Bush
to say would keep Guantanamo prison open if elected
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[November 18, 2015]
By Steve Holland
CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - Republican
Jeb Bush will pledge on Wednesday that if elected president next year he
will keep open the disputed U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, as long as the fight against Islamic militants lasts.
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Bush, looking to show he is capable of being commander-in-chief in
the face of multiple threats abroad, will lay out a national
security strategy in a speech that he retooled in order to take
account of the Paris attacks that killed 129 people last Friday.
The Bush campaign provided details of his plan in advance of the
speech at The Citadel, a military college in Charleston.
He will vow to restore $1 trillion in cuts to the U.S. military that
President Barack Obama agreed to as part of a budget-cutting deal
with Congress. He would add 40,000 personnel to the U.S. Army and
4,000 to the U.S. Marines, and would bolster U.S. relations with key
allies from NATO nations to the Middle East and Asia.
To counter Islamic State militants specifically, Bush would embed
U.S. special operations forces with Iraq forces to help identify
enemy targets. He would build an anti-militant international
coalition and include regional partners. He is not calling for a
massive reintroduction of U.S. troops to Iraq.
His plan to counter Islamic State includes a provision that if
elected in November 2016, he would maintain the Guantanamo prison
which his brother, former President George W. Bush, used to house
terrorism suspects and which President Barack Obama is trying to
close by the time he leaves office in January 2017.
This week the Defense Department said it had sent five Yemeni
detainees at the prison to the United Arab Emirates, reducing the
number of inmates at the Cuba facility to 107.
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Bush is eager to make an impact on a Republican race that in some
respects has been leaving him behind. He is in single digits in many
polls of Republican voters, who so far have been more enthusiastic
about non-politician candidates Donald Trump and Ben Carson.
Bush's belief is that voters will eventually come around to a
serious, policy-minded candidate like him, but with the Iowa
caucuses to kick off the 2016 election season on Feb. 1, his plan
has yet to yield results in the polls.
A Reuters-Ipsos poll found on Tuesday that 33 percent of Republican
voters felt Trump would be the strongest candidate to deal with
terrorism, followed by Senator Marco Rubio at 17 percent. Carson and
Bush were tied at around 9 percent.
(Reporting By Steve Holland; Editing by Edmund Klamann)
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