While Attorney General John Ashcroft seeks the death penalty for
French citizen Zacarias Moussaoui, the alleged "20th hijacker" in the
attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, President George W. Bush
is quietly seeking compassionate leniency for a U.S. citizen convicted
of a similar crime in Peru.
If that weren�t irony enough, Bush is relying on an international
tribunal for the possibility of such relief. Never mind that this
president has gone out of his way to express his distaste for the very
concept of international tribunals, even hinting he may try to find a
way to withdraw President Clinton�s signature from the Statute of the
International Criminal Court.
There is no hard evidence that Zacarias Moussaoui took part in the
planning of the Sept. 11 attacks. So far, the public has been told that
he received a check from a roommate of suspected Sept. 11 ringleader
Mohammed Atta, and that he wanted to learn to pilot jumbo jets without
learning takeoffs and landings. But he was in detention on a visa
violation on Sept. 11 and in the weeks prior to the attacks.
That means the United States is seeking the death penalty on merely
circumstantial evidence. And it is doing so despite vigorous objections
from France, which has banned the death penalty and is refusing to
cooperate with the investigation. France is a key member of the European
Union, whose support the administration badly needs in its war on
terrorism.
The Peruvian case is strikingly similar. Lori Berenson is a U.S.
citizen arrested in Lima while sharing a house with members of the Tupac
Amaru Revolutionary Movement, a Marxist guerrilla group committed to the
violent overthrow of the Peruvian government. There is no hard evidence
that Berenson ever took part in violent acts. But she admits to
sympathizing with a group that the government�and most Peruvian
citizens�consider terrorists.
A military tribunal found Berenson guilty of being a terrorist leader
in 1996, and sentenced her to life in prison. Last year, a civil court
reexamined the evidence, and convicted her on the lesser charge of
"collaboration with terrorists," reducing her sentence to 20 years.
Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo has vowed not to pardon her.
To avoid embarrassing Toledo, Bush is relying on a mechanism he
normally disapproves of�an international tribunal. Berenson�s case is
under review by the OAS Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which
could refer it to the OAS Inter-American Court of Human Rights. Peru has
recognized the compulsory jurisdiction of the court, as have most Latin
American countries. If the court finds that Berenson�s human rights have
been violated, Peru may be obligated to release her.
The United States is not a party to that tribunal. That means Zacarias
Moussaoui will have no such opportunity to appeal any conviction,
including a death sentence, beyond U.S. courts.
And that, apparently, is just what this administration wants.
President Bush has also made it clear that he is opposed to U.S.
participation in international tribunals that could in principle try
U.S. citizens for crimes committed abroad.
On the other hand, Bush has shown he doesn�t mind relying on such
courts when they serve U.S. interests. Last summer, Washington helped
deliver an adversary�former Yugoslav dictator Slobodan Milosevic�to an
international tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands.
In effect, Bush is saying that international human rights law is good
only when applied to the detriment of adversaries or to the benefit of
U.S. citizens. The equivalent in domestic law would be to allow an
individual to sue others without risk of being sued in return. It makes
a mockery of the rule of law.
What can the president be thinking? Europeans and Latin Americans
aren�t blind to this double standard. The very premise of the
president�s global war on terrorism is that there is such a thing as
international law, and that all nations must cooperate to prevent and to
punish lawless acts. Without strong support from U.S. allies, that war
cannot be won. But to win that support will require a recognition that
international law cannot be one-sided.
Confronting international lawlessness necessarily implies accepting
international tribunals. Any other approach is doomed to failure and
will foster resentment of the United States worldwide.
(Andrew Reding is a senior fellow of the World Policy Institute in
New York. He can be reached at [email protected].)