Military commissions in historical perspective: Lessons from the United States - Dakota war trials

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Abstract

In the aftermath of september 11, 2001, president bush declared that alleged perpetrators of terrorism against the United States would be brought to trial not in Article III federal courts, but instead before military commissions. It was commonly recognized that these would be distinct from military courts-martial, a form of dispensing justice familiar within the United States. But what kind of courts these would be and what challenges they would pose was far from clear. Throughout American history, military commissions had been used irregularly and rarely, most recently to try a handful of enemy combatants shortly after the end of World War II. Given the contemporary use of military commissions, it behooves us to consider what the historical use of such bodies can teach us about their risks and utility. Created in a somewhat different guise as a structure for adjudication during the Mexican-American War and employed - although not without challenge - during the Civil War, the military commission was also the form of tribunal invoked in the trial of almost 400 Dakota who fought American soldiers in a brief frontier war in 1862. Of the 392 combatants who were tried, 323 were convicted, and 38 were hanged in the largest mass execution in American history. Bound up in the history of the new state of Minnesota and the relations between Americans and American Indians, the significance of the events for American military and political history was long ignored. With the rising importance of military commissions and the continuing controversy over their legitimacy, it is enlightening to explore problems associated with their early use and reflect on the contemporary salience of those concerns.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationGuantanamo and Beyond
Subtitle of host publicationExceptional Courts and Military Commissions in Comparative Perspective
PublisherCambridge University Press
Pages55-72
Number of pages18
ISBN (Electronic)9780511920721
ISBN (Print)9781107009219
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2013

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Cambridge University Press 2013.

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