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The War on Terror Spectator

A Question Not Asked

Is the administration again preparing to transfer Guantanamo prisoners to an Illinois facility?

Last night’s presidential debate rightfully put the spotlight on President Obama’s performance over the last four years as commander-in-chief. As informative as the debate was in certain respects, it regrettably did not include discussion of the President’s views on what to do with the remaining terrorist detainees currently being held at Guantanamo Bay. Like his administration’s spectacular mishandling of the Benghazi attack with which last night’s debate opened, recent maneuvering by President Obama and his allies to possibly take another run at transferring terrorist detainees from Gitmo to the United States underscores a troubling reality of a President unable at best, and unwilling at worst, to acknowledge that we are a nation at war with Islamic terrorism.

As has been pointed out, transferring Gitmo detainees to U.S. soil could create an opening for their lawyers and sympathetic judges to give them criminal trials in federal court, complete with the range of defendant-friendly legal protections they provide. That Obama would attempt this highly unpopular transfer yet again is further symptomatic of his failure as a wartime Commander-in-Chief, shown this time through his unwillingness to use military detention — a tool fundamental to the prosecution of a war — despite clear authority from Congress to do so.

Though no one acknowledges that any such transfer is underway, there are several indications pointing in that direction.

Earlier this month, the Department of Justice initiated the purchase of the Thomson Correctional Center, a now-empty state prison facility located in Thomson, Illinois. The reason for the purchase was ostensibly to address overcrowding in the federal prison system, with Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) also asserting that the purchase would bring over a thousand jobs to his state. This is the same facility that was on the table as a Gitmo transfer destination back in 2009, and at the time was one of several transfer attempts that collectively sparked fierce backlash throughout the American public and in Congress. The result: several pieces of legislation barring the use of federal funds for the transfer of Gitmo detainees to the United States or for constructing/upgrading U.S. facilities for that purpose. Given this history, the announcement of the purchase has understandably elicited strong reaction from Capitol Hill, notably from Rep. Frank Wolf (R-VA), Chairman of the Commerce-Justice-Science Appropriations Subcommittee (which funds the Justice Department), and Rep. Pete King (R-NY), Chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, among others. The Obama administration denies it is going to use the Thomson facility for a Gitmo transfer, but as Debra Burlingame’s 9/11 Families for a Safe and Strong America observes, the Justice Department has cracked the door open for such a transfer by citing as part of its purpose for the acquisition: “…as well as to provide humane and secure confinement of individuals held under authority of any Act of Congress, and such other persons as in the opinion of the Attorney General of the United States are proper subjects for confinement in such institutions…” Attorney General Holder, however, is not opening that door all by himself.

It appears that the Chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) — a leading proponent of closing Gitmo and bringing its detainees to the United States — is laying some of her own groundwork on this as well. Chairman Wolf has previously indicated that Sen. Feinstein has requested that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) produce an assessment of the extent to which there are facilities in the United States that are suitable for housing Gitmo detainees. The GAO apparently is undertaking such an assessment — which it expects to have completed by November 14, 2012 — and describes it as follows

MILITARY CAPABILITIES & READINESS

Title: GUANTANAMO BAY DETAINEES: FACILITIES AND FACTORS FOR CONSIDERATION IF THE DETAINEES WERE BROUGH TO THE UNITED STATES (351696)

Type: Congressional

Anticipated Completion: November 14, 2012

Background/Key Questions: In the event that the detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, are closed, facilities in the United States that are suitable to house Guantanamo detainees might need to be identified. Key Questions: 1) What are the characteristics of the Guantanamo detention facilities, and what legal provisions and operational standards are they required to meet? 2) What are the characteristics of DOD correctional facilities, and do existing facilities have the capacity to hold the current Guantanamo population? 3) How does the Dept. of Justice manage individuals in their custody who engage in terrorist-related activities, and do their facilities have the capacity to hold the Guantanamo population? 4) What potential challenges, if any, may affect the ability to house Guantanamo detainees in the U.S.?

Then there is President Obama’s own continued, recently-re-affirmed preference for trying terrorists in criminal courts, despite public outcry objecting to such a course. According to an interview in November’s Vanity Fair, President Obama apparently would have sought to put Osama bin Laden on trial in federal court, had he been captured alive:

…”in the unlikely event that bin Laden surrendered, Obama saw an opportunity to resurrect the idea of a criminal trial, which Attorney General Eric Holder had planned for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. This time, the president tells Bowden, he was prepared to bring bin Laden back and put him on trial in a federal court. ‘We worked through the legal and political issues that would have been involved, and Congress and the desire to send him to Guantánamo, and to not try him, and Article III.’ Obama continues: ‘I mean, we had worked through a whole bunch of those scenarios. But, frankly, my belief was if we had captured him, that I would be in a pretty strong position, politically, here, to argue that displaying due process and rule of law would be our best weapon against al-Qaeda, in preventing him from appearing as a martyr.’”

If President Obama would have fought to put the founding father and leader of al Qaeda in the criminal court system, rather than place him in military detention and possibly try him by military commission, it would not be difficult for the President to conclude that the current Gitmo detainees — by definition lower on the chain of command than bin Laden but no less avowed enemies of the United States — also should be tried in criminal court. That this statement would be made against the backdrop of a recent purchase of a U.S. facility once on the table for Gitmo transfers, and the GAO’s ongoing work to assess the suitability of U.S. facilities for such transfers, strongly suggests that a transfer may be in the works, the administration’s assurances notwithstanding. And if that’s the case, it underscores this president’s discomfort with framing the war against Islamic terrorism as a war, in which military detention is a basic and indispensable tool.

Defenders of this President’s approach to terrorism will point to his use of drones to eliminate terrorists as proof of his strength as a Commander-in-Chief taking the fight to the enemy. But while individual drone strikes are a justified and often desirable tactic, they cannot fully substitute for a coherent military detention policy that provides for detaining and gathering intelligence from enemy combatants during hostilities and then trying them in a venue suitable to the wartime circumstances of their capture. Former judge and Attorney General Michael Mukasey, when commenting on the drone strike that killed al Qaeda operative Anwar al-Awlaki last year, framed it well:

Why fret about the difficulty of eliciting information from captured detainees, or of detaining them at all, when we have drones available to kill rather than capture? Well, drones are aptly named, in the sense that they do not guide themselves — they need human beings, who need intelligence. If we are to win this war against an enemy that occupies no particular territory, we need intelligence. That can be gathered electronically but electronic wizardry has its limits. 

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About the Author

Ben Lerner is Vice President for Government Relations at the Center for Security Policy in Washington, D.C.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (12) |

c. j. acworth| 10.23.12 @ 8:54AM

How's about we just hang the miserable SOBs? As terrorists they are "enemies of all mankind", like pirates. Summary execution is how to deal with them, unless you want to question them for intel first.

SUBVET| 10.23.12 @ 10:12AM

The summary execution will be just like the death penalty in CA. ........it will never happen.

Stormy| 10.23.12 @ 9:18AM

What is the morality of a policy where a president can designate an enemy for assassination by drone, including collateral damage of innocents, versus humane detention of those individuals? How is the former acceptable and the latter not?

nathan| 10.23.12 @ 9:38AM

C.J. You wouldn't want to go to the trouble of actually determining their guilt first would you? That MINOR little detail? I mean the Canadian we sent abroad to be tortured for six months only for the Canadians to say "oops, he's not a bad guy", that happens literally ALL the time. We know many of the people at both Gitmo and Abu Ghraib didn't belong there, they were guilty of nothing. OBL's driver, won on appeal didn't he?

You see, under the Constitution, American law, and international agreements that we both helped draft and signed, we're obligated to treat these people properly. And when we don't we're no better than the people we're fighting. The writer here talks about if we bring them here they will have rights in American courts. They already have rights folks. And please we already hold these kinds of trials here. And Matthew Alexander in Iraq got all sorts of information from the guys he interrogated without ever violating their rights. Why can't others do like he did? The notion that we have to torture people to get information is nonsense. Look at the Luftwaffe unit who never touched our flyers. Look at the American unit who never touched the Japanese prisoners and got huge amounts of info from them. The premise that we have to resort to "enhanced" methods was nonsense from the beginning. This guy really doesn't know history and doesn't know what he's talking about.

Tom Kyba| 10.23.12 @ 11:23AM

I understand from your past comments sir, that you think youself superior to all other commenters here, but for what it's worth I am Canadian and would put a bullet in khadr's head myself. The "Canadians" you cite are the leftist brethren of yourself, who arrogantly speak for others and see themselves as more "evolved" than the rest of us. Your obnoxious "law and Order" routine is snobbish and insulting. Don't pretend to speak for me your highness.

nathan| 10.24.12 @ 7:52AM

Sir: Criticize my "attitude" all you want, but I notice you did not dispute my facts which were exactly as I stated them. Your own government stated for the record that the person in question was innocent of any involvement with the bad guys and was sent abroad to be tortured for absolutely nothing.

I remind you again that the Fifth Amendment of OUR Constitution says no PERSON shall be deprived of life liberty or property without due process. Furthermore the Eighth Amendment bars cruel and unusual punishment. In the case we are discussing both amendments were violated. Governments have an obligation to obey the law too. Otherwise you go down the road to things like the Holocaust. Go back and read the history of how that happened. And also read about how this country committed genocide against the Indians here. And indefinitely detained those Japanese many of whom were American citizens. Tom Paine is right, defend the rights of those you hate to secure your own. But Martin Niemollor is right too, they came form this group, I said nothing . . . and when they came for me, there was no one to speak for me. We cannot allow this behavior. Not with the lessons of the last century staring us in the face. Not with the remnants of Auschwitz still standing.

You no doubt criticize "moderate" muslims for not standing up to the bad guys and yet when I stand up for constitutional rights, you yell at me? I don't get it. I'm doing exactly what we expect of them.

Pecos Pete| 10.23.12 @ 12:59PM

nathan: "We know many of the people at both Gitmo and Abu Ghraib didn't belong there, they were guilty of nothing. " Other than OBL's driver, do you have any proof for your statement?

nathan| 10.24.12 @ 8:00AM

Our "allies" the Northern Alliance responding to a "bounty" we offered, just grabbed people and gave them to us. The rough estimate was aroung 60-70 percent. We ended up out rightly releasing that percentage from Gitmo and while a handful went back to blowing things up the vast majority just went home.

In Iraq the way this works is a bomb goes off. If you recall the scene from the movie "Casablanca" where the inspector says "round up the usual suspects" this is sort of what happens. If y0u happened to be in the "hood" when it blew you just got picked up in the general round up. The conventions require signatories meaning us to make a speedy determination regarding detainees as to whether they are bad guys or not. Similar if you will to the Sixth Amendment. We have been failing to do that. But again the estimates are well over half at all the detention facilities.

A priest in Baghdad was so outraged over OUR behavior at Abu Ghraib that he refused to let Americans worship at his Catholic church. You can question his theology here, but it shows you how our behavior was viewed by at least some of the general population.

cicero| 10.23.12 @ 2:59PM

Rather than release all of those innocents in Getmo, like the others who were rleeased and returned to the battlefield, perhaps we should just have an escape attempt every once in a while.

Don't be too suprised if this president does not start issuing pardons as soon as he is not reelected. At that point, patriotic disobedience to his orders may be in order.

Anthony| 10.23.12 @ 4:23PM

I propose that Obozo, upon losing the election, along with his Chicago thugs, (and Holder) be transported to GITMO for some severe waterboarding.
I would love to participate in the waterboarding of Holder and Axelrod. Numerous times.
And Obozo doesn't even have to bring his prayer rug and Koran, as the Army supplies them to all the Muslim terrorists housed at GITMO.
What a great country!!

Albert Constantine Jr.| 10.23.12 @ 5:32PM

Because of the proximity to Chicagoland, I propose instead we use this new prison to detain the Chicago thugs (because I'm not so sure that it is not, in fact, for the current Gitmo detainees, but is intended to be used in the event of an Obama reelection for us, his vocal opposition).

Thomas II| 10.23.12 @ 9:11PM

Thompson, Illinois is one of the worst choices to put terrorists. It is on the Mississippi river which would provide a great area for staging prison breaks and all kinds of terrorists attacks on strategic infrastructure and military targets in the reason. Save this prison site for the traitors in our government.

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