Revised
U.S. defense bill sails through House, despite Guantanamo
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[November 06, 2015]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The House of
Representatives overwhelmingly passed the National Defense Authorization
Act on Thursday, including $5 billion in spending cuts not contained in
a version of the bill vetoed by President Barack Obama last month.
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The vote was 370-58 for the measure, which authorizes more than
$600 billion in defense spending. It had strong support from both
Republicans and Obama's fellow Democrats, even though it still
contains provisions making it difficult to close the detention
center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The Senate could pass the revised bill as soon as next week, despite
calls for changes in its Guantanamo provisions. These include
restrictions on transferring detainees to the United States from the
naval base, which still houses 112 foreign terrorism suspects.
Congressional aides said they expect Obama will sign the revised
bill, even with the Guantanamo restrictions, but the White House has
not made his intentions clear. Obama, who has vowed to close the
prison before leaving office in 2017, said the Guantanamo language
was one reason he vetoed the bill, known as the NDAA.
The White House has not issued another veto threat, but a spokesman
said Obama has not ruled out an executive order to close the
facility.
That suggestion angered some Republicans in Congress, many of whom
consider Guantanamo an essential tool in efforts to combat
terrorism. "Why do we even have a Congress if the president can
issue an executive order on anything?" Republican Senator Pat
Roberts fumed at a news conference.
U.S. officials have considered transferring Guantanamo detainees to
a facility in Kansas, Roberts' home state. Republican senators Tim
Scott of South Carolina and Cory Gardner of Colorado, states that
are also potential targets for transfers, also strongly opposed the
plan.
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On the other side, 28 retired senior U.S. military officers signed a
letter to Obama expressing support for closing Guantanamo, saying
some concerns of those who oppose bringing detainees to the United
States were unfounded.
"Our prisons house hundreds of convicted terrorists. None has ever
escaped," they wrote.
The spending cuts contained in the revised NDAA reflect a budget
agreement between the administration and the Republican-controlled
Congress addressing Obama's main concern about the bill, using war
funds to let the Pentagon avoid mandatory spending cuts.
Senate Democrats voted Thursday to block another defense measure,
the fiscal 2016 appropriations bill, for a third time, part of a
broader fight with Republicans over spending policy.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Frances Kerry and Lisa
Shumaker)
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