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Gitmo Detainees Cleared for Move Stateside by Senate

October 22, 2009
By
(December 9, 2008 - Photo by Pool/Getty Images South America)

(December 9, 2008 - Photo by Pool/Getty Images South America)

Gitmo Detainees will be moving stateside immanently.  All that stands in their way from a trip back to the country they aimed to destroy is a signature from our wonderful President Barack Hussein Obama.  With the Senate following the House in signing off on the transfer, the work has been done to close Guantanamo and move the terrorists detainees that are imprisoned there to American soil.  The President’s signature is little more than a formality at this point, but the question still remains as to what they will do with them when they get here and how their cases will be adjudicated.

With the Supreme Court granting cert on a group of Chinese Muslim (Uighers)  imprisoned at Gitmo shortly after 911 and then transferred to Bermuda of all places in recent months, many have begun to question whether the remaining detainees will face military justice or if their cases will be move to the federal system.  It should be noted that the 911 terrorists are among this group still calling Gitmo home as well – Just in case you forgot that we actually caught a few of them.  The decision is reportedly in the hands of Attorney General Eric Holder and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates -and by that I mean President Obama.

Fox News

President Obama won a modest victory Tuesday in his continuing effort to close the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, allowing the government to continue to transfer detainees at the facility to the U.S. to be prosecuted.

The plan to permit terrorist suspects held at the facility to be shipped to U.S. soil to face trial passed the Senate by a 79-19 vote as part of a larger $44.1 billion budget bill for the Homeland Security Department.

The measure already passed by the House now goes to Obama for his signature. The Guantanamo provision generally tracks restrictions already in place that block release of detainees in the U.S., but permits them to be tried here.

Obama in January ordered the facility closed within a year, but the administration has yet to deliver a plan and the effort has hit several roadblocks. Among the problems is unease among Obama’s Democratic allies on Capitol Hill, who have refused to fund the effort.

The plan adopted Tuesday requires the administration to develop a plan before any further transfers. It also requires 15 days’ notice before a transfer can occur and a certification that the prisoner does not represent a security risk.

The Senate debate over Guantanamo prisoners was relatively sedate. Last week, House Democratic leaders had to press to defeat a GOP effort to block transfer of any of the Guantanamo Bay detainees to the U.S., even to face trial.

“Prosecuting these individuals in our U.S. courts simply will not work and there is too much at stake to grant the unprecedented benefit of our legal system’s complex procedural safeguards to foreign nationals who were captured outside the United States during a time of war,” said Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.

“Guantanamo must be closed because it’s become a recruiting tool for al-Qaida and other terrorists,” countered Dick Durbin, D-Ill.

Separately, a group of retired generals and war veterans Tuesday launched a national campaign to rally support for closing the prison and transferring its inmates.

The campaign, “CLOSE GITMO NOW” begins Tuesday with a relatively modest $100,000 ad buy on cable channels across the country, exhorting Congress to reject the “failed Bush-Cheney policies.”

The underlying spending bill also backs the Obama administration’s refusal to release new photos showing U.S. personnel abusing detainees held overseas. The measure supports Obama’s decision to allow the defense secretary to bar the release of detainee photos for three years.

The American Civil Liberties Union has filed suit to obtain unreleased photos of detainee abuse under the Freedom of Information Act and won two rounds in federal court. The bill would essentially trump the ACLU’s case.

The administration has appealed to the Supreme Court and Obama has said he would use every available means to block release of additional detainee abuse photos because they could whip up anti-American sentiment overseas and endanger U.S. troops. His powers include issuing an order to classify the photos, thus blocking their release.

The bill also would extend for three years the E-Verify program, which uses the Social Security Administration database so that employers can verify the immigration status of new hires. A GOP plan to permanently expand the voluntary program and make it mandatory for federal contractors — which passed the Senate in July — was dropped during House-Senate talks.

The E-Verify program is a favorite of lawmakers who prefer an enforcement-first approach to immigration policy. They want to make it mandatory for employers nationwide. But more liberal lawmakers want to pair it with other elements of immigration reform, such as creating a so-called pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants already in this country.

And Jim DeMint, R-S.C., complained that negotiators dropped a plan to require double-layer fences along 700 miles of the border with Mexico rather than vehicle barriers and high-tech equipment.

The spending bill provides the department with a 6 percent budget increase.

Here is a report from FoxNews’ Catherine Herridge on the change in media access policy at Guantanamo- “transparency” ha!!

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2 Responses to Gitmo Detainees Cleared for Move Stateside by Senate

  1. Kenneth on October 22, 2009 at 12:13 pm

    This is the first step toward breeding new domestic terrorists through our prison system. THe admin will say these individuals will be in iso and solitary but they will be able to spread their message and the ACLU will make sure of it.

  2. marinemanny on October 23, 2009 at 1:06 pm

    Where they going to put them? Rhikers? Levinworth? Once they are here, then what do we do with them? Are they detainees, POW’s, or prisoners? What a friggin mess.



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