joining us now, bruce fiene, attorney general in the regan rn administration, and karen greenburg, and miles davis. from 2005 to 2007, the chief prosecutor of the guantanamo bay military trials. bruce fiene, before the break, we heard him talking about with relative easy, the view that the trials could be repatriated, brought back onshore in the united states and concluded here. is it really that easy to do? >> i think the answer is yes. there have been hundreds of terrorist prosecution post-9/11 in the commissions, and i don't know of a single case where the military said justice was not done because of evidence with cross-examination, and proof beyond the reef, outroots. i would like to make a comment that the military commissions are not really like civilian trials. remember, there were two counts against king george 3rd in our declaration of independence. absence of trial by jury, and you don't have trial by jury, and in king george iii, depended on his own whims. and military commissions, unlike federal judges, are not independent of the executive branch, and indeed are part of th