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1. Q: Is it likely that martial law is imminent in the U.S.?
A: Yes. The way has been partially cleared for it legally by the Homeland Security
Act, that 'grandfathered in' the whole of a secret 1979 executive order dealing
with emergency rule. One legal hurdle to martial law still remains, namely,
the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which explicitly forbids soldiers to participate
in domestic law enforcement. However, Congress could easily annul the Posse
Comitatus Act, and is being pressured by the attorney general and the Pentagon
to do just that.
2. Q: What is martial law?
A: In popular usage, martial law means that some or all civil liberties are
suspended. For example, there could be a curfew, which would prevent people
from exercising their normal liberty to walk around after 9 p.m. Legally, martial
'law' means that military commanders are assigned to carry out law and order
among civilians. Hence, soldiers can determine what the rules are, can arrest
civilians for breaking them, and can subject them to summary justice. A person
could not turn to the courts for help.
3. Q: Have any democratic countries experienced martial law?
A: Yes, many. For example, Prime Minister Trudeau of Canada declared martial
law over Montreal in 1970 in response to kidnappings by Quebec separatists.
In the Philippines, martial law under President Marcos lasted from 1972 to 1981.
Greece endured 'the rule of the Colonels' from 1967 to 1974.
4. Q: At the moment, while the Posse Comitatus Act is still in effect,
does it offer good protection?
A: No. Posse Comitatus was substantially weakened by amendments in 1981 and
1991 that gave the Defense Department a role in the enforcement of drug laws.
Since then, many American cities have acquired joint task forces composed of
military and local police (who can be temporarily deputized as federal officers).
A drug dealer, or an innocent person, may have his door broken down--legally--and
his home entered by soldiers and police with guns drawn.
5. Q: What does the Constitution of the U.S. say about martial law?
A: The term 'martial law' never appears in the Constitution. However, the idea
of it is conveyed in two sections of Article I as follows: Section 8 says The
Congress shall have the Power . . . (15) To provide for calling forth the Militia
to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions.
Section 9 (2) says The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended,
unless when in cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety will require
it.
6. Q: Does the Constitution tell us which branch of government has
the right to declare martial law?
A: Yes, the legislative branch has the right. Currently, there are 'White House
radicals,' particularly in the Office of Legal Counsel to the President, advocating
the position that the Constitution can be interpreted to support almost unlimited
executive power. However, even they must acknowledge that the above-quoted sections
(Sections 8 and 9) appear in Article I of the Constitution, which is the article
that allocates specific powers to the legislature! Indisputably, this means
that Congress can suspend our right to habeas corpus. One looks in vain for
any similar authority for the president. Article II, which lays out the prerogatives
of the executive branch, is silent on these matters.
7. Q: Has martial law ever been declared in the U.S.?
A: Yes. President Lincoln declared it during the Civil War. but this was overruled
by the Supreme Court, after the war ended, in the case of Ex Parte Mulligan
(1866). Mr. Mulligan was a civilian in Indiana who was allegedly aiding the
enemy, i.e., the Confederacy. He was arrested and tried by the military. The
Supreme Court ruled that there was no justification for martial law since the
ordinary courts had functioned throughout the Civil War, and thus Mr. Mulligan
should not have been deprived of his right to habeas corpus. One of the Justices
said, "No graver question was ever considered by this court, nor one which
more nearly concerns the rights of the whole people . . ."
8. Q: Then what about Jose Padilla, who has been held in a military
brig since 2001, uncharged, even though he is an American civilian? Isn't the
deprivation of his rights a grave matter?
A: Not according to the US Court of Appeals, which has taken the pro-executive
position that the president requires scope to fight the war on terror.
(Note: the Latin 'habeas corpus' literally means "Produce the body"
i.e., bring the accused before a judge.)
9. Q: Will we ever see Army tanks roll onto the streets in our country?
A: This has already happened. Tanks rolled out in Los Angeles during the Watts
riots in 1965. It happened again in that city in 1992, when rioting followed
the verdict of 'not guilty' in the case of four white police officers who had
severely beaten an African-American, Rodney King.
10. Q: Is it likely that race riots will be the thing that triggers
martial law?
A: In many countries, ethnic minority repression leads to outbursts that are
quelled by military force. Since Americans are conditioned to see racial conflict
as a frightening possibility, our government may be able to 'sell' the idea
of martial law. An alternative scenario, which cannot be ruled out, is that
someone would kidnap or assassinate a high official of the American government
with an eye to bringing about martial law.
11. Q: What is the first assignment for soldiers when martial law is
declared?
A: If the actual intent of the government is to establish illegitimate dictatorial
rule, one of the first things it must do is remove oppositional leaders and
popular figures--be they poets, physicians, priests, or judges. When General
Augusto Pinochet seized power in Chile in 1973, his soldiers immediately arrested
hundreds of dissidents and corralled them in a stadium. They were subsequently
tortured and many were 'disappeared.' Now, three decades later, technological
advances such as stun guns and remote-control pain delivery make it even easier
to arrest huge groups of people.
12. Q: Is it conceivable that mercenaries would be used domestically?
A: It is more than conceivable; it has already happened. Following Hurricane
Katrina, the Blackwater USA (and perhaps other mercenary units) were assigned
to duty in Louisiana by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).
13. Q: Where does FEMA get its authority?
A: As above mentioned, the Homeland Security Act established it legislatively.
Section 502 of that act says" . . . there shall be transferred to the Secretary
[of the new Homeland Security Department] the functions, personnel, assets,
and liabilities of . . . the Federal Emergency Management Agency."
14. Q: Didn't FEMA have an unsavory history during the Reagan administration
when it helped to run a secret government inside the White House, doing deals
that became known as the Iran-Contra affair?
A: Yes.
15. Q: How is it that the controversial powers of FEMA did not get
resolved in the past 20 years?
A: Perhaps because there have been too many distractions. Fortunately for us,
however, Professor Harold Koh, Dean of Law at Yale, provides excellent recommendations
for reform in his 1990 book The National Security Constitution. Koh calls for
a return to the proper balance of power among the three branches of government,
even in times when foreign crises--or domestic terrorism--work to unbalance
those powers.