Bret Stephens: Obama's Finest Hour
Bret Stephens writes the Journal's "Global View" column on foreign affairs.
There was only one discordant note in Barack Obama's otherwise masterly speech Sunday night announcing the killing of Osama bin Laden. It came when the president invoked the word "justice" to describe what had just been done to the architect of 9/11.
It wasn't quite the word he was looking for. But actions speak louder than words.
Justice, as we in the West have come to know it, requires due process. It takes place in a courtroom under the supervision of a judge. Prosecutors must prove their case; defendants are entitled to a competent defense; rules of evidence and procedure must scrupulously be followed. A jury must render its verdict. Punishment can be neither cruel nor unusual.
This is the sort of justice the hapless Attorney General Eric Holder had in mind when he sought to have bin Laden's operational lieutenant, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, tried in a civilian Manhattan courthouse. The people of New York City revolted. KSM will now get better than he deserves in a military tribunal.
As for bin Laden, what was meted out to him was vengeance. Vengeance pure and simple, sweet and sound. Vengeance cathartic, uplifting, necessary and right.
Got a problem with that?..