. military and counterterrorism operations. The law is bound to generate new and contentious legal challenges that likely will leave U.S. policies on detainees in an uncertain state. Beside the request that federal courts throw out detainees' lawsuits, judges also will be asked to decide new legal questions that again may end up before the Supreme Court. Meanwhile, human rights groups said it is far from clear how the new law will be implemented, and the CIA has asked Justice Department lawyers to review interrogation guidelines. The legislation sets new ground rules for the CIA to conduct interrogations and allows for the prosecution of terror suspects before military tribunals. Bush said the measure enables the U.S. to bring to justice the coordinators of the Sept. 11 attacks and allows the CIA to continue an aggressive interrogation program that he said had disrupted additional terror strikes. "With the bill I'm about to sign, the men our intelligence officials believe orchestrated the murder of nearly 3,000 innocent people will face justice," Bush said, sitting at a table with a sign posted on the front that said "Protecting America." The president said he signed the new law "in memory of the victims" of Sept. 11. He was surrounded by military officers, members of his Cabinet and lawmakers who helped pass the bill. Several dozen protesters chanted slogans outside in the rain branding the measure an affront to civil liberties. The enactment of the law -- four months after the U.S. Supreme Court said that an earlier scheme for handling terror cases violated U.S. law -- was good news for Bush as casualties have mounted in Iraq and his handling of the war on terror has come under intensifying criticism. The signing ceremony was part political rally for a GOP that is struggling to retain control of Congress three weeks before a pivotal midterm election. Republican leaders said the legislation showed that they were a party of strength and assailed Democrats for not supporting the measure. "The Democratic plan would gingerly pamper the terrorists who plan to destroy innocent Americans' lives," House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., said. The Justice Department moved swiftly to enforce one of the law's most controversial provisions. Within two hours of the signing ceremony, department lawyers notified the U.S. appeals court in Washington that the new law had been enacted, "eliminating federal court jurisdiction." The court is overseeing dozens of lawsuits filed on behalf of prisoners held at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Lawyers for the detainees responded with their own filing Tuesday, requesting time to present legal arguments that the new law violated the U.S. Constitution. The appeals court took no immediate action. The detainee's lawyers, who had won victories on behalf of their clients in two previous cases against the administration that went to the Supreme Court -- involving detainees Shafiq Rasul and Salim Ahmed Hamdan -- said they were confident they would prevail once again. "We beat them in Rasul. We beat them in Hamdan. Now, they have tried to beat us in Congress. I don't think it will work," said Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a New York advocacy group that has represented a number of the detainees. "They have been slapped down twice. I think they will be slapped down again." The administration has identified about two dozen suspects it plans to put on trial, including accused Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who, along with 13 other high-profile suspects, was recently transferred from CIA custody to Guantanamo Bay. The rules do not affect the vast majority of the estimated 435 prisoners being held at the Cuban military prison. Unless the military decides to bring charges, most of the detainees will remain in legal limbo, without the opportunity to challenge their status, under the new law. Bush said the new interrogation rules would allow the CIA to restart a program of tough questioning of terrorist suspects that ground to a halt more than a year ago, in the wake of a congressional debate over legislation banning the use of torture and questions about whether rough treatment of detainees would subject operatives to prosecution for war crimes. A senior administration official said that the CIA has not yet finalized a list of interrogation tactics or procedures, but when it does, it will submit its new program to the Justice Department for a legal review, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the secrecy of the CIA effort. Once it gets the blessing of Justice, the program will be brought to Congress, the official said. "The CIA will have to brief its program to an oversight committee," said the senior official. "This is the beginning of the conversation, not the end."
Poster Comment: Beside the request that federal courts throw out detainees' lawsuits What happened to no post facto law. This is obviously unconstitutional. The people who brought this legislation foward are American Nazis.
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