Administration officials say a Senate defense policy bill, coming
up for debate within days, would allow them to move out prisoners
who have long been cleared for transfer overseas but are still held,
in part because of a complicated Pentagon certification process. The
bill would ease those restrictions and lift a ban on bringing
suspected terrorist prisoners from Guantanamo to the United States
for detention, trial or emergency medical treatment.
The White House effort faces dogged resistance, with opponents
pointing out that some former detainees have joined terrorist
efforts after being released from the remote U.S. naval prison in
Cuba.
"Why would you want to reduce the standard?" asked Sen. Kelly
Ayotte, R-N.H., who along with Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., is
working on amendments to preserve the current high bar for
transfers.
Even if the Senate passes the White House-backed legislation, the
House earlier this year approved a measure that further restricts
transfers, including an outright ban on sending detainees to Yemen.
Yemen is a particular challenge since more than half of the 164
detainees are from there. It's also home to the world's most active
al-Qaida branch.
Obama himself imposed a ban on Yemeni transfers from Guantanamo
after a Nigerian man attempted to blow up a U.S.-bound flight on
Christmas 2009 with explosives hidden in his underwear on
instructions from al-Qaida operatives in Yemen. But Obama lifted
that moratorium in his speech on May 23 at National Defense
University in which he said Guantanamo "has become a symbol around
the world for an America that flouts the rule of law."
"I transferred 67 detainees to other countries before Congress
imposed restrictions to effectively prevent us from either
transferring detainees to other countries or imprisoning them here
in the United States. These restrictions make no sense," Obama said.
He has vowed to close the prison.
"There is no justification beyond politics for Congress to prevent
us from closing a facility that should never have been opened,"
Obama said.
Purely from an economic point of view, the administration says
Guantanamo is too costly. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told
Congress that annual spending on Guantanamo was $454 million — or
about $2.7 million per detainee.
Obama has not said much publicly about Guantanamo in the six months
since the speech, but administration officials say he presses Hagel
and Secretary of State John Kerry on the matter every week. Obama
also has new special envoys for Guantanamo closure at the State
Department and Pentagon working full time on the matter.
"Our marching orders are very clear from the president, and in terms
of what he wants to do, and that's to close the facility," said
envoy Clifford Sloan at the State Department.
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Sloan said achieving that goal requires three steps — transferring
out those who have been approved, prosecuting others and making a
plan for the remaining detainees accused of participating in
dangerous plots who cannot be prosecuted because the evidence
against them is inadmissible in a court of law. That's a tall order
on a three-year clock, but Sloan vowed, "Step by step, we will get
there, and we will close it."
Sloan has been holding meetings across Capitol Hill to push for more
flexibility, while Lisa Monaco, Obama's top counterterrorism adviser
in the White House, has been calling moderate senators to encourage
them to back the Senate bill.
The Senate bill would allow the Pentagon to transfer any detainee
the administration no longer considers a threat to the United
States, as long as actions are taken to "substantially mitigate the
risk" that the detainee would re-engage in terrorism and ensure that
the transfer is in the national security interest of the United
States.
This summer, the administration sent home two Algerian detainees.
Eighty-four others have long been cleared for transfer, and the U.S.
government has begun a formal review process of about 45 others
previously considered too dangerous to be released to determine if
circumstances have changed.
Ayotte argued the Algerian transfers prove the current process is
working, and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., agreed that the
administration doesn't need more flexibility. "All they have to do
is assure us that they won't re-enter the fight, as numerous ones
have, in leadership positions. We can't do that," McCain said.
Chris Anders, senior legislative counsel for the American Civil
Liberties Union which wants to close Guantanamo, acknowledges the
issue is always a tough vote for lawmakers but argues there's a
growing recognition that Guantanamo can't stay open forever and
harms national security
"What's different this year compared to past years is that the
president is ready and willing to use whatever authority Congress
gives him to start closing Guantanamo," Anders said, "and
particularly to start sending home the majority of detainees who
were long ago cleared to be sent back home."
[Associated
Press; NEDRA PICKLER]
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