Tuesday, April 27, 2010

GITMO is just ok
AG Holder is running into roadblocks on his way to close GITMO

WASHINGTON, DC—Attorney General Eric Holder is having a difficult time in closing the Guantanamo Bay Detention facility in Cuba. Congress has not yet appropriated the money necessary to relocate and house the enemy combatants currently held at GITMO.

But AG Holder is not only facing budgetary problems now and arguably into the future, he’ll also be facing legal opposition—and not just from elected officials. President Obama’s dedication to closing GITMO isn't exactly shared by its resident terrorists—that’s right, GITMO detainees wanting to stay in Guantanamo Bay.


Why, you may ask?

At GITMO, the detainees are given access to religious materials, allowed to exercise, all of the things allowed under the Geneva Convention. But if transferred to a supermax prison in the United States, the detainees would be subject to supermax rules and that means lock-down for twenty-three hours a day.

In a January Newsweek blog, an attorney representing some of the captured enemy combatants says they’ll sue to keep from being transferred to a supermax facility.  

And this is just another example of the folly of making a circular political campaign promise square with reality; there never has been a real reason to transfer the detainees and NIMBYs of all stripes certainly don’t want them in their back yards. It would be the ultimate knee-slapper to see Mr. Obama’s administration to go toe-to-toe with the likes of the ACLU.


-- Killswitch Politick



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