October 9, 2006
More collateral damage from Afghanistan/Iraq
It's tempting to say
that Charles Swift has been swift-boated. But, then again, what has
happened with Navy Lt. Cmdr. Swift is something that has been a
hallmark of the George Bush Presidential Agenda since 2000, not a 2004
invention for use against John Kerry. That is, harm those who won't
drink the Bush Kool-Aid, damage and abuse those whose loyalty is to
their country and the the United States Constitution, not to a morally
deficient political figure.
Charles
Swift, like Captain Ian Fishback, Spec. Joseph Darby, Bunnatine
Greenhouse and others before him, possesses a functioning moral compass
and is guided by such, unlike the Bush-aholics and their faux Christian
leader, who have taken moral relativism to depths heretofore unknown.
This country needs the services of more Charles Swifts, people who
understand personal conduct is guided by ethics and principles, not the bastardized Bush version of the Ten Commandments.
Guantanamo defense lawyer forced to retire by Navy
By Carol Rosenberg
McClatchy Newspapers
Oct. 07, 2006
NEWARK, N.J. - The Navy lawyer who took the Guantanamo case of Osama
bin Laden's driver to the U.S. Supreme Court - and won - has been
passed over for promotion by the Pentagon and must soon leave the
military.
Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift, 44, said last week he received word that he
had been denied a promotion to full-blown Navy commander this summer -
"about two weeks after" the Supreme Court sided against the White House
and with his client, a Yemeni captive at the U.S. Navy base in
southeast Cuba.
Under the military's "up or out" promotion system, Swift will retire in
March or April, closing out a 20-year career of military service.
A Pentagon appointee, Swift embraced the alleged al-Qaida's
sympathizer's defense with a classic defense lawyer's zeal - casting
his captive client as an innocent victim in the dungeon of King George,
a startling analogy for the attorney whose commander-in-chief is
President George Bush.
He wore Navy whites to his client's war-crimes tribunal at Guantanamo,
dress blues to challenge the administration on the steps of the Supreme
Court and turned up last week at a symposium at Seton Hall Law School
in more sober, workaday khakis.
"It was a pleasure to serve," said Swift, who added that he would
defend Salim Hamdan all over again, even if he knew he would have to
leave the Navy earlier than he wanted.
"All I ever wanted was to make a difference - and in that sense I think
my career and personal satisfaction has been beyond my dreams," he said.
To read the rest of the article, go here.
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