Sunday, December 7, 2014

Six Guantanamo Prisoners Released Amid Tensions Over Security - Businessweek


Six suspected terrorists held at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have been released to be resettled in Uruguay, the Pentagon said.


The releases, the first to a country in South America, are part of a push by President Barack Obama to accelerate transfers of detainees, many held since before he became president.


The U.S. government conducted an interagency review to determine whether the detainees met the standards for release and Congress was informed in advance, according to a statement issued issued today by the Defense Department.


“The United States coordinated with the government of Uruguay to ensure these transfers took place consistent with the appropriate security and humane treatment measures,” the department said.


Uruguayan President Jose Mujica sent an open letter to Obama on Dec. 5 offering to resettle the six prisoners while calling on the U.S. to end its embargo against Cuba, according to the Associated Press. “We have offered our hospitality for human beings who suffered an atrocious kidnapping in Guantanamo,” Mujica said, according to the AP.


Mujica, a former urban guerrilla fighter, agreed earlier this year to resettle the detainees on humanitarian grounds.


After the releases, the detention center on U.S.-held territory in Cuba holds 136 prisoners detained on the suspicion they have ties to terrorist organizations including al-Qaeda.


Guantanamo Dispute


Obama has sought to close the Guantanamo prison since taking office, against resistance from members of Congress who oppose prosecuting alleged terrorists in the U.S. and say released detainees have gone back to attacking Americans.


According to the statement, the release was approved by Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, who is stepping down amid tensions with Obama’s White House advisers. One point of tension has been Hagel’s reluctance to sign off on proposed prisoner releases as not posing a risk to national security.


Hagel is currently traveling, visiting a forward operating base in Afghanistan earlier today.


Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said on Nov. 25 that Hagel “fully supports the president’s policy that the Guantanamo detention facility should close and that those detainees should be transferred out of there.


‘Sober’ Decision


‘‘He has also said himself that he takes his responsibility very seriously’’ in making ‘‘detainee transfers and making sure that the assurances we get from third-party countries are adequate to our own national security,’’ Kirby said. ‘‘He takes that very seriously, and there’s not a single transfer that he signs off that he doesn’t do so in a very sober fashion.”


In 2012, Republicans on the House Armed Services Committee released a report asserting that about 27 percent of 600 detainees released from Guantanamo have been confirmed or suspected of returning to terrorist or insurgent activities. Democrats on the panel dismissed the report as “smoke and mirrors.”


President George W. Bush began using the detention facility in Cuba to hold suspected and accused terrorists after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Obama campaigned for president promising to close Guantanamo, saying it attracted international criticism of U.S. detention policies and interrogation practices. Facing congressional opposition, Obama backed away from an executive order to close the prison that he issued on his first day in office.


The annual defense authorization bill that passed the House last week would extend a congressional ban on closing the prison.


To contact the reporter on this story: Maura Reynolds in Washington at mreynolds34@bloomberg.net


To contact the editors responsible for this story: Maura Reynolds at mreynolds34@bloomberg.net Larry Liebert, Bernard Kohn









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