EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- Disaster Capitalism Strikes as Hedge Funds Circle Near-Bankrupt Municipalities Like Vultures
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Wisconsin Bill Would Treat Organic Milk, Sharp Cheddar, Brown Eggs as "Junk Food"
- Climate Change's 'Evil Twin': Ocean Acidification
- In 'March Toward Disaster,' World Hits 400 PPM Milestone
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Closing Guantanamo
The U.S. government's failure to close the Guantanamo Bay detention center for alleged terrorists continues to haunt and color our standing in the world. Barack Obama and John McCain both endorsed closing the facility. Even President George W. Bush has been known to utter such a heretical idea, and some of his top aides have expressed similar sentiments. In 2006, Bush said, "I'd like to close Guantanamo, but I also recognize that we're holding some people that are darn dangerous, and that we better have a plan to deal with them in our courts." As the old Kentucky political prescription says, watch the way he acts, not the way he talks.
Whatever he meant, Bush now clearly has reversed himself and has chosen to do nothing. Guantanamo prison will not close on his watch; there are no plans "to deal" with the detainees "in our courts."
As to his "war on terror," Bush concedes nothing. Some brave or disgusted soul somewhere in the bureaucratic maze has leaked the fact that the president ignored numerous options for closing the prison. On Oct. 17, 2008, the Financial Times reported that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates pushed the idea, but the Justice Department reportedly opposed moving the prisoners to American bases or prisons. You would have to be on another planet to be unaware of the not-so-subtle hands of Vice President Dick Cheney and his staff in all this. According to The New York Times, Cheney and his staff successfully argued that maintaining Guantanamo's active status is necessary to validate the administration's policy on terrorists.
In any event, the effect is to maintain the status quo—in this case, maintaining a facility that has earned us only international enmity.
Criticism from "Old Europe" is to be expected, but now that Tony Blair is gone, our British allies have rejected "the Guantanamo model." Stella Rimington, the former director general of England's domestic intelligence agency, voiced hope that the next American president would ratchet down the talk of a "war on terror," even expressing the sacrilegious notion that there has been a huge overreaction to 9/11. One official who has prosecuted terrorism trials for several years rejected any notion of a "British Guantanamo" where defendants' rights would be totally absent. Imagine-our British cousins maintain their faith in the Magna Carta.
The Justice Department (and Cheney) wants us to believe that the prisoners cannot be moved for fear they would require a different set of rights once on American soil. The Supreme Court ruled in Boumediene v. Bush in June 2008 that the Guantanamo prisoners had a right to habeas corpus, but the government mainly has ignored the decision, which has had no discernible impact. A number of members of Congress have opposed moving the prisoners to bases or prisons in their districts.
After the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, we demonstrated that our legal system could proceed properly under existing laws and constitutional practice. Four conspirators were convicted a year later, and two more followed in 1997. Ramzi Mohammed Yousef, the alleged ringleader, and the others received life sentences, with no chance for parole. The system worked. Why has there been such resistance for the Guantanamo detainees? Does the military have a vested interest in conducting military trials?
The loathsome tales of torture, abuse, sodomy and murder that emerged from the Abu Ghraib prison in 2004 resulted in convictions of low-level Army guards. Those who ordered or condoned such policies never have been charged. In the case of Guantanamo, the president, his chief Cabinet officers and their underlings, and the military, from the Joint Chiefs to the actual warders on the ground, unquestionably bear responsibility for the abuse—the physical and mental abuse of prisoners and the abuse against our constitutional system. The Bush administration and the military initiated the situation, and they willingly, even enthusiastically, provided ideas and machinery that continue to keep the prison running. Reports of Guantanamo's conditions have circulated widely on the Internet; again, we are informed with little thanks to the "mainstream" media. Our supposedly ever-vigilant media simply have allowed the news to fade into the mists of history.
Bureaucratic drift and inertia grip the problem of resolving Guantanamo's status. According to The New York Times, the perennial anonymous "senior administration official" (Gates or Rice?) could see little if any prospect of closing the prison. He/she said that the victorious presidential candidate would find it hard to fulfill his campaign promise to close the base. "This may not be the ideal answer, but what we are trying to do is work with the system we've got," the official said. Passivity with a vengeance, it seems.
George W. Bush is apparently confident that history will vindicate him. He will be gone in three months, and he has decided to pass the buck in time-honored fashion and saddle his successor with cleaning up his mess. He will not retreat, and he obviously will not make any decisions that might correct his policies or support criticism of them. His inaction on Guantanamo is emblematic. He fiddles while the global banking system cries for vigorous governmental action and an end to free-market nonsense. He fiddles while our international prestige—not to mention our reputation—goes up in smoke.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


15 Comments so far
Show AllGuantanamo prison will not close on his watch; nor will any other Black Hole
or Torture Chamber that Cheney and his CIA have scattered all over the globe.
Inflicting pain is their greatest pleasure.
Anyone care to lay odds that the US gulag, including Guantanamo, will remain intact no matter who wins the upcoming farce...er, election?
The United States will not get its "Moral Standing" back simply by shutting down GITMO.
What Gitmo has done is reveal to the World that the United States HAD no Moral standing in the first place. The Moral Standing it once claimed was based upon deceptions and smoke amd mirrors, fed by its overwhelming sense of narcissism.
Gitmo and the Bush regime have simply stripped away the facade built up over all those years.
America , as far as being a champion for Human rights and a beacon on the hill for other aspiring nations , has been exposed as a fraud. People the world over and in America itself are realizing that this was not a stumble or an 8 year mistake.
In order for an America to "regain" Moral standing, it first must realize it never really deserved it and then look back at decades of sponsoring coups, dictators, torturers and murderous regimes the world over.
It must look at its Arms Industry and its Corporations and how they exploit peoples the world over for their own gain. It must realize that this has been part and parcel of "America" for generations and not just the Bush Presidency.
Close Guantanamo!
http://wilypython.net/Editorial-1.html
Do you recognize that the "Democrats" are complicit in everything that's wrong??? Not only was the "Democratic" leadership informed about torture, etc. they have failed to hold a single government official accountable for these war crimes. I call the "Democrats" the "Complicit Party". And yet the American Sheeple ("Progressives") follow the Complicit Party.
I have already cast my vote for Nader.
Guantanamo Bay Prison, torture at its finest, brought to our backyard by the Christian Self Righteous Fanatical Racist Neocon Muslim haters. Ooops, I forgot to include all the Jews, who want the Christians to do their fanatical bidding because they are too chicken shit to do it themselves. Praise the Lord! What is really cool is watching the pathetic Christian Right who is toooooo chicken shit to admit they got their Holy War or Crusade.......
"George W. Bush is apparently confident that history will vindicate him"
Are we talkng about "My daddy never really loved, but I do love Karl Rove and Jeff Gannon, Beer, and Cocaine" ?
Coffeelover,,,,,,
yes, it's not JUST guantanamo ... according to there are all of the "secret prisons" and our partners in extraordinary redition not to mention Diego Garcia ...
Amnesty International is kicking off a major fundraising / direct action effort to close Guantanamo -- they called me (doubtless among thousands) ... Although I cannot find it on their web site, apparently there is evidence of "secret prisoners" on US Soil ... which is one of those good news/bad news stories ... yes, because of such apparent wide spred complicitiy and blithe disregard of both American and international law ...
If they call you ... give a listen and maybe some money .. Yes, some of these things do "belong" to the ACLU ... treating American human rights abuses as deserving of equal condemnation and actions at those of other "rogue states" is, imho, the rightful province of Amnesty International (along with a number of our other gigantic "pesky" problems with our prison industrial complex, FISA, and that "new" about to be jammed down our throats extension of federal law enforcement privileges)...
Closing Guantanamo and protecting human rights for everyone on American soil is Job #1.
Go ahead, keep it open... then throw Bush, Cheney and all their fellow war criminals and henchmen in there and let the prisoners have their way with them.
Yeah, put 'em in Gen Pop--at GITMO...one can dream...
This is a good start. Now Stan needs to write the following articles:
Closing Bagrham, Diego Garcia, and the rest of the American Gulag
Archipeligo (including the prison ships that sail to nowhere with their tortured cargo).
Repealing the USA Patriot Act
Repealing the Military Comissions Act
Repealing the Gramm-Blilley-Leach Act
Repealing The Taft-Hartley Act
Repealing the Bankruptcy Law and restoring former protections
Reenacting the Glass-Steagall Act
Deactivating the 4th Fleet
Repudiate all Bush Administration signing statements
So much to do and so little time...
Poet
Oh, poet, you warm the cockles of my heart!
You ever thought of running...?
Good cleanup list.
Joe
Amin, Poet
Just don't hold your breath. NOTHING will change after election. The same paymasters of the corporate oligarchy will still be in charge of the government.
But I could be wrong !
If Obama is elected, which appears likely, what he does with Guantanamo will make an excellent litmus test. He's promised to close it, but watch what happens to the poor souls we've kept in this gulag for all these years. Will the US free them? Will the US accept them if there's no other country to take them? What kind of recompense will we make for the crime we have committed against them? A tee shirt?
Every American that still has a conscience should write Obama demanding that he keep his promise: real justice, not just the appearance of justice.