Word: abroader
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...captured suspects indefinitely without trial, hand them over for questioning to nations known to torture prisoners, define American citizens as enemy combatants who can be detained without charges, resist efforts by Congress to put limits on the rough interrogation of detainees and allow the CIA to establish secret prisons abroad. Any and all of those things may be necessary, but this is shaping up as the year when we take a long, hard look...
...White House insists that the NSA is looking into only the communications of people who have known links to al-Qaeda. A former senior intelligence official told TIME the program was used to develop a "spiderweb" of links between any person connected to al-Qaeda who communicated from abroad and someone in the U.S. That in turn would lead investigators to whomever the U.S.-based person might communicate with later. The people under surveillance, he says, "always had an established link to al-Qaeda people." Or, as Cheney said recently, "if you're calling Aunt Sadie in Paris...
...military brig to civilian custody. Originally, the Bush Administration named Padilla an enemy combatant, prompting his lawyers to challenge that designation. Just as the Supreme Court prepared to review the case, a federal grand jury indicted Padilla in a Miami court on charges of conspiring to carry out attacks abroad. (In the new indictment, the dirty-bomb claim has disappeared.) Luttig complained that the Administration appeared to be attempting to manipulate the federal courts to elude Supreme Court review of key questions about presidential authority...
...planning to file court challenges to see where the information on their clients came from. Miami attorney Kenneth Swartz represents Adham Amin Hassoun, a Lebanese-born Palestinian who lived in Broward County, Fla., and has been charged, along with Padilla, in an alleged conspiracy to commit terrorist acts abroad. Swartz says if any of the wiretaps used to build a case against his client were done "without legal authority, it would be a real constitutional issue...
...could be summed up as "the foreign devils made them do it"?may be comforting to Korean readers eager to overcome the burdens of their tortured history. But Hwang's determination to smooth over the ugliness of the past may doom his book to a far less enthusiastic reception abroad than it earned at home...