Military tribunals commissioned to prosecute traitors in the US
Corrupt officials and traitors inside the US Government risk being classified as enemy combatants and face execution if found guilty of high crimes by military tribunals.
Former members of the military can also be recalled to service and tried before military tribunals for crimes they have committed in violation of The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ)
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh described the difference between military law and criminal law during his confirmation hearing, in response to questions from Republican Senator Lindsey Graham.
"American citizens who collaborate with the enemy are considered enemy combatants?" Graham asked. "They can be. They are sometimes criminally prosecuted, sometimes treated in the military, under supreme court precedent," Judge Kavanaugh replied.
"There is a supreme court decision that said that American citizens that collaborated with Nazi saboteurs were tried by the military. I think a couple of them were executed," Graham said. "If anybody doubts, there is a long standing history in this country that your constitutional rights follow you wherever you go, but you don't have a constitutional right to turn on your own government and collaborate with the enemy of the nation, you will be treated differently," Graham concluded. Kavanaugh agreed.
Numerous crimes in the UCMJ carry the death penalty, including aiding the enemy, mutiny or sedition, spying for the enemy and espionage.
"Any person who aids, or attempts to aid, the enemy with arms, ammunition, supplies, money, or other things; or without proper authority, knowingly harbors or protects or gives intelligence to or communicates or corresponds with or holds any intercourse with the enemy, either directly or indirectly; shall suffer death or such other punishment as a court-martial or military commission may direct."
"A person who is found guilty of attempted mutiny, mutiny, sedition, or failure to suppress or report a mutiny or sedition shall be punished by death or such other punishment as a court-martial may direct."
Mark Taylor, the man who predicted the Trump Presidency in 2011, has regularly predicted large scale Military Tribunals.
"Be prepared, Sessions has been unleashed. The hammer is now dropping. There's a reason he is called The silent executioner. The Military tribunals that will take place will make Nuremberg look like a cake walk. Justice is here!" he said.
"John McCain was a prophetic time marker. Judgment on the corrupt has been on going, now justice is being served. The enemy knows the truth of what happened to him. They are shaking and quaking, because they know they are next!"
Guantanamo Bay has begun extensive renovations under the Trump administration. Trump also reversed Obama's executive order aimed at closing the US military base in Cuba.
The Trump administration has committed to more than $200 million in new construction for Guantanamo Bay in 2018 and 2019, according to military.com. "The biggest ticket item for the U.S. Navy base in Cuba in the so-called Omnibus Spending law is $115 million for a new 848-troop barracks across the street from the McDonald's and commissary to consolidate enlisted prison staff under one roof."
The Pentagon has also notified Congress that it found $14 million to expand the Top Secret war court complex at Camp Justice, known as the Expeditionary Legal Complex.
Work is also underway on a "pop-up tent city site that could, in the event of a migrant crisis, hold up to 30,000 people intercepted at sea not far from Guantanamo's lone functioning airfield."