Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Fidell and Rosenblatt on the Military Justice Review Panel

This blog's editor and Franklin Rosenblatt wrote "The Armed Forces Need the Military Justice Review Panel" in Just Security about the Pentagon's disregard of the review body required by law in favor of more secretive and malleable internal review bodies. 

Among these is defense secretary Pete Hegseth's recent announcement of an internal "special" panel reviewing military justice. The authors argue that this development

[I]s highly concerning. Rather than some new handcrafted DoD entity, it is crucial that the Military Justice Review Panel (MJRP) be restored as required under statute. Any further erosion of confidence in the country’s military justice system–for that will be the outcome of Hegseth’s internal effort–will have a profound negative impact on the U.S. military’s good order and discipline, and morale, and detract from the country’s national security. 

The authors conclude:

If the Trump administration does not reinstate the MJRP, Congress should vigorously object to the creation of Hegseth’s “special review panel” and demand that the MJRP, created by a still-in-force federal statute with a mandate to report to Congress, be revived immediately. Confidence in the country’s adherence to the rule of law and in the U.S. military justice system has never been more critical.




Thursday, May 14, 2026

What's in store for DoD's military justice review?

Who even knows?, asks practitioner Cody Harnish in this video. DoD has still not released hard copy of the governing document.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Sen. Mark Kelly's case -- is there a "there" there?

Prof. Ryan Burke writes here on the case of Senstor Mark Kelly. His cconclusion:

[A]fter all the noise, we are left with the same conclusion: there is no there, there. No legal order actually at issue. No sedition. No Article 88 violation. No singular statement that can be traced to Senator Kelly as a standalone call for misconduct. Just a spliced, multi-voice video and a sprawling overreaction.

The Pentagon would do well to step out of this self-created fog and return its focus to matters that actually threaten the country. Because this is not one of them. This is, once again, much ado about nothing – the latest entry in a growing catalog of Pentagon follies that never should have escaped the cutting room floor.

Except for the suggestion that this is much ado about nothing, it's hard to disagree. But the implications of Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's vendetta again Sen. Kelly are far from nothing. The implications for free speech, whether by senators or retirees, are grave.

Where should this case be tried (this time it's Burkina Faso)?

There's a dispute in Burkina Faso over whether a case currently in civilian court really ought to be in the military court. Details here. Not quite sure we follow, but this is what was argued:

"In this case, you are dealing with a common law offense committed by members of the military." Secondly, the defense counsel pointed out that the events occurred during the soldiers' regular duty. "They were on a security mission at the Palace Hotel in Ouagadougou," he maintained. In light of the aforementioned elements, the legal question that arises is whether the law reserves jurisdiction over this type of case to another court.

To address this, Mr. Minoungou cited the law governing the military justice code, specifically Article 34, which stipulates, among other things, that military courts have jurisdiction over offenses committed by military personnel. "This case falls under the jurisdiction of the Military Court," he concluded. He noted that in 1994, members of the gendarmerie were not subject to the jurisdiction of the Military Court, according to Article 41 of the military justice code. Following this date, particularly with the law of July 4, 2017, Article 41 was repealed.

In 2023, the defendants' counsel continued, a law was passed amending the military justice code. "But this law did not address the jurisdiction of the Military Court regarding cases involving gendarmes... One cannot choose to bring a matter of employee dismissal before the Criminal Court. Similarly, a land dispute will not go before the Military Court. In this particular case, the matter does not fall under the jurisdiction of the criminal chamber of the Regional Court," he concluded.

The offense occurred in 2020. Does that suggest a problem? 


Saturday, May 9, 2026

Summary court-martial: British legacy in the Indian military legal system

Summary courts-martial were a part of post-1857 mutiny reforms in India. It never existed under the British military legal system. Historically, they owe their origin to the Punjab Irregular Forces which came into prominence after the 1857 mutiny. It was found that the Punjab Irregular Forces, which were under the Local Government, were far more disciplined as compared to the regular forces. The Irregular Forces, created in 1851 to protect the NW frontier of British India, were not under the Commander-in-Chief and were also not subject to Native military law in the British India. The reason for this was traced to the paramount position secured to commanding officers who were allowed to deal promptly and directly with military offenders and enforce discipline among the troops commanded by them. Such officers often held drum-head court-martial and passed sentences and inflicted punishments on them in the way in which a general officer commanding in the field across the frontier exercised extraordinary powers (under military commissions) over persons who were not amenable to military law. The system was associated with the name of Colonel Coke, who, while Deputy Commissioner of Kohat, raised and commanded the 55th Coke’s Rifles. It had come into existence through the then frequent union on the frontier of the functions of Deputy Commissioner, Political Officer, and Military Commandant in the same person. The combination of power enabled the commanding officer to award the punishment to a military offender and thereafter to issue a warrant for the execution of the sentence which was respected by the civil and prison officials as emanating from him in his civil and magisterial capacity.

It was realized during the post-Mutiny reforms that to strengthen the hands of commanding officers, similar summary powers must be given to them to discipline the Native regular forces. With this object summary powers were first introduced by Act No. VI of 1860 and continued under Articles 81 and 82 of the Act XXIX of 1861. In these two Acts, it was stated that a trial under these Articles shall be deemed a Court Martial and the words “court martial” in the Articles of War shall be deemed to include a commanding officer/detachment commander holding a trial. The term summary court-martial was formerly used under Article 72 of the Act of 1869. The Indian Articles of War (Amendment) Act XII of 1894, categorized the summary and summary general court-martial as “extra-ordinary courts-martial,” while general, district and regimental courts-martial were termed as “ordinary court-martial.”