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One-Click Treason 

By Tom W. Bell 
07/24/2003 



Accusations of treason fly when a nation goes to war. Sometimes, those claims stick. 
After World War II, the U.S. punished several of its citizens for having served as 
paid Axis propagandists. Recent terrorist attacks on the U.S. have triggered new cries 
of "Treason!" Could successful prosecutions follow? 

 

As the Constitution defines it, treason includes "adhering to" enemies of the U.S. and 
"giving them Aid and Comfort." Courts have already told us that paid propagandists 
meet the test. An American serving as a paid propagandist of the al-Qaida network 
would thus run a high risk of punishment for treason. The same would likely hold true 
of anyone who, owing allegiance to the U.S. , spoke on behalf of and in the pay of an 
anti-U.S. terrorist organization. 

 

The War on Terrorists will probably not generate any treason prosecutions of paid 
propagandists, however. Contemporary terrorist networks favor less formal -- we might 
say "packet-switched" -- operations. Terrorist enemies of the U.S. thus tend to 
distribute their propaganda via volunteers from the press, in the street, or on the 
internet. Could such volunteer propagandists suffer punishment for treason? 

 

Here, the law of treason hides a treacherous hole. Courts have not said whether 
volunteer propagandists for enemies of the U.S. commit treason against it. The volume 
of volunteer pro-terrorist propaganda alone makes that legal uncertainty worrisome. 
The growing ease of adding to that flood of speech makes the legal gap dangerous. 

 

Advances in telecommunications have made it astonishingly easy to publish unpaid, 
volunteer, freelance propaganda. Because she relied on short-wave radio signals sent 
from powerful transmitters overseas, Axis Sally needed Nazi help to broadcast to the 
U.S. Today, in contrast, a domestic "al-Qaida Al" could, with a single click on his 
weblog interface, bombard the world with anti-U.S. polemic. 

 

Does that mean that every domestic blogger who criticizes U.S. foreign policy thereby 
commits treason? Of course not. The Constitution requires treasonous speakers to 
"adhere to" U.S. enemies. Most critics of their country want to help it. As the 
Supreme Court explained in Cramer v. United States , a treasonous speaker must 
"intellectually or emotionally favor the enemy and harbor sympathies or convictions 
disloyal to this country's policy or interest . . .." A domestic blogger like al-Qaida 
Al might easily qualify on that count. 

 

The Constitution also requires that a treasonous act give "Aid and Comfort" to enemies 
of the U.S. Can mere speech do that? Here, again, Cramer v. U.S. offers guidance. The 
Supreme Court included "making a speech critical of the government or opposing its 
measures" among the acts that could aid and comfort an enemy. Again, al-Qaida Al might 
do that; bloggers already do. 

 

Suppose, then, that our imagined blogger owes allegiance to the U.S. , sympathizes 
with al-Qaida, harbors convictions disloyal to the U.S. , and uses his blog to express 
those views. Does he thereby commit treason? Although language from Cramer v. U.S. 
suggests that he does, that case speaks only to the prosecution of a paid 
propagandist. It thus does not control the hypothetical case of U.S. v. al-Qaida Al. 
And, as other courts have observed, al-Qaida Al has a free speech right to express his 
opinion. 

 

Treason law has not yet bridged the gap between paid and independent propagandists. If 
al-Qaida Al blogs as a paid agent of the al-Qaida conspiracy, he probably commits 
treason. If he speaks in complete independence of al-Qaida direction, he almost 
certainly enjoys immunity from prosecution. Between those solid edges fall a number of 
cases, including directed but unpaid propaganda, undirected but coordinated 
propaganda, and sympathetically republished propaganda. 

 

How should we decide whether those types of propaganda qualify as "treasonous speech" 
or "free speech"? One rule leaps to the fore: Require evidence of a binding obligation 
between a supposed traitor and a U.S. enemy. Their obligation would not have to be in 
writing, involve money, or make the accused an agent. At the least, though, al-Qaida 
Al's prosecutors would have to show that he had promised aid and comfort to a U.S. 
enemy. 

 

Free speech rights would win greater protection if prosecutors also had to show that 
defendant Al had gained something in the exchange. It would not have to be money; a 
promise of almost anything would suffice as consideration for the deal. Perhaps as 
little as Osama bin Laden's (allegedly) personal "thank you" would do, or a hypertext 
link on the (alleged) al-Qaida homepage. It would not do, though, to prove only that 
al-Qaida Al had emailed a promise of help to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Prosecutors would 
have to show that Al got a reply and reached a deal. 

 

Courts may soon face the chasm-splitting treason law. They will then have to walk the 
legal tightrope between paid and independent propaganda, balancing the power to 
prosecute treason against the right to speak freely. To give that distinction a solid 
footing, to protect our liberties from a terrible fall, courts should follow contract 
law. 

 

Tom Bell is a professor at Chapman University School of Law and adjunct scholar at the 
Cato Institute. 



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The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
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"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
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