Exclusive: Obama administration not
pursuing executive order to shut Guantanamo - sources
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[June 13, 2016]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama
administration is not pursuing the use of an executive order to shutter
the Guantanamo Bay military prison after officials concluded that it
would not be a viable strategy, sources familiar with the deliberations
said.
The conclusion, reached by administration officials, narrows the
already slim chances that President Barack Obama can fulfill his
pledge to close the notorious offshore prison before leaving office
in January.
The White House has said repeatedly that Obama has not ruled out any
options on the Guantanamo center, which has been used to house
terrorism suspects since it was set up in 2001 following the Sept.
11 attacks on New York and Washington.
Obama is eager to fulfill his 2008 campaign pledge to close the
prison and could still choose to use his commander-in-chief powers,
but the option is not being actively pursued, the sources said.
Without executive action, the chances of closing the prison would
hinge on convincing a resistant Congress to overturn a long-standing
ban on bringing possibly dozens of remaining prisoners to
maximum-security prisons in the United States.
White House lawyers and other officials studied the option of
overriding the ban but did not develop a strong legal position or an
effective political sales pitch in an election year, a source
familiar with the discussions said.
"It was just deemed too difficult to get through all of the hurdles
that they would need to get through, and the level of support they
were likely to receive on it was thought to be too low to generate
such controversy, particularly at a sensitive (time) in an election
cycle," the source said.
Republicans in Congress are opposed to bringing Guantanamo detainees
to U.S. prisons and have expressed opposition to transfers to other
countries over concern that released prisoners will return to
militant activities. They have vowed to challenge any potential
Obama executive action in court.
At its peak, the prison at the U.S. naval base in Cuba housed nearly
800 prisoners, becoming a symbol of the excesses of the "war on
terror” and synonymous with criticism of detention without trial and
accusations of torture. Obama has called it a recruitment tool for
terrorists.
OPTIONS NARROW
The number of Guantanamo detainees has fallen to 80 now, the lowest
since it was opened.
The administration is focusing on getting the number of detainees at
the prison down to such a low number, perhaps 20, that the cost of
keeping it open could prove unpalatable to Congress. Republican
lawmakers remain unswayed.
The Guantanamo prison and associated military commissions cost $445
million in fiscal year 2015. That works out to more than $5.5
million a year for each of the 80 remaining prisoners.
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The United States flag decorates the side of a guard tower inside of
Joint Task Force Guantanamo Camp VI at the U.S. Naval Base in
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba March 22, 2016. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File
Photo
Thirty of the remaining detainees at Guantanamo have been approved
for transfer to foreign countries and the State Department says it
will move all of them out this summer. Those who would be left
include 10 being prosecuted in military commissions, and other
detainees deemed too dangerous to release or transfer.
“The administration's goal is to work with Congress to find a
solution to close Guantanamo," said Myles Caggins, a spokesman for
the White House National Security Council.
He said the government had made "substantial progress" moving
prisoners to foreign countries and was working to identify more
countries for additional transfers. Reviews to determine whether
certain prisoners need to remain detained to prevent a threat to
U.S. security had been accelerated and would be completed in the
coming months, he said.
Obama, who issued an order to shut the prison within a year on his
first day in office, released his latest plan to close it to
Congress in February, but it has not gained traction.
The White House has not publicly ruled out the executive order
option in part to keep pressure on the Pentagon to move prisoners
who have been cleared for release to other countries, one of the
sources said.
"If Congress ... would finally say no to the president's plan and
the executive order option wasn't on the table, there was a concern
that the wheels could grind to a halt," said the source familiar
with discussions at the White House.
Gregory Craig, who served as Obama's first White House counsel, said
that without an executive order, Obama would likely need the
cooperation of Congress to shut down the prison.
"I think the odds are probably challenging," Craig said.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Stuart Grudgings)
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