Trump lashes out after terror in New York
Donald Trump just changed the way Presidents talk about terror attacks.
But the question now is whether his venting will change how America prosecutes the legal war on terrorism.
Instead of channeling grief  and offering reassurance and resolve, as his predecessors might have  done after the Halloween horror in New York where eight people died,  Trump amplified the fury and desire for vengeance stirred by such  carnage. 
He lashed out at the "animal" behind the truck attack, threatened to throw him in Guantanamo Bay, vowed to terminate the visa lottery that help draw him to the US and branded the justice system a "laughingstock."
Trump,  handling his first major attack on American soil as President, was true  to his bruiser's persona: He was tough, politically incorrect and  trampled nuance.
He  also politicized the attack, all but accusing his top Democratic foe,  Sen. Chuck Schumer, of enabling it by nurturing the visa program which  benefited the alleged attacker Uzbek immigrant Sayfullo Saipov.
"Diversity lottery. Sounds nice. It's not nice. It's not good," Trump said at a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday. 
"That  was a horrible event, and we have to stop it, and we have to stop it  cold," said the President, who rarely misses a chance to incite the  fight against Islamic radicalism.
His  approach contrasted sharply with the measured response to terrorism  adopted by his predecessor Barack Obama, who was often criticized for  insufficiently appreciating public anxiety after attacks.
Obama  reasoned that reacting viscerally to such horror helped terrorists who  want to divide Americans and spread indiscriminate fear.
Trump  also did not offer assurances that the alleged attacker, who yelled  "God is Great" in Arabic during the assault, was not a representative of  Islam itself, as a whole, as another President, George W. Bush, often  did.
Guantanamo Bay?
But the practice of fighting terrorism is more complicated than talking about it as Trump quickly discovered on Wednesday.
The  President argued that accused terrorists do not deserve legal  protections granted to others -- but there were signs the White House  was acting off the cuff without deep forethought.
In a staggering moment, the President of the United States branded his own nation's justice system as a "joke."
"We  need punishment that's far quicker and far greater than the punishment  these animals are getting right now," he said, before saying he might  send Saipov to Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, which holds suspects caught  abroad.
Trump's spokesman Sarah  Sanders told reporters later that the White House considered Saipov an  "enemy combatant" -- a designation that would deprive him of legal  representation and the right to remain silent and would not necessarily  apply to his case from a legal perspective.
Despite  the tough words, Trump soon came up against a familiar impediment: the  legal and constitutional constraints that sometimes frustrate his desire  for a strongman presidency.
"Our  criminal justice system is based on the Constitution," said Republican  Rep. Mike McCaul on "The Situation Room" with Wolf Blitzer.
"Under  due process, this individual, like it or not, came into the US legally,  is a lawful permanent resident and has rights under the Constitution,"  said McCaul, the chairman of the House Homeland Security committee.
Shortly  after McCaul spoke, New York justice officials announced federal  criminal charges against Saipov, including providing material support to  ISIS.
Susan Hennessey, a former National  Security Agency attorney, said on CNN that the afternoon of "sound and  fury" raised questions about the administration's approach.
"It  is not clear whether the President legitimately did plan on making this  novel or really quite dramatic legal argument if he did not understand  what the words enemy combatant meant and what the ramifications of that  kind of designation would mean here," Hennessey said.
Trump's  new favorite golf partner, South Carolina GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, was  not happy, accusing the President of following Obama's example in  viewing the war on terror as a domestic criminal issue, rather than  looking at using the enemy combatant tag.
"The  Trump administration missed an important opportunity to send a strong  message to terrorists and make America safer. This is a huge mistake.  Very sad," Graham said in a statement.
While  Trump's contempt for the record of the justice system in terrorist  cases might satisfy his sense of frontier justice, it also doesn't  reflect reality.
Most perpetrators  of attacks on US soil have been handled in civilian courts since 9/11.  Many of them, like shoe bomber Richard Reid and September 11 conspirator  Zacarias Moussaoui, are serving life in draconian Supermax prisons  where inmates are locked in spartan cells for up to 23 hours a day.

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