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Former Member

Gitmo to go, Carter in Iraq, and Iran on the Hill again

July 23 at 9:20 AM, Source

 

GITMO TO GO. The Obama administration is in the final stages of a plan, to be submitted to Congress, to close Guantanamo Bay, Defense One reports, a move that also represents a concession from an administration that had previously argued that such a move was unnecessary. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) had tried to give the administration a window for this move in the NDAA – now he’s pressing his colleagues to include a provision to close the offshore prison in the final, conferenced version of the bill. But the issue remains a controversial one in Congress.

 

CARTER IN IRAQ. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter made a surprise visit to Iraq Thursday to speak with officials before the start of a new attack on Islamic State strongholds, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Islamic State took Ramadi in the spring, and U.S.-backed Iraqi forces have been planning an operation to choke off supply routes and take it back. But the effort to push back the Islamic State has had mixed results at best, and Carter has in the past been openly critical of the Iraqis’ efforts to stem the advance of this threat.

 

IRAN AGAIN. Secretary of State John Kerry, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, and Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew head to the Senate Foreign Relations committee on Thursday to sell the deal, and are facing a pretty skeptical Congress, as The Washington Post reports. They face an uphill battle to change skeptical lawmakers’ minds – especially because Congress is only at the start of its 60-day review. And on Wednesday, the Cabinet members’ behind-closed-doors efforts weren’t terribly successful, as National Journal points out.

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White House Readies New Plan to Close Guantanamo Prison

July 22, 2015, Source

 

HAVANA TIMES (dpa) — The White House is in the “final stages” of drafting a new plan to present to Congress that would close “safely and responsibly” the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, said spokesman Josh Earnest.

 

“It’s a tough job, but we’ve made many important advances,” Earnest said.

 

“It is a priority of the president. He believes it to be part of our clear national security interests to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay,” he said.

 

The initiative of President Barack Obama to close the prison was blocked on several occasions by members of Congress.

 

After taking office in January 2009, Obama ordered the closure of the prison where there were detained some 800 suspected terrorists, nearly all without charges, captured abroad and held by the United States since 2002.

 

The process was hampered by the lack of places to send the prisoners, along with the actions of Congress to block the transfer of suspects to US civilian courts or transfer them to prisons in US territory.

 

Since then, hundreds have been released and handed over to their governments or third countries. As of June, 116 men were in the detention center.

 

The controversial naval base in Guantanamo Bay, on the eastern tip of Cuba, is under US control under a 1903 lease agreement that Cuba hasn’t recognized since 1959.

 

Havana demands the return of the territory, but Washington refuses to do so pointing to the “perpetual” lease.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

Guantanamo Bay closure: Why plans to close the notorious prison may be wishful thinking

 

It sounds like an old vinyl record stuck in its groove, another regular reminder of what has long since been a national disgrace. After six years of trying in vain to close the infamous prison for suspected terrorists at Guantanamo Bay, the White House, it is said, is close to finalising another plan to do just that. To which one is tempted to reply: “Dream on”.

 

It was just two days after his first inauguration, on 22 January 2009, that President Obama signed an order requiring that the detention facility in Cuba be shut down. No longer, he said, need the United States be confronted with “a false choice between its security and its ideals.” In the case of Guantanamo however, that choice has persisted, and security, whatever the price to the country’s reputation abroad, has won.

 

True, the number of detainees at “Gitmo” has fallen steeply during the near 14 years it has been in operation, to just 116 today from a peak of 684 in 2003. Of those that remain 99 have been held for at least 10 years, many without specific charges being brought, while 52 have been approved for release.

 

Yes, a few truly big fishes are to be found there, like Khalid Sheik Mohammed, a prime organiser of the 9/11 attacks. But many others are the smallest of fry, individuals picked up on or around the battlefields of Afghanistan in the first months of the war, some of them traded for money to the US authorities by tribal leaders, guilty of little more than being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

 

It is their ordeal that has generated the headlines that shame America: the denial of proper legal representation, the suicides and hunger strikes born of despair. Take Tariq Ba Odah, a Yemeni cleared for release in 2009 but who has languished at Guantanamo, trapped in a legal limbo unmitigated by the bureaucratic confections that lend a veneer of propriety to proceedings – Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRT), Administrative Review Boards, Periodic Review Boards, Inter-Agency Task Forces and suchlike.

 

Since 2007 he has maintained a hunger strike. He is kept alive only by twice-daily forced feeding, a practice now deemed to be torture. His weight has shrivelled from over 11st to barely over 5st. Still, amazingly, he has not lost all hope. In the meantime the trickle of releases has dried up.

 

The last approvals date back to January. The final six men who were freed were resettled last month in Oman. In February, a new Defence Secretary, Ashton Carter, took over from Chuck Hagel, who signed off on the final transfers. Since then, nothing.

 

So why the hold-ups? About all that can be said in defence of the status quo is that the bulk of those are, like Mr Odah, from Yemen, and the civil war raging there renders simple repatriation next to impossible. There then arises the problem of where. Other countries in their region, some with highly oppressive regimes, have not rushed in to help.

 

And Yemen, of course, is just part of the broader chaos across the Middle East. The spread of Isis, the horrific videos of beheadings and other atrocities, hardly strengthen the case for sending back dozens of people justifiably  outraged at the way they have been treated by a country that proclaims itself a champion of the rights of man.

 

The true obstacle however is the attitude of ordinary Americans, reflected in a Congress that, time and again, has stymied efforts to shut Guantanamo down. There is no reason to doubt Obama’s sincerity in seeking that end; even President Bush, during whose administration Gitmo opened, wanted no more of the place, only to realise that prisons, like wars, are much easier to start than to end.

 

But, for all the agitation of human rights groups, the general public simply doesn’t care that much. And even if it did, the shameless fearmongering on Capitol Hill would probably win the day. Fearmongering explains why Guantanamo inmates can’t be transferred to prisons on the US mainland (as if they’d make a break from a federal supermax). It partly explains too why Congress refuses to allow their cases to be heard by standard criminal courts (which have handled other high-profile terror cases competently and without incident).

 

The other part of the explanation is of course that the evidence against many suspects, whether extracted by torture or consisting of little more than hearsay, would be inadmissible in a normal civilian court. But, then again, who cares?

 

As Tom Cotton, the brash young Republican Senator from Arkansas, has put it: “In my opinion, the only problem with Guantanamo Bay is there are too many empty beds and cells there right now. As far as I’m concerned every last one of them can rot in Hell, but as long as they don’t do that, they can rot in Guantanamo Bay.” Charming stuff. But even responsible voices like Speaker John Boehner insist that “bipartisan majorities in Congress” oppose closing the prison and “bringing dangerous terrorists to US soil.” Every sign is that he is right.

 

So is there a chance that six and a half years after signing that initial presidential order, Obama can finally deliver? Perennial optimists will point to the Senate version of the latest Pentagon spending bill which maintains current restrictions but at least offers a path towards shutting Gitmo down.

 

Not so, however, the House of Representatives version, which if anything tightens existing conditions. The two texts have to be reconciled. Obama has promised to veto any measure that does not allow closure of Guantanamo Bay. Surely though, only if the Senate prevails will this latest White House plan have a chance.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

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