I suppose it is possible Captain Paul Willee, head of Australia's military bar, is a softie with a poor grasp of the law who isn't sufficiently galvanised by the terrorist threat David Hicks might present.
There could be a remote chance that Ninian Stephen, former governor-general, former High Court judge, and present patron of Melbourne University's Asia-Pacific Centre for Military Law, is off beam when he says he tends to agree with Willee's views on the injustice of the US military commission Hicks will face, finding the whole thing "disturbing".
Conceivably, former US military prosecutors were talking through their hats in condemning (in just-revealed emails sent last year) the commissions and describing the proposed cases against Hicks and three other Guantanamo Bay detainees as "half-assed".
And maybe the Law Council of Australia has some undiscerned ulterior motive in commissioning a report from Lex Lasry, QC, who declared Hicks' case "is much less about David Hicks than . . . about a grossly unfair process", adding that "Australia's own moral authority is at risk if it continues to condone this process".
All these people could be wrong-headed. But do we really think they are?
http://www.theage.com.au/news/michelle-grattan/before-a-kangaroo-court/2005/08/02/1122748632923.html