dissenting:
The majority opinion correctly recites the constitutional standards governing the Sixth Amendment right to counsel and the correlative right under Faretta to waive counsel and proceed pro se. See Faretta v. California, 422 U.S. 806, 819, 95 S.Ct. 2525, 45 L.Ed.2d 562 (1975) (“Although not stated in the [Sixth] Amendment in so many words, the right to self-representation — to make one’s own defense personally — is ... necessarily implied by the structure of the Amendment.”). The majority also identifies the responsibilities incumbent upon defendants before undertaking self-representation. Defendants must execute a waiver of their Sixth Amendment right to counsel that is (1) clear and unequivocal, see Faretta, 422 U.S. at 835, 95 S.Ct. 2525; (2) knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, see id.; see also Godinez v. Moran, 509 U.S. 389, 400-01, 113 S.Ct. 2680, 125 L.Ed.2d 321 (1993); and (3) timely. See United States v. Lawrence, 605 F.2d 1321, 1325 n. 2 (4th Cir.1979).
While the majority articulates the constitutional framework accurately, its characterization of Frazier-El’s attempted waiver of counsel is somewhat tenuous. As I read the record, the district court’s denial of Frazier-El’s request for self-representation rested on a fundamental misunderstanding of the “competency” a defendant must demonstrate before waiving counsel and proceeding pro se. Recognizing the futility of affirming on this fallible legal foundation, the majority creates a post hoc rationalization for the district court’s ruling. The majority accomplishes this by redescribing the infirmity in Frazier-El’s request, emphasizing not his incompetence but his failure to waive counsel in a “clear and unequivocal” fashion. At various points, the majority also engrafts a fourth “legitimacy” criterion onto Faret-ta’s three-part framework, arguing that defendants must also have “legitimate” or “sincere” reasons for wanting to proceed pro se. This reformulation of the case is more conceptually sophisticated than the district court’s approach. When applied to the facts of Frazier-El’s case, however, the majority’s modified analysis suffers from several difficulties.
I.
Frazier-El was profoundly dissatisfied with his court-appointed counsel, in part because his counsel refused to argue that the court lacked jurisdiction over Frazier-El as “an officer in the Moorish Science Temple.” Frazier-El initially sought the appointment of new counsel, which the court denied. As a fallback, Frazier-El requested that the court permit him to proceed pro se. The court denied this request as well.
The threshold issue is determining why the district court denied Frazier-El’s pro se request and whether a denial on that basis was appropriate. The court explained that it was denying the request because Frazier-El’s “Moorish national” *565argument represented an effort “to argue matters which would not be permitted by this court.” The court continued: “I think Mr. Frazier-El is in a position where he is not competent because of arguments he has made to represent himself. However, this court is absolutely convinced that Mr. Frazier-El understands the nature of the proceedings and is able, if he so desires— he is an intelligent man — to assist in his own defense .... ” (emphasis added).
The district court’s conclusion reflects a misunderstanding of the “competence” defendants must demonstrate before undertaking self-representation. “Competency” in the waiver of counsel context is coextensive with the “competency” necessary to stand trial. See Godinez, 509 U.S. at 399, 113 S.Ct. 2680 (holding that a defendant who waives his right to counsel need not be “more competent than a defendant who does not, since there is no reason to believe that the decision to waive counsel requires an appreciably higher mental functioning .... ”); see also Faretta, 422 U.S. at 835-36, 95 S.Ct. 2525 (while a defendant choosing self-representation must do so “competently and intelligently,” the defendant’s “technical legal knowledge” is “not relevant” to determining whether he is competent to waive his right to counsel). “Competency” represents the minimal ability to understand the nature of the trial proceedings and to assist in one’s own defense. See Godinez, 509 U.S. at 401 n. 12, 113 S.Ct. 2680 (“The focus of a competency inquiry is the defendant’s mental capacity; the question is whether he has the ability to understand the trial proceedings.”). It is the threshold issue in every waiver of counsel case; for if the defendant is incapable of understanding the adversary proceeding in which he is involved, no trial is possible, much less a trial with the defendant conducting his own representation.
The district court, however, spoke of Frazier-El’s lack of “competence” in the same sentence that it pronounced him capable of assisting in his own defense— stating, in effect, that the defendant was not competent to proceed pro se even though he was competent to stand trial. In doing so, the court improperly applied a heightened standard of competency for waiver of counsel purposes, requiring defendants seeking pro se representation to demonstrate an extra measure of legal capacity exceeding the baseline standard for competency to stand trial.1 The district court’s conclusion is incorrect as a matter of law, given that the competency standards in the two contexts are symmetrical. See Faretta, 422 U.S. at 834, 95 S.Ct. 2525 (rejecting judicial paternalism and holding that a court must respect a defendant’s desire for self-representation as competent even when “he may conduct his own defense ultimately to his own detriment”); see also United States v. Arlt, 41 F.3d 516, 518 (9th Cir.1994) (“[T]he Supreme Court’s decision in Godinez explicitly forbids any attempt to measure a defendant’s competency to waive the right to counsel by evaluating his ability to represent himself *566[in a tactical sense].”)- The court effectively ratchetted up the standard for a valid waiver of the right to counsel, applying a heightened “competency” analysis that scrutinized Frazier-El’s reasons for seeking pro se representation rather than his basic capacity to understand the trial proceedings and his rudimentary cognizance of what waiving counsel would entail.
To its credit, the majority opinion correctly notes that the district court, when denying Frazier-El’s request for pro se representation, committed “an error of law” to the extent it based its denial on the feebleness of Frazier-El’s proposed arguments and the legal “incompetence” these arguments allegedly reflected. Instead of reversing the district court’s error, however, the majority provides a post hoc rationalization for the court’s denial of Frazier-El’s request for self-representation. Recognizing that the district court’s “competency” analysis is indefensible, the majority repackages the court’s denial of Frazier-El’s pro se request as resting on two different foundations: (1) Faretta’s first requirement that waivers of the right to counsel be “clear and unequivocal,” 422 U.S. at 835, 95 S.Ct. 2525, and (2) a manufactured “fourth” requirement that defendants have sincere and legitimate reasons for seeking pro se representation. The majority’s “clear and unequivocal” analysis is an attack on the form of Frazier-El’s request. Its “sincere and legitimate” analysis is an attack on the reasons why Frazier-El sought pro se representation.
II.
First, the form of Frazier-El’s request. The majority contends that the district court denied Frazier-El’s request for self-representation because Frazier-El repeatedly equivocated, vacillating between a desire for new appointed counsel, on one hand, and a desire to proceed pro se, on the other hand. Whether this accurately describes the district court’s rationale is of course debatable, given that the court seemed more concerned with the kinds of arguments Frazier-El wanted to raise at trial than with the certitude of his desire to make them on his own behalf. Assuming for the moment that the court was indeed concerned about the clarity of Frazier-El’s request for self-representation, there was nothing equivocal about what Frazier-El said. It is true that Frazier-El’s request was a conditional one that he phrased “in the alternative,” making it more nuanced than an orthodox waiver of counsel: Nevertheless, Frazier-El’s request to represent himself was perfectly clear and intelligible. Each day people make countless requests in the alternative (“I’d like some coffee, but if you’re out of coffee I’ll take some tea”; “I’d prefer to see a movie, but if that’s not possible, we can go to the museum instead”). Many languages even have a separate linguistic category called the subjunctive mood to express these sorts of contingent statements. Because such statements are “conditional ... not equivocal,” Adams v. Carroll, 875 F.2d 1441, 1445 (9th Cir.1989), every other federal circuit to consider the question has come to the sensible conclusion that requesting self-representation as a “fallback” or “alternative” to a primary request for new appointed counsel does not automatically render the alternative request unclear or equivocal for purposes of Faretta. See Adams, 875 F.2d at 1444-45 (conditional nature of request for self-representation does not make it equivocal or provide evidence of vacillation, in view of the “earnestness and frequency of [defendant’s] requests to represent himself’); Johnstone v. Kelly, 808 F.2d 214, 216 n. 2 (2d Cir.1986) (“A request to proceed pro se is not equivocal merely because it is an alternative position, advanced as a fallback to a primary request for different counsel.”) (citations omitted); Williams v. Bartlett, 44 F.3d 95, 100 (2d Cir.1994) (“[A] defendant is not deemed to have equivocated in his desire for self-representation merely because he expresses that view in the alternative [and] simultaneously requests the appointment of new counsel .... ”); and United States v. Baker, 84 *567F.3d 1263, 1264 (10th Cir.1996) (rejecting government’s argument that defendant did not make clear and unequivocal request; request for advisory counsel did not diminish right to self-representation).
While the majority does not embrace the common sense position that prevails in other federal circuits, I do not read its opinion as creating a categorical rule that every request stated in the alternative is presumptively an equivocal one. Instead, the majority implies that courts must look to the policies underlying the “clear and unequivocal” requirement to determine whether a particular request for self-representation complies with Faretta. Thus, on the majority’s theory, not every request stated in the alternative violates the “clear and unequivocal” requirement — only that sub-set of requests stated in the alternative violating the policies the requirement embodies.
III.
The majority seems to have -three different theories about why pro se requests stated in the alternative violate the “clear and unequivocal” requirement, vitiating a defendant’s request for self-representation: (1) conditional requests increase the risk of an inadvertent waiver of the right to counsel; (2) conditional requests are often a manipulative tactic for delay, disruption, and distortion of the system; and (3) conditional requests are often a strategic ploy to create grounds for reversible error on appeal.
First, the majority argues that a request stated in the alternative may increase the risk of “an inadvertent waiver of the right to counsel by a defendant’s ‘occasional musings on the benefits of self-representation.’ ” Arlt, 41 F.3d at 519 (quoting Adams, 875 F.2d at 1444). In the instant case, however, Frazier-El’s request for self-representation reflected a deep-seated, persistently held conviction, not an “occasional musing” on the benefits of proceeding pro se. In separate pretrial proceedings spread out over the course of a year, Frazier-El repeatedly told the court that he wanted to represent himself. At the initial hearing regarding his competency to stand trial, Frazier-El told the court several times that he wanted to dismiss his lawyer and represent himself. Frazier-El reasserted his right to self-representation at the second competency hearing when he sought to discharge his counsel, Mr. Ris-berg. Finally, before the start of the pretrial motions hearing, Frazier-El again sought to represent himself and repeatedly responded “yes” when the court asked him if that was his desire. Thus the concerns raised in Arlt (amorphous gestures toward self-representation leading to an inadvertent waiver of the right to counsel) are simply not present in the instant case. If there is an infirmity in Frazier-El’s request, it must therefore lie elsewhere.
The majority’s second theory is that pro se requests stated in the alternative are not “clear and unequivocal” when they are a device for delay, disruption, and distortion of the system. See majority op. at 559. A defendant’s duplicitous motivations for stating a pro se request, however, have nothing to do with the request’s clarity and unequivocality. I suspect the majority would counter that a pro se request engendered by ulterior motives (such as the desire to delay, disrupt, or distort) is not “clear and unequivocal” in the sense that it is tainted with an agenda, rather than being a pure, unalloyed request. This is a creative gloss on the “clear and unequivocal” requirement. What the majority is really doing, however, is grafting a fourth “sincerity,” or “legitimacy,” criterion onto the trilogy of factors governing waiver of the right to counsel under Faretta. See majority op. at 560 (“A trial court must be permitted to distinguish between a manipulative effort to present particular arguments and a sincere desire to dispense with the benefits of counsel.”) (emphasis added).
The questionable pedigree of the majority’s “sincerity” thesis is best illustrated by the cases the majority cites in support of *568it. One of the cases has nothing to do with waiver of the right to counsel at all. The two others are factually distinguishable from the instant case. For example, the majority cites United States v. Lawrence, 605 F.2d 1321, 1324-25 (4th Cir.1979), as authority for its claim that alternative requests for self-representation are invalid when used as a tactic for “delay.” Lawrence did raise concerns about the tendency of self-representation requests to delay trial proceedings; but the court discussed the issue under the rubric of the “timeliness” requirement, asking whether courts should honor requests by the defendant to waive counsel and proceed pro se after the trial has commenced. The Lawrence court held that the “timeliness” requirement is designed to strike a balance between the defendant’s right to self-representation and the system’s interest in minimizing disruptions, avoiding inconvenience and delay, and maintaining the continuity of the trial. Id. Lawrence is therefore a case about late, untimely requests to proceed pro se, not about pro se requests stated in the alternative. Consequently, it is a red herring in the majority’s analysis. Moreover, what little relevance Lawrence possesses clearly redounds to Frazier-El’s benefit, given that the defendant in Lawrence requested self-representation only after a year of repeated pretrial court appearances, see id. at 1325, whereas Frazier-El stated his request from the outset of the pretrial proceedings.
Equally misleading is the majority’s reference to United States v. Singleton, 107 F.3d 1091 (4th Cir.1997), for the proposition that pro se requests stated in the alternative are impermissible when they are an “instrument to distort the system.” Id. at 1102. Like Lawrence, Singleton was not a case about a pro se request stated in the alternative. Instead, it involved a request by a defendant to represent himself in certain spheres of the trial while enjoying the benefits of appointed counsel in others. In the instant case, Frazier-El wanted either a new counsel or to represent himself. The defendant in Singleton, however, wanted both simultaneously — an “intermediate accommodation” that involved “selectively employing] his attorney while making his own defense.” Id. The “distortion” of the system that Singleton addressed therefore arose from a scenario entirely distinguishable from Frazier-El’s conditional request for self-representation. The majority’s effort to export Singleton’s “distortion” rationale to the instant case is therefore unavailing.
Most problematic is the majority’s misleading citation to footnote 46 of Faretta for the proposition that defendants should not use conditional pro se requests as a tactic for “disruption of the system.” 422 U.S. at 834 n. 46, 95 S.Ct. 2525. Footnote 46 has nothing to do with conditional pro se requests. Indeed, it has nothing to do with the propriety of any type of pro se request. Instead, footnote 46’s “disruption” concerns focus on problems that may arise after a court has already granted a pro se request, and a defendant who is untrained in the rituals and conventions of legal argumentation represents himself without the normalizing influence of a lawyer. Footnote 46 of Faretta empowers courts to deal with potential disruptions and irregularities by preventing pro se defendants from making a travesty of the court proceedings. Footnote 46, however, says nothing about whether a defendant’s disruptive motivations for making a pro se request constitute a legitimate basis for denying it.2
*569In short, the majority derives its second theory (the sincerity-based “delay, disruption, and distortion” argument) from inap-posite case law. Notwithstanding the fact that a defendant’s motivation for seeking self representation is irrelevant under the trilogy of factors governing waiver of the right to counsel, the three eases the majority cites to support its “sincerity” thesis have nothing to do with the defendant’s sincerity at all. The defendant in Lawrence lost because his pro se request was belated, not because it was insincere. The defendant in Singleton lost because he sought an impermissible middle ground between self-representation and representation by counsel. The problem was what he wanted, not why he wanted it. Faretta is the farthest afield because it has nothing to do with requests for self-representation at all, much less the sincerity with which defendants make such requests.
Even if it had stronger moorings in relevant decisional authority, the “sincerity” thesis is a weak basis for attacking Frazier-El’s request, which arose not from dilatory or disruptive stratagems but from a sincere desire to conduct his own defense in the event the court would not grant him new appointed counsel. The argument that Frazier-El sought to advance on his behalf (that the court lacked jurisdiction over him as a Moorish national) was indeed a frivolous one. But Faretta makes abundantly clear that, while pro se defendants must practice basic decorum while conducting their defense, the tenuousness of their arguments is not a basis for denying them the right to self-representation. See id. at 834, 836, 95 S.Ct. 2525.
IV.
Even though the majority’s analytical detour through the “sincerity” thesis is a dead end, the majority has yet another theory as to why conditional requests for self-representation amount to an insuffi*570cient waiver of the right to counsel. According to the majority, defendants like Frazier-El often request pro se representation in the alternative for the express purpose of creating reversible error on appeal. The strategy the majority imputes to defendants like Frazier-El involves the defendant’s creation of a Catch-22, forcing the court to “ ‘traverse ... a thin line’ between improperly allowing the defendant to proceed pro se, thereby violating his right to counsel, and improperly having the defendant proceed without counsel, thereby violating his right to self-representation.” Fields v. Murray, 49 F.3d 1024, 1029 (4th Cir.1995) (quoting Cross v. United States, 893 F.2d 1287, 1290 (11th Cir.1990)). Because the denial of the right to self-representation is a structural defect never amenable to harmless error analysis, see McKaskle v. Wiggins, 465 U.S. 168, 177 n. 8, 104 S.Ct. 944, 79 L.Ed.2d 122 (1984), and Arizona v. Fulminante, 499 U.S. 279, 310, 111 S.Ct. 1246, 113 L.Ed.2d 302 (1991), the majority is concerned that artful criminal defendants will manipulate the “mutual exclusivity of the rights to counsel and self-representation,” Fields, 49 F.3d at 1029, for the deliberate purpose of creating reversible error on review. See majority op. at 559.
Unlike the “sincerity” thesis, the “reversible error” scenario discussed in Fields at least has a firmer doctrinal grounding in Faretta’s “clear and unequivocal” requirement. See Fields, 49 F.3d at 1029 (describing the “reversible error” scenario as one of the problems the “clear and unequivocal” requirement helps to combat). Fields, however, is distinguishable from the instant case. To begin with, the “reversible error” language in Fields is dicta. The Fields court denied the defendant’s request for pro se representation not because it was a plot to create reversible error but because the defendant only requested self-representation once over the course of three letters to the court and several subsequent hearings. The single request he tendered, moreover, was a tentative one, qualified by a comment that he “regretfted] taking this action” and was “reluetan[t]” even to act as co-counsel “since [his] knowledge of the law [was] limited.” Id. at 1033. By contrast, Frazier-El requested self-representation on multiple occasions, beginning at the outset of the pretrial proceedings. At no time did he express any reservations about his ability or his desire to proceed pro se, in the event the court was unwilling to grant his primary request to have newly appointed counsel.
The defendant in Fields, furthermore, was not genuinely interested in conducting his entire defense on his own. All he really wanted was the opportunity to participate in one discrete area of the trial: the cross-examination of the children he was accused of assaulting. Id. at 1034. In this sense, his request to proceed pro se was really just a pre-text for a different agenda. Because the court held that the defendant had no right to cross-examine the children personally, it denied his request for self-representation, given that his pro se motion was parasitic on his desire to engage in the forbidden cross-examination. Id.
In short, Fields ’ discussion of the “reversible error” scenario was not essential to its holding. Interestingly, however, Fields lends some credence to a variant of the majority’s “sincerity” thesis, even though the majority does not seem to recognize this and fails to develop its implications. The Fields court held that a request to proceed pro se must, at a minimum, be clear and unequivocal, knowing and voluntary, and timely. Yet a pro se request could still fail, the court held, if the defendant’s underlying reasons for seeking self-representation were illegitimate. Id. at 1034. In the instant case, the majority makes a similar argument when holding that the district court’s finding regarding Frazier-El’s “incompetence” referred only to “the legitimacy of the request and the arguments advanced, rather than to Frazier-El’s abili*571ty to make a knowing election of self-representation and waiver of counsel.” See majority op. at 561 (emphasis added). The suggestion is that, Faretta’s three-part waiver of counsel framework may implicitly include a fourth “legitimacy” criterion. This argument, however, is question-begging. It provides no criteria for distinguishing legitimate from illegitimate reasons for seeking self-representation. And it leaves unanswered the toughest question: namely, how to reconcile the intuition that certain reasons for seeking self-representation are improper with the unmistakable command of Faret-ta, which held that courts should not be in the business of paternalistically second-guessing the wisdom of a defendant’s desire to proceed pro se, “even where the defendant may ultimate conduct his defense to his own detriment.” 422 U.S. at 834, 95 S.Ct. 2525.
Frazier-El’s Moorish national argument is clearly a non-starter in terms of trial strategy. Nevertheless, as the report on Frazier-El’s competency suggested, Frazier-El’s argument “is loosely based on the doctrine of the Moorish Science Temple of America, a recognized organization in the United States.” While Frazier-El had “exaggerated” the doctrine for his own benefit, the competency report concluded that the argument was not delusional and was grounded in an established set of religious creeds. Unlike in Fields, where the court had a compelling reason for denying the defendant’s request to cross-examine the children he allegedly assaulted, there is no comparable reason for denying Frazier-El the opportunity to make his Moorish national argument simply because it strikes more enlightened judicial minds as utter absurdity.
To focus the inquiry, however, I suggest that this court need not reach the issue of whether Frazier-El’s reasons for wanting to proceed pro se are analogous to, or distinguishable from, the situation in Fields. And we certainly need not reach the even thornier antecedent issue of why some reasons for seeking pro se representation are legitimate and others are not. Sidestepping these difficult conceptual issues is possible because there is a narrower, more straightforward basis for granting Frazier-El’s pro se request. Even if the Moorish national argument is improper, Frazier-El made clear that this was not the only argument he would have advanced during the course of his contemplated self-representation. Unlike the defendant in Fields, who conceded “that he desired to proceed pro se for only one purpose,” id. at 1034, Frazier-El let the court know that his Moorish national argument was merely “one of the issues” he would raise at trial. See majority op. at 557-58. In light of this statement, it was the judge’s responsibility to ask more thorough follow-up questions to determine what else Frazier-El would be arguing during his self-representation. Instead, the judge (or, more precisely, the majority standing in as a surrogate for the judge) glibly presumed that Frazier-El’s request for self-representation was nothing more than “a manipulative effort to assert the [Moorish national] defenses himself.” The tenuous quality of his Moorish national argument, however, was an improper basis for denying Frazier-El’s request for self-representation, given that he was planning to make other arguments and had other reasons for wanting to proceed pro se, unlike the defendant in Fields.
V.
There is one final issue worth revisiting, and it deals with the majority’s argument that Frazier-El was surreptitiously trying to create reversible error by phrasing his request in the alternative. I argued in the prior section that the “reversible error” scenario in Fields was dicta. Even if it was not dicta, however, there are better ways to deal with the “reversible error” problem than by creating a judicial rule, ex ante, that all pro se requests stated in the alternative are presumptively disfavored. Indeed, it is possible to combat the “re*572versible error” scenario in a way that both respects a defendant’s Faretta right to self-representation and guards against its abuse. The Ninth Circuit’s opinion in Adams v. Carroll is instructive. Holding that the conditional nature of a defendant’s request for self-representation does not make it equivocal, the court explained:
This conclusion is reinforced when tested against the purposes underlying the unequivocality requirement. Adams was not seeking to waive his right to counsel in a thoughtless manner; the trial court engaged him in extensive discussion regarding the difficulties of proceeding in pro per. Adams nevertheless persisted, choosing to fend for himself rather than rely on counsel whom he mistrusted. Nor was his request a momentary caprice or the result of thinking out loud; he made the same request over and over again, at nearly every opportunity. Had the request been granted, an appeal based on the denial of the assistance of counsel would have been frivolous, in light of the earnestness and frequency of his requests to represent himself. None of the purposes served by the requirement would be furthered by treating a conditional request for self-representation as equivocal.
Id. at 1445.
I also note the significance of the immediately preceding passage. Right before concluding that the defendant’s conditional pro se request was in fact “clear and unequivocal,” the Adams court raised concerns about defendants concocting a “reversible error” scenario by phrasing their pro se requests in the alternative — the exact issue so worrisome to the majority. In fact, the language from Fields v. Murray that the majority cites to underscore its “reversible error” concerns is lifted verbatim from Adams, which was decided six years earlier. In effect, the majority selectively borrows language from Adams that helps it rule against Frazier-El but conveniently ignores the ultimate holding of Adams, which undeniably inures to Frazier-El’s benefit — given the obvious parallels between the nature of the conditional pro se requests made by the defendants in the two cases.
Had the majority read Adams holistically, rather than in a piece-meal fashion, it would have seen that the case offers some simple antidotes to the “reversible error” Pandora’s Box that the majority is reluctant to open. First, Adams suggests that the district court must conduct a thorough and careful colloquy with the defendant to pin down precisely what the defendant’s wishes are. If a defendant is making ambiguous gestures toward self-representation, the court must confront the defendant and force him to make a more exacting statement, ensuring that the defendant understands precisely what his rights are along with the serious consequences of waiving counsel. There is no reason that a conditional pro se request should send the district court into analytical disorientation. Rather than flatly denying a request for self-representation because the form of the request is a conditional one, the court should simply frame the conditional request in clear terms and make the defendant acknowledge on the record that the court has properly understood the request. For example, the court should say something to the defendant such as: “You want new counsel; but if I deny you that, you then want to represent yourself. Is that correct? And you understand that if I deny your request for new counsel and grant your fallback request for self-representation, you thereby waive your right to counsel and cannot later come back and say that my decision to grant you self-representation was a denial of your right to counsel. Do you understand that? If so, do you still want to represent yourself?”
Forcing defendants to articulate their position in such precise terms is one step toward combating the “reversible error” scenario. The second step is even simpler. As long as the district court elicits the *573precise contours of a defendant’s request, appellate courts will not countenance arguments by defendants on appeal that the district court improperly allowed them to proceed pro se. The district court need not worry about clever defendants manipulating them into “reversible error” as long as the district court does a sufficient job of engaging the defendant on the record. See Bartlett, 44 F.3d at 100 (“The entire procedure requires not only an intricate assessment of the defendant’s intent, knowledge, and capacity, but a strong measure of patience as well.”) (internal quotations omitted). It is no doubt easier when the defendant makes a simple request to proceed pro se, uncluttered by conditions and fallback scenarios. By trying to make things easier on the district court, however, the majority dangerously erodes defendants’ fundamental Faretta rights by requiring, it seems, “a Zen-like persistence in uttering a single mantra,” Fields, 49 F.3d at 1044 (Ervin, J., dissenting), and the “ability to spout crisp legalese,” id., before a court will grant a request for self-representation.
VI.
While the majority pays nominal deference to the pro se right recognized in Faretta, the unmistakable subtext of its opinion is that the right is a nuisance and a constitutional anachronism that courts should curtail whenever possible. For example, the majority cites Martinez for the proposition that, “with the increased availability of competent counsel, the historical reasons for recognizing the right do not have the same force.” See majority op. at 560.
The original historical justification for the pro se right, however, is but one source of its constitutional legitimacy. Equally important to the Faretta court was the insight that the self-representation right grows out of “that respect for the individual which is the lifeblood of the law.” 422 U.S. at 834, 95 S.Ct. 2525 (internal quotations omitted). “An unwanted counsel ‘represents’ the defendant only through a tenuous and unacceptable legal fiction,” id. at 821, 95 S.Ct. 2525, because it is ultimately the “defendant, and not his lawyer or the State, [who] will bear the personal consequences of a conviction.” Id. at 834, 95 S.Ct. 2525.
Unlike the antiquated historical argument for self-representation, Faretta’s “autonomy” rationale is as compelling today as it was centuries ago and is undiminished by the ready availability of competent counsel in modern times. The Martinez Court recognized as much, holding that “an individual’s decision to represent himself is no longer compelled by the necessity of choosing self-representation over incompetent or nonexistent representation; rather, it more likely reflects a genuine desire to ‘conduct his own cause in his own words.’ ” Martinez, 120 S.Ct. at 689 (quoting Faretta, 422 U.S. at 823, 95 S.Ct. 2525).
To be sure, the pro se right is not without limits. Appellate courts are not free, however, to superimpose additional layers of restrictions that reduce the availability of the pro se right. The majority’s decision to do so suggests that it is less concerned with analytical and doctrinal integrity than with surreptitiously eroding a disfavored constitutional right.
I respectfully dissent.
. The Supreme Court has often spoken of the “knowing and intelligent” requirement as imposing a “heightened” standard on defendants seeking self-representation. See Godinez, 509 U.S. at 401, 113 S.Ct. 2680. In Godinez, however, the court explained that the heightened standard created by the "knowing and intelligent” requirement "is not a heightened standard of competence." Id. Instead, it is a heightened standard of cognizance. See id. at 401 n. 12, 113 S.Ct. 2680 (holding that the "competency inquiry” focuses on "the defendant's mental capacity” and "ability to understand the proceedings,” whereas the "knowing and voluntary” inquiry determines "whether the defendant actually does understand the significance and consequences of a particular decision and whether the decision is uncoerced”).
The evidence suggests that Frazier-El did in fact understand the significance and consequences of waiving counsel and proceeding pro se, thereby satisfying the heightened “knowing and voluntary” requirement. Thus, even if the district court was confused about the proper nomenclature and accidentally conflated the “competency” inquiry and the "knowing and voluntary” inquiry, its denial of Frazier-El’s request was still improper.
. The majority also relies on Martinez v. Court of Appeal of Cal., - U.S. -, 120 S.Ct. 684, 145 L.Ed.2d 597 (2000), for the proposition that trial courts have a general, overarching interest in "ensuring the integrity and efficiency of the trial,” which often "outweighs the defendant’s interest in acting as his own lawyer.” Id. at 691. Martinez, however, is distinguishable. In that case, the question before the Court was whether the logic of Faretta, which recognized a Sixth Amendment right to represent oneself at trial, also confers an analogous Sixth Amendment right to represent oneself during appellate proceedings. See id. 120 S.Ct. at 687 ("Our conclusion in Faretta extended only to a defendant’s consti*569tutional right to conduct his own defense. Accordingly, our specific holding was confined to the right to defend oneself at trial. We now address the different question whether the reasoning in support of that holding also applies when the defendant becomes an appellant and assumes the burden of persuading a reviewing court that the conviction should be reversed.”). Because the Sixth Amendment "does not apply to appellate proceedings,” id. at 690, the Court held that "any individual right to self-representation on appeal based on autonomy principles must be grounded in the Due Process Clause.” Id.
In the course of its due process inquiry, the Court observed, in dicta, that "the right to self-representation is not absolute ... [e]ven at the trial level....” Id. at 691. The Court then enumerated the various limits on the Sixth Amendment pro se right recognized in Faretta. For example, the defendant’s request for self-representation must be "voluntary and intelligent” and "timely.” The trial judge "may also terminate self-representation or appoint 'standby counsel' — even over the defendant’s objection — if necessary.” Id. Standby counsel may also participate in the trial proceeding, even without the express consent of the defendant, as long as the participation does not seriously undermine the appearance before the jury that the defendant is representing himself. See id. (citing McKaskle v. Wiggins, 465 U.S. 168, 187, 104 S.Ct. 944, 79 L.Ed.2d 122 (1984)). Finally, the trial judge is under no obligation to provide instruction to the pro se defendant on courtroom procedure or to perform any "legal 'chores’ for the defendant that counsel would normally carry out.” Martinez, 120 S.Ct. at 691 (citing McKaskle, 465 U.S. at 183-84, 104 S.Ct. 944).
These various limits on the pro se right, the Martinez Court explained, reflect the "government’s interest in ensuring the integrity and efficiency of the trial,” which will "at times outweigh the defendant's interest in acting as his own lawyer.” Id. 120 S.Ct. at 691. The "integrity and efficiency” rationale, however, does not endow trial courts with the power to scrutinize the "sincerity” or "legitimacy” or a pro se request, as the majority claims. The only ex ante limit on pro se requests is that they be clear and unequivocal; knowing and voluntary; and timely. All the other limits (appointment of standby counsel and termination of self-representation once commenced) are ex post restrictions. The majority’s reliance on Martinez is therefore misplaced. The ultimate holding of Martinez addressed the pro se right in an appellate, rather than a trial, setting. And the Court’s dicta regarding the "integrity and efficiency” restriction on the pro se right in the trial context does not authorize judicial interrogation into the "sincerity” or “legitimacy” of a pro se request.