>From what I have read lately there does not seem to be
any Democratic initiative to tackle the reactionary
legislation passed by Bush on human rights.

Cheers, Ken Hanly

DHS chief says foreign courts inhibit U.S. security
efforts
By Chris Strohm, CongressDaily


Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff on Friday
decried what he described as an "activist" and
"left-wing" interpretation of laws in foreign
countries, saying it affects the U.S. government's
ability to protect the nation.

In a far-reaching speech to the Federalist Society, a
legal community of conservatives and libertarians,
Chertoff said judicial activism is "flourishing" in
international circles and foreign courts, and
increasingly affects the U.S. government's ability to
conduct domestic security affairs.


There is "broad legal activism" in other countries, he
said, that goes beyond the type of judicial activism
that occurred in the United States in the late 1960s
and early 1970s. He charged that "vaguely defined"
legal positions could trump the activities of a
sovereign nation to protect itself.


Chertoff, a former U.S. Court of Appeals judge, said
the Homeland Security Department has already hit legal
roadblocks in international dealings. For example, he
said the department had difficulty convincing the
European Union to provide information on foreigners
flying into the United States, largely because privacy
advocates in the European parliament had reservations.



In the end, the U.S. government succeeded in getting
access to so-called passenger name records, which are
used to screen airline passengers. He said the debate
focused his attention "on how much of my ability to do
my job ... depends upon constraints that others want
to put upon us" based on their legal interpretations.


Chertoff said international pressure came to bear in
the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in a case involving
the detainment of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, an accused
terrorist and former driver for Osama bin Laden. The
court ruled that military commissions set up by the
Bush administration to try detainees at Guantanamo Bay
violate U.S. and international law.


Chertoff also observed that international
organizations, such as the United Nation's Human
Rights Committee, consider legal interpretations from
countries such as Cuba and Zimbabwe. He warned that
international judicial activism could affect the U.S.
government's use of the USA PATRIOT Act or "force" the
United States to afford legal rights to illegal
aliens. "How we deal with this issue of international
law [affects] how we defend ourselves and how we
conduct our domestic affairs," he said.


Judicial activism in the United States has largely
been replaced by judicial modesty, Chertoff said. But
the philosophy of judicial modesty "is pretty much
absent" when people develop and discuss international
law abroad, especially at academic institutions, he
said.


Chertoff said it is not enough for conservatives in
the United States to be on the defensive when it comes
to international legal proceedings. Instead, he called
on members of the Federalist Society to go on the
offensive in their dealings with foreign governments,
academic institutions or organizations in an effort to
persuade them to change their legal philosophies.

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