Friday, January 23, 2009

How Convenient

In the wake of Barack Obama's inauguration and announcement that he will impose an order to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, the article below has come out. I am not too into conspiracy, but it seems odd that this would come out days after Obama's announcement. It is also disheartening to read some of the commentary. I highlighted a couple lined from a congressman from Florida, who says that these people should not have equal rights as Americans. True, we shouldn't make them American citizens, but that doesn't mean we should treat them with any less rigor in the legal system. We should hold the same standards when it comes to habeas corpus, due process, and the like.

By the Florida congressman and John McCain's logic, we should presume guilt on anyone going to trial. We currently Americans who have viciously killed Americans, many of whom most of us would prefer to be "NIMBY," but that is what prisons are for. The Guantanamo prisoners who are found guilty should be punished, and those who are found innocent should be sent home to resume their lives. Let's not reinvent the wheel when it comes to trying those accused of committing crimes. America must prove itself to be the leader when it comes to justice and that involves treating the accused to a high standard that is not always comfortable.

Also, presuming that this article is true and accurate, what are we creating with this secret prison? Are we creating more terrorists that we are detaining? Probably. Closing this prison will send a symbolic message around the world that is critical to promoting peace.

From CNN.com
Detainee went from Gitmo to al Qaeda, official says

The Defense Department recently estimated that more than 60 terrorists released from Guantanamo may have returned to the battlefield.

According to the counterterrorism official, freed detainee Ali al-Shiri traveled to Yemen after being released to Saudi Arabia and may have been involved in recent al Qaeda attacks in Yemen, including a car bombing outside the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa last year that killed nearly a dozen people.

"He is one of a handful of al Qaeda deputies in Yemen," the official said. "He is one of the top terrorists."

His title is deputy and senior operations commander, the source said.

According to the magazine Sada al-Malahem, or The Echo of the Epics, published by al Qaeda in Yemen, al-Shiri attended a media session in which Yemen commander Abu Baseer was interviewed.

The magazine identified al-Shiri as Baseer's deputy commander and quoted Baseer as announcing that al Qaeda's operations in Yemen and Saudi Arabia have been combined to become al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula.

The magazine noted that al-Shiri was released from Guantanamo more than 10 months ago.

He fled a Saudi jihadi re-education program, where he went after his release, a Saudi source told CNN's Nic Robertson.

President Obama on Thursday signed an order mandating that the Guantanamo Bay prison be closed within the year. What to do with the detainees has been a hotly debated topic.

The issue of freed detainees engaging in terrorism is one concern. Another is housing them in prisons inside the United States. Watch experts debate the Guantanamo dilemma »

Rep. Bill Young, R-Florida, said he has "quite a bit of anxiety" about the possibility of transferring detainees to U.S. facilities.

"Number one, they're dangerous," Young said. "Secondly, once they become present in the United States, what is their legal status? What is their constitutional status? I worry about that, because I don't want them to have the same constitutional rights that you and I have. They're our enemy."


Obama's decision to close the Guantanamo facility received immediate backing from his general election opponent, Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain.

McCain, in a joint statement with South Carolina GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham, said he supported Obama's decision to "begin a process that will, we hope, lead to the resolution of all cases of Guantanamo detainees."

But Thursday night on CNN's "Larry King Live," McCain said the new president may have been hasty in the decision and should have taken the time to consider everything associated with closing the camp before forcing himself into a timetable.

Specifically, McCain said he thought Obama needed to consider what would happen to the prisoners held at Guantanamo before ordering the facility to be closed.

"So, the easy part, in all due respect, is to say we're going to close Guantanamo," McCain said. "Then I think I would have said where they were going to be taken. Because you're going to run into a NIMBY [not in my backyard] problem here in the United States of America." Watch what may happen to Guantanamo's inmates »

Asked about that issue Thursday, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said, "We have developed some options in terms of how many we think could be returned to other countries to take them. That diplomatic initiative has not started. That will await work in carrying out the executive order."

"We have identified a number of possible prisons here in the United States" that could take the detainees. However, Gates added, "I've heard from members of Congress [representing] where all those prisons are located. Their enthusiasm is limited."

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