John, many thanks for picking this up. The relief pitcher was
better than the lead off but still not very good. Certainly
interrogation and due process are two different things and indeed
the latter circumscribes the former. So I don't understand the
argument that Thompson's due process view of things allows
interrogation and his critics' approach wouldn't. (No one I think
would argue we execute without interrogating.) And yes there is a
big argument as to what rights should be afforded to Guantanamo
prisoners but I for one vote against giving OBL's attorneys any
intelligence information(not even the switchboard number of the FBI
or CIA) he would need to mount a defense. And that is the problem
with throwing around "due process" as if it is a cozy blanket to
wrap around every prisoner and stretched to fit each situation.
UPDATE: I am reminded that Churchill thought trying Hilter would
have been a "farce." More here and here.