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Relax, Mitt Guantanamo's Not Closing
by Karen J. Greenberg
"Some people have said, we ought to close Guantanamo. My view is, we ought to double Guantanamo." -- Mitt Romney, Republican presidential debate, May 15, 2007
Take a breath, Mitt. Whatever you may think, your bravado statements about doubling the size of Guantanamo -- part of your bid to lead the American people faster and farther into the Global War on Terror -- are by no means completely off-the-wall.
True, President Bush and Secretary of Defense Gates have both stated that closing Guantanamo might be the best way out of the legal limbo we've been in ever since that facility opened five and half years ago as the crown jewel of the administration's offshore network of secret prisons. But forget what they say. Check out what they're doing. The closing of Guantanamo -- and a winding down of the administration's detention and interrogation policies -- may be farther away than most of us think. As elsewhere in this administration's record, casual talk of refashioning a failed policy masks an inflexible commitment to "staying the course."
Tomgram: Karen Greenberg, Guantanamo Forever
As the
presidential election season heats up, Republican candidates have opted
for "Guantanamo-forever" policy positions. Retiring Republican Senator
Chuck Hagel recently complained that the notorious detention facility
-- once the proud public face of the President's attempt to move
incarceration and mistreatment offshore and beyond the reach of
American courts -- has bizarrely enough become "a Republican litmus
test." At the same time, at Guantanamo itself, anger and factionalism
are on the rise, not among prisoners but warders, while the attempt to
set up what Wall Street Journal reporter Jess Bravin calls "a
free-standing court system to try alleged foreign terrorists" founders
for the nine hundredth time.
More than five years after being
inaugurated, the prison complex has so far adjudicated exactly one case
to the point of conviction -- a simple plea bargain (essentially
negotiated between President Bush and Australian Prime Minister John
Howard) that transferred small-fry Taliban follower David Hicks back to
Australia where he is to be freed at the end of this year.
In
the meantime, the Pentagon official overseeing Guantanamo's nonexistent
terrorism trials and the chief prosecutor of those trials are, reports
Bravin, at each other's throats. Wrote Col. Morris Davis, the
prosecutor, to the Wall Street Journal: "If someone above me tries to
intimidate me in determining who we will charge, what we will charge,
what evidence we will try to introduce, and how we will conduct a
prosecution then I will resign." He's also lodged a formal complaint
against Gen. Thomas Hartmann, legal adviser to the administrator
running the trial system, "refused to file any additional charges
against Guantanamo inmates until the dispute is resolved," and sent a
separate complaint to the Pentagon inspector general. Time-consuming
investigations are slated to follow.
And so it goes in George
Bush's offshore Bermuda Triangle of Injustice where infamy, fiasco,
mismanagement, and incompetence have been stirred into a fatal brew,
discrediting a country -- ours -- that has proven, as Karen Greenberg,
the Executive Director of the Center on Law and Security at New York
University (whose last Tomdispatch piece was "Gitmo Decorum") makes
clear, incapable of asking basic questions about this administration's
detention policy. Tom
Relax, Mitt Guantanamo's Not Closing
by Karen J. Greenberg
Bear with me a moment, Mitt, and let's consider the alleged signs
of impending closure that evidently worry you greatly. As a start, out
of a total of 759 detainees acknowledged to have been at Guantanamo at
one time or another, more than half have been released to their home
countries or to a third country.
According to the Department of
Defense, "approximately 340" detainees remain, 120 of whom are deemed
no longer a threat and will assumedly be released once Condoleezza
Rice's State Department can find homes for them. Approximately a dozen
detainees are now let out every month.
In addition -- and this
must set your pulse racing, Mitt -- Senator Dianne Feinstein has
introduced a bill to close Guantanamo, co-sponsored by Democratic
Senators Christopher Dodd, Hillary Clinton, Sheldon Whitehouse, and Ted
Kennedy. It's also clear that some members of the Bush administration
are actually searching for a Gitmo end-game, possibly by accelerating
the disastrous military commissions process that, after all this time,
has only managed to start court proceedings against one detainee.
Finally, an American prison constructed outside of Kabul, Afghanistan
-- Pul-i-Charki -- is currently being expanded as a possible
alternative facility to which at least some of the Guantanamo detainees
could be transferred as part of a "closing" process that didn't quite
close anything.
Even these signs, however, seem to be more
smokescreen than reality. Consider this, Mitt: During the last six
months -- and for the first time since December 2004 -- several new
detainees have been transferred to Guantanamo.
I'm not referring to the
arrival in September 2006 of Khaled Sheikh Mohammed and the 13 other
"high value detainees," but to more ordinary transfers. In this case,
in order of transfer: Abdul Malik, Abduullahi Sudi Arale, Abd Al Hadi
al Iraqi (the only one of the five categorized as a "high value
detainee"), Haroon al Afghani, and Inayatullah.
Note as well
that two of these individuals are Afghanis, which has to make you
wonder a little about those Department of Defense plans for
Pul-i-Charki. So, too, ongoing construction remains a constant feature
of Guantanamo, as has been true since December 2001. At the moment,
$10-$12 million is being invested in the building of a "legal tent
city" for the military commissions that have floated on the horizon
since January 2002.
Elsewhere on the base, another $17 million dollars
are being put into building a facility with a capacity for 10,000
detainees -- in the eventuality of a Caribbean migrant crisis (but, if
not that, the capacity will still be there). Meanwhile, the bill to
close Guantanamo has stalled in Congress and, in July 2007, the Senate
voted overwhelmingly (94-3) against transferring any prisoners from
Guantanamo to prisons or holding facilities in the United States.
And,
Mitt, here's the good news for you: These signs of survival, even
expansion, at Guantanamo are indicative of a larger trend in U.S.
detention policy -- towards ratcheting up the nation's detention effort
globally. Not a scaling down process in sight!
The populations of
American prisons in Iraq, for instance, are increasing at a rate of 60
prisoners per day. In the "surge" months, between February and August
2007, according to the New York Times, the number of detainees in Iraq,
especially in Camp Bucca in southern Iraq and Camp Cropper near
Baghdad, grew from 16,000 to 24,500 and that figure is evidently still
on the rise, while facilities at both camps continue to be expanded.
A
similar process seems to be underway in Afghanistan. The population at
Pul-i-Charki (only one of the prisons Americans control in that
country) continues to rise. According to International Committee of the
Red Cross figures, it held at least 2,000 detainees in 2006 and was
evidently growing. As an answer to Guantanamo, this way lies irony.
After all, the idea of Guantanamo initially grew, in part, out of the
problems involved in keeping detainees in Afghanistan -- unbearably
harsh weather, poor medical facilities, danger from the surrounding
violence, and a wasteful diversion of U.S. troops. So putting the whole
enterprise back where it started would likely be a disaster, not to
mention an admission of just how wasteful and misguided the process has
been from 2002 to today.
Meanwhile, Mitt -- just in case
you're still fretting -- lighten up. It's not just the total population
of "war on terror" detainees that's on the rise, so are administration
justifications for, and defenses of, detention policy. Initially, our
prisons in Afghanistan and the facility at Guantanamo were created to
keep dangerous enemies off the battlefield and to garner tactical
information that could help U.S. troops on the ground in Afghanistan.
Within the first six months of Guantanamo's existence, however, as
detainee tactical information became stale, that rationale morphed into
the need to extract strategic information -- about the make-up and
nature of al-Qaeda's network, about jihad, about Osama Bin Laden, and
so on. This latter justification only grew in importance as the years
in detention passed. With each prisoner transfer, in fact, the Pentagon
now announces that "the detainees being held at Guantanamo have
provided information essential to our ability to better understand how
Al Qaeda operates and thus to prevent future attacks."
As a recent
commanding officer at Guantanamo explained earlier in 2007, "We are
getting good and useful and interesting intelligence -- even after five
years." In September 2006, President Bush detailed the ways in which
information from the CIA's secret detention program had proven valuable
and administration spokespersons have continued to insist that, indeed,
much information has come from those in custody. But there is little
proof of this.
Perhaps evidence of the general uselessness of
most detainees to intelligence operatives, a new reason for detention
has appeared. As Major General Douglas Stone, in charge of all
detainees in Iraq, explained to CNN's Anderson Cooper last week, "Now
we're fighting the battle in the battlefield of the brain." He went on
to assert that U.S. detention centers globally provide an ideal
opportunity not for intelligence gathering but for counterinsurgency.
"This is where the idea of al Qaeda will be beaten," Stone insisted.
It
is certainly a tacit admission of one reality -- that such prisons
regularly cause the radicalization of detainees and their recruitment
by international jihadi terrorist groups. So, the Bush administration
now acknowledges incarceration as another of its many battlefields in
the Global War on Terror and is conducting its own campaigns of
reeducation. At Camp Cropper in Iraq, for instance, where more than 800
of the 4,000 detainees are juveniles, civics classes and teachings that
involve moderate, non-violent readings of the Koran, along with more
traditional school classes, are underway at a prison school that is
grandiloquently called "the House of Wisdom."
Whatever the
rationale for detention -- be it tactical intelligence, the need for
the ready presence of a human library of information on terrorism, or
the reeducation of extremists -- the fact remains that Guantanamo and
allied U.S. detention facilities are all a long way from entering a
wind-down phase. Detainee populations are on the rise as are new
detention sites, new construction expenditures, and new guard training.
The only thing not on the rise is a serious policy discussion
about all this. Six years after 9/11, isn't it time to face the fact
that, as a nation, we have not yet asked ourselves: What should our
detention policy be? What are the rules and regulations we might want
to create to confront the threat posed by terrorists? As a nation, we
have chosen to bemoan the policies that have emerged without
legislative backing and popular vetting -- or, like you, Mitt, to call
for more of the same. But even Gallup polling of American opinion on
detention and torture fails to ask: Do you think that incarcerating
suspected terrorists for indefinite periods without trials or
convictions is acceptable? A country essentially without leadership, we
have wasted five and half years avoiding asking what exactly is a
policy on detention that the United States should live with -- as
opposed to just living with the ad hoc one we have.
So, Mitt,
relax. Guantanamo (and everything it represents) is alive and well. The
administration's loose talk of change only conceals its stubborn
commitment to a wholly discredited path. Guantanamo, a prison in no way
ready to close, is at the heart of a conversation that almost no one
seems willing to open.
Karen J. Greenberg is the Executive
Director of the Center on Law and Security at New York University and
the editor of The Torture Papers: The Road to Abu Ghraib (with Joshua
Dratel), The Torture Debate in America, and Al Qaeda Now: Understanding
Today's Terrorists.
Copyright 2007 Karen J. Greenberg
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