Military Justice: The first of three Navy SEALs
charged with abusing a captured jihadist has been cleared. Why has this
administration taken the word of terrorists and let American heroes
twist in the wind?
The acquittal of Petty Officer 1st Class Julio Huertas, 29, of Blue
Island, Ill., by a six-member U.S. military jury in Baghdad on Thursday
is good news and the correct verdict.
Huertas was found innocent of charges of dereliction of duty and
attempting to influence the testimony of another service member in the
case of the treatment of captured terrorist Ahmed Hashim Abed.
Huertas was a member of the Navy SEAL (sea, air, land) team that last
Sept. 3 was dropped into harm's way to capture Abed, a high-value target
known as Objective Amber. The mission was a success.
Abed was the mastermind behind the killing, burning and mutilation of
four American contractors working for Blackwater USA in Fallujah, Iraq,
in March 2004. Their charred bodies were dragged through the streets and
hung from a bridge over the Euphrates River for the world press to
photograph.
Abed, following the al-Qaida training manual, claimed he was abused
while in custody.
An al-Qaida handbook captured in a raid by British authorities on a
terrorist cell in Manchester, England, states "brothers must insist on
proving that torture was inflicted on them by state security before the
judge. Complain of mistreatment while in prison." And lie Abed did.
Petty Officer 2nd Class Matthew McCabe of Perrysburg, Ohio, was
charged with assaulting Abed, punching him in the stomach and giving him
a fat lip. McCabe is scheduled to be court-martialed May 3 in Virginia.
The court-martial of Petty Officer 2nd Class Jonathan Keefe of
Yorktown, Va., who, like Huertas, was charged with dereliction of duty
for failing to safeguard Abed, is scheduled to begin Thursday, also at
Camp Victory.
Huertas' civilian attorney argued that Abed was a terrorist who could
not be trusted and may have inflicted wounds upon himself as a way of
placing blame on his captors.
"There was no abuse," the lawyer, Monica Lombardi, argued. "This is
classic terrorist training."
The politically correct Maj. Gen. Charles Cleveland, commander of
Special Operations Command Central, said of the attempted railroading of
the three SEALs: "The abuse of a detainee, no matter how minor, creates
strategic repercussions that harm our nation's security and ultimately
costs the lives of U.S. citizens."
We do not know what he thinks of the Huertas verdict or of the harm
done to our nation's security by prosecuting those willing to die for
their country on the word of a terrorist who has murdered American
citizens.
All three SEALs could have accepted only a military reprimand, but
risked a court-martial to clear their names and save their careers. They
refused to be human sacrifices to the same political correctness that
seeks a civilian trial with all the trimmings for 9/11 mastermind Khalid
Sheik Muhammed in New York City not far from ground zero.
Administration defenders say that for President Obama to intervene as
commander in chief would amount to exercising "undue command influence,"
a traditional no-no in military justice. Yet as commander in chief, he
sent them on a dangerous mission to apprehend a terrorist murderer of
American citizens. They risked their lives on his orders. Who has their
back, Mr. President?
They performed their mission brilliantly and bravely, and for doing
so found themselves facing charges based on the word of a terrorist
taught to lie. It's doubtful that President Reagan would have let this
travesty of justice continue.
This, however, is a politically correct administration that wants to
close the detainee facility in Guantanamo Bay lest it tarnish our image
among Islamofascists worldwide. We apologize to everybody and anybody.
We won't tolerate another Abu Ghraib, so we tolerate this tragedy.
We are happy for Huertas. No more American heroes should be offered
up as human sacrifices to world public opinion and the political left.