Showing posts with label guantanamo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guantanamo. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

Uruguay Agrees To Take Five Guantánamo Prisoners

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Uruguay Agrees To Take Five Guantánamo Prisoners

Saturday, February 1, 2014

The world at war: The mind, journalism, freedoms... Retired Generals and Admirals Urge President Obama to Close Guantanamo, Release Senate Report on CIA Torture


We bring to the attention of our readers the letter by 31 retired generals to President Obama. While the latter tacitly endorses the Obama administration without focusing on the illegality and criminal nature of the Guantanamo detention facility, it nonetheless constitutes a timely initiative. The letter by the 31 retired military leaders calls upon President Obama to fully cooperate with the Senate intelligence committee to declassify and publicly release the 6000-plus page study that details the post-9/11 CIA rendition, detention, and interrogation program.


The following introductory text is by Human Rights First, followed by the transcript of the Open Letter (GR Editor M.Ch.)


Washington, D.C. – Thirty-one of the nation’s most respected retired generals and admirals today sent a letter to President Obama urging him to make good on his executive order to close the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay. They also asked that he set the record straight on torture, a policy he also banned by executive order. Members of the coalition who signed today’s letter stood behind the president on January 22, 2009 – his second day in office – when the orders were signed.


“We appreciate your leadership this past year in recommitting to closing Guantanamo,” wrote the generals and admirals. “Guantanamo does not serve America’s interests.  As long as it remains open, Guantanamo will undermine America’s security and status as a nation where human rights and the rule of law matter.”


Today’s letter comes as Congress and the Obama Administration have made progress toward putting Guantanamo on the path to closure.  In December, Congress passed its annual defense bill that replaced confusing and cumbersome foreign transfer restrictions that the Obama Administration had said complicated the transfers of detainees to their home or third countries. The administration also transferred three Uighur detainees to Slovakia, ending the detention of men whom the administration says never posed a threat to the United States, but could not be repatriated to China where they faced certain persecution as a Muslim minority in that nation.


Progress toward closing Guantanamo continued this month as the Periodic Review Board (PRB), established by executive order in March 2011, concluded its first case. It ruled that Mahmoud Abdulaziz Al-Mujahid, a Yemeni citizen, no longer poses a significant threat to U.S. national security and is now cleared for transfer. In addition, media and nongovernmental organizations have been invited to observe PRB hearings at the end of the month. Despite this progress, the pace of transfers will have to increase dramatically to achieve closing the prison by the end of President Obama’s second term.


With regard to torture, the retired military leaders urged President Obama to direct his administration, particularly the CIA, to fully cooperate with the Senate intelligence committee to declassify and publicly release the 6000-plus page study that details the post-9/11 CIA rendition, detention, and interrogation program. The report, which was adopted by the committee over a year ago, has not yet come to a vote over declassification as the intelligence committee had been unable to move forward due to lack of cooperation from the administration.


“Former CIA officials who authorized torture continue to defend it in books and film, and public opinion is with them, based on mythology, not fact,” stated the letter.


“We believe that upon reviewing the facts the American people will agree that torture was not worth it, and that we as a nation should never return to the dark side.”



TEXT OF LETTER


January 21, 2014


President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500


Dear President Obama:


Five years ago tomorrow, members of our coalition of retired generals and admirals stood behind
you in the Oval Office when you signed three executive orders that helped put our nation’s
counterterrorism efforts on a stronger footing, consistent with our laws and values. You banned
torture, closed the CIA “black sites” where torture occurred, and put Guantanamo on the path to
closure.


We appreciate your leadership this past year in recommitting to closing Guantanamo. Congress
responded, passing an annual defense bill that provides you with substantial additional flexibility
to repatriate or resettle the 77 detainees who have been cleared for transfer by our security
agencies. We encourage your administration to transfer all cleared detainees as soon as possible
and complete administrative reviews of the remaining eligible detainees by year’s end to determine
who else might be eligible for transfer. Guantanamo does not serve America’s interests. As long
as it remains open, Guantanamo will undermine America’s security and status as a nation where
human rights and the rule of law matter.


While you have made progress on Guantanamo this past year, we are concerned about the
enduring and false debate over torture by the CIA. Former CIA officials who authorized torture
continue to defend it in books and film, and public opinion is with them, based on mythology, not
fact. The American people deserve access to the voluminous, 6000-plus page study that details the
post-9/11 CIA rendition, detention, and interrogation program, adopted by the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence. We call on you to direct your administration, including the CIA, to
fully cooperate with the committee to declassify with minimal redaction and publicly release the
study. We believe that upon reviewing the facts the American people will agree that torture was
not worth it, and that we as a nation should never return to the dark side.


 We thank you for your steadfast commitment to these issues at the heart of our national security
and values, and stand ready to assist in any way that we can.

Sincerely,


General Joseph P. Hoar, USMC (Ret.)
General Charles C. Krulak, USMC (Ret.)
General David M. Maddox, USA (Ret.)
General Merrill A. McPeak, USAF (Ret.)
General William G. T. Tuttle, Jr., USA (Ret.)
Lieutenant General Robert G. Gard, Jr., USA (Ret.)
Vice Admiral Lee F. Gunn, USN (Ret.)
Lieutenant General Arlen D. Jameson, USAF (Ret.)
Lieutenant General Charles Otstott, USA (Ret.)
Lieutenant General Keith J. Stalder, USMC (Ret.)
Major General Paul D. Eaton, USA (Ret.)
Major General Eugene Fox, USA (Ret.)
Rear Admiral Donald Guter, JAGC, USN (Ret.)
Rear Admiral John D. Hutson, JAGC, USN (Ret.)
Major General Michael R. Lehnert, USMC (Ret.)
Major General Melvyn S. Montano, USAF (Ret.)
Major General William L. Nash, USA (Ret.)
Major General Thomas J. Romig, USA (Ret.)
Major General Walter L. Stewart, Jr., USA (Ret.)
Major General Antonio M. Taguba, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General John Adams, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General David M. Brahms, USMC (Ret.)
Brigadier General Stephen A. Cheney, USMC (Ret.)
Brigadier General Evelyn P. Foote, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General Dennis P. Geoghan, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General David R. Irvine, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General John H. Johns, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General Keith H. Kerr, CSMR (Ret.)
Brigadier General Richard O’Meara, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General Murray G. Sagsveen, USA (Ret.)
Brigadier General Anthony Verrengia, USAF (Ret.)



Brigadier General Stephen N. Xenakis, USA (Ret.)



For more information or to speak with any of the signatories of today’s letter, contact Corinne Duffy at [email protected] or 202-370-3319.




Global Research



The world at war: The mind, journalism, freedoms...

Retired Generals and Admirals Urge President Obama to Close Guantanamo, Release Senate Report on CIA Torture

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Guantanamo: Three Uighurs to be sent to Slovakia, 155 detainees remain





The United States released the last three ethnic Uighurs from its military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on Tuesday.


The three men will be sent to Slovakia, resolving a diplomatic crisis that has kept the innocent men imprisoned since 2008 when a judge ordered their release.


They were the last of 22 Uighurs from China who were detained by American forces during the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and brought to Guantanamo. The men were kept for years without trial before being deemed as safe for release by a judge.


Finding them a new home after Guantanamo proved difficult.


The men had fled to Afghanistan from China, where they have been persecuted by the government.


Heavy lobbying from China to have the men returned has added to the difficulties in releasing the men.


Those Uighurs who possessed other citizenship found homes, whereas 22 others with Chinese citizenship faced a much more difficult situation.


More from GlobalPost: Obama calls on Congress to do more on Guantanamo Bay


After their release was stalled, a judge ordered them sent to the United States – a move that was blocked by Congress and the Bush administration.


A diplomatic push saw many of them eventually find homes in places like Palau, Bermuda, El Salvador and Switzerland, their lives beginning anew in places far from home.


The three men who stayed in Guantanamo had refused to be transferred to Bermuda or Palau. The Associated Press reported that the men sought to be closer to Uighur communities in Europe.


Slovakia has now agreed to take the men. The EU and NATO member had previously accepted three other Guantanamo prisoners in 2010.


“Slovakia deserves a lot of credit because they were willing to do what large countries like the United States, Canada and Germany were unwilling to do, which was to resist diplomatic pressure from China and the stigma of Guantanamo,” Wells Dixon, a lawyer with the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, told the Associated Press.


US officials thanked Slovakia on Tuesday for agreeing to take the men.


“These three resettlements are an important step in implementing President Obama’s directive to close the Guantanamo detention facility,” said Clifford Sloan, Department of State Special Envoy for Guantanamo Closure.


Their release has brought the number of detainees at the US base to 155 from a high of 750. Nine prisoners were released in December.


Only a handful of the remaining prisoners have been charged with terrorism offenses with another 80 cleared for release – 60 of which are from Yemen.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/united-states/131231/guantanamo-three-uighurs-be-sent-slovakia-155-de




GlobalPost – Home



Guantanamo: Three Uighurs to be sent to Slovakia, 155 detainees remain

Guantanamo: Three Uighurs to be sent to Slovakia, 155 detainees remain





The United States released the last three ethnic Uighurs from its military prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on Tuesday.


The three men will be sent to Slovakia, resolving a diplomatic crisis that has kept the innocent men imprisoned since 2008 when a judge ordered their release.


They were the last of 22 Uighurs from China who were detained by American forces during the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and brought to Guantanamo. The men were kept for years without trial before being deemed as safe for release by a judge.


Finding them a new home after Guantanamo proved difficult.


The men had fled to Afghanistan from China, where they have been persecuted by the government.


Heavy lobbying from China to have the men returned has added to the difficulties in releasing the men.


Those Uighurs who possessed other citizenship found homes, whereas 22 others with Chinese citizenship faced a much more difficult situation.


More from GlobalPost: Obama calls on Congress to do more on Guantanamo Bay


After their release was stalled, a judge ordered them sent to the United States – a move that was blocked by Congress and the Bush administration.


A diplomatic push saw many of them eventually find homes in places like Palau, Bermuda, El Salvador and Switzerland, their lives beginning anew in places far from home.


The three men who stayed in Guantanamo had refused to be transferred to Bermuda or Palau. The Associated Press reported that the men sought to be closer to Uighur communities in Europe.


Slovakia has now agreed to take the men. The EU and NATO member had previously accepted three other Guantanamo prisoners in 2010.


“Slovakia deserves a lot of credit because they were willing to do what large countries like the United States, Canada and Germany were unwilling to do, which was to resist diplomatic pressure from China and the stigma of Guantanamo,” Wells Dixon, a lawyer with the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, told the Associated Press.


US officials thanked Slovakia on Tuesday for agreeing to take the men.


“These three resettlements are an important step in implementing President Obama’s directive to close the Guantanamo detention facility,” said Clifford Sloan, Department of State Special Envoy for Guantanamo Closure.


Their release has brought the number of detainees at the US base to 155 from a high of 750. Nine prisoners were released in December.


Only a handful of the remaining prisoners have been charged with terrorism offenses with another 80 cleared for release – 60 of which are from Yemen.


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/united-states/131231/guantanamo-three-uighurs-be-sent-slovakia-155-de




GlobalPost – Home



Guantanamo: Three Uighurs to be sent to Slovakia, 155 detainees remain

Friday, October 11, 2013

Guantanamo Bay Lawsuit Shows Gitmo"s Still As Secretive As Ever

guantanamo, bay, lawsuit, shows, gitmos, still, as, secretive, as, ever,

Guantanamo Bay Lawsuit Shows Gitmo’s Still As Secretive As Ever
© AP




The detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba has long been a secretive base, whetherit be  Colonel Nathan Jessup covering up murder in A Few Good Men or President Obama’s administration refusing to answer questions regarding Camp 7 to a Miami Herald reporter.


The Herald’s Carol Rosenberg has been covering the Guantanamo Bay detention facility since it opened in 2002, and is currently suing the the Pentagon under the Freedom of Information Act over the refusal to disclose how much it Camp 7 cost to build and to operate. Camp 7 is where 16 of the high-value detainees, including alleged 9/11 conspirators, are being held. According to the lawsuit, all other construction and operating costs have been revealed for the rest of the camp. The Pentagon claims that the information is classified and that it would cause an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, despite releasing it for all other areas.


If the president and the Pentagon are serious about transparency at the detention center than it must finish releasing the documents on the operational and construction costs for Camp 7. If the detention facility is going to remain open then it has to be transparent. Any number published regarding the housing of alleged 9/11 conspirators could be justified by the president’s team, and those who support the facility on the right. The refusal to reveal this information when it has been revealed in all other contexts is confusing, especially considering the ease by which this policy could be justified by both sides of the aisle supporting the continuation of the detainment policy. Hopefully Rosenberg’s lawsuit is successful so that at least we understand more about this facility that has gained such a negative reputation.




PolicyMic



Guantanamo Bay Lawsuit Shows Gitmo"s Still As Secretive As Ever

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Zawahri vows al Qaeda to free Guantanamo inmates

DUBAI (Reuters) – Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri slammed U.S. treatment of hunger striking inmates at Guantanamo Bay and said the group would spare no effort to free them, according to an audio recording posted on the Internet on Wednesday.


Reuters: Top News



Zawahri vows al Qaeda to free Guantanamo inmates

Zawahri vows al Qaeda to free Guantanamo inmates

DUBAI (Reuters) – Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri slammed U.S. treatment of hunger striking inmates at Guantanamo Bay and said the group would spare no effort to free them, according to an audio recording posted on the Internet on Wednesday.


Reuters: Top News



Zawahri vows al Qaeda to free Guantanamo inmates

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Support growing to close Guantanamo prison: senator


U.S. Senator John McCain walks after the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa at the King Hussein Convention Centre at the Dead Sea May 25, 2013. REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed

U.S. Senator John McCain walks after the opening ceremony of the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa at the King Hussein Convention Centre at the Dead Sea May 25, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Muhammad Hamed





WASHINGTON | Sun Jun 9, 2013 1:27pm EDT



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican Senator John McCain said on Sunday there is increasing public support for closing the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and moving detainees to a facility on the U.S. mainland.


“There’s renewed impetus. And I think that most Americans are more ready,” McCain, who went to Guantanamo last week with White House chief of staff Denis McDonough and California Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein, told CNN’s “State of the Union” program.


McCain, a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he and fellow Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina, are working with the Obama administration on plans that could relocate detainees to a maximum-security prison in Illinois.


“We’re going to have to look at the whole issue, including giving them more periodic review of their cases,” McCain, of Arizona, said.


President Barack Obama has pushed to close Guantanamo, saying in a speech in May it “has become a symbol around the world for an America that flouts the rule of law.”


The camp holds 166 prisoners picked up in the war on terrorism, most of whom have been held without charges for more than a decade.


McCain and others who favor closing the prison have been unable to overcome opposition in Congress, where many Republicans say the administration has not offered satisfactory alternatives on what to do with the detainees.


Meanwhile, detainees have complained of abuse and torture, which the administration denies, while rights activists and international observers have criticized the government’s use of the prison.


Obama, a Democrat who promised in his 2008 election campaign to close the prison, pledged last month to lift a ban imposed on transfers of Guantanamo detainees to Yemen, one of the core obstacles to clearing out the detention camp.


Of the 86 detainees who have been cleared for transfer or release, 56 are from Yemen, where al Qaeda has a dangerous presence. An unknown number of the 80 other prisoners at the camp who are not cleared are Yemeni as well.


More than 100 prisoners in the camp have joined a hunger strike to protest the failure to resolve their fate after more than a decade of detention, and 41 are being force-fed through tubes inserted into their noses and down into their stomachs because they have lost so much weight.


(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Vicki Allen)






Reuters: Politics



Support growing to close Guantanamo prison: senator

Friday, June 7, 2013

Guantanamo Bay hunger strike grows; 41 now being force-fed


Peter Finn
Washington Post
June 7, 2013


The number of hunger strikers being force-fed by the U.S. military at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, has risen to 41, with the protest showing no signs of abating more than a week after President Obama renewed his commitment to close the detention facility.


The military said in a statement Thursday that 103 detainees are on hunger strike and that 41 of them are being force-fed. The military also said four detainees who are being force-fed are being observed at the hospital.


None of the hunger strikers has a life-threatening condition, said Lt. Col. Samuel House, a spokesman for Joint Task Force Guantanamo.


Read full article


This article was posted: Friday, June 7, 2013 at 12:32 pm


Tags: 9/11










Infowars



Guantanamo Bay hunger strike grows; 41 now being force-fed

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Obama must follow Guantanamo promise with action: Yemen