Of all that mumbo jumbo in the charges, the only thing that matters to me is that he was caught on a battlefield with other soldiers. In and of itself, that is justification to hold him, w/out a trial, until the end of the conflict. That according to the Geneva Conventions. If, however, somebody wants to stand by the argument that it's not an organized army, but more of a guerilla force, then the Hague Convention gives the US the right to simply put a bullet in his head, legally. His physical condition must not be that bad, or his attorney would be all over the MSM with it. Until this thread, and one similar elsewhere, I hadn't heard of this at all.
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