On Saturday, Barack Obama said he’s itching for a fight on the Boumediene case. “I think we should make it an issue,” said Obama. “John McCain thinks the Supreme Court was wrong … I think the Supreme Court was right.” ABC’s Jake Tapper reported that Obama went on to incorrectly imply that the Supreme Court merely granted the detainees the same rights as the Nazis tried at Nuremburg:
Obama, a former senior lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School, cited “that principle of habeas corpus, that a state can’t just hold you for any reason without charging you and without giving you any kind of due process — that’s the essence of who we are. I mean, you remember during the Nuremberg trials, part of what made us different was even after these Nazis had performed atrocities that no one had ever seen before, we still gave them a day in court and that taught the entire world about who we are but also the basic principles of rule of law. Now the Supreme Court upheld that principle yesterday.” (Though Obama was clearly referring to the principle of giving criminals a day in court, it’s worth pointing out the distinction here, that the Nuremberg trials did not give Nazi war criminals access to U.S. courts, but to a special international military tribunal created by the U.S., USSR, France and the U.K. Though Nuremberg currently is considered a model for international law, it’s not as if Rudolph Hess had access to challenge his detention in U.S. federal court.)