U.S. general who opened Guantanamo prison says shut it down

Comshaw

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By Jane Sutton

MIAMI (Reuters) - The U.S. general who opened the Guantanamo detention camp said Thursday it was a mistake and should be shut down because "it validates every negative perception of the United States."

"In retrospect, the entire detention and interrogation strategy was wrong," Marine Major General Michael Lehnert wrote in a column published in the Detroit Free Press.

Lehnert, now retired from the military and living in Michigan, was the first commander of the task force that opened the detention camp in January 2002 at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba.

He said the United States opened it "because we were legitimately angry and frightened" by the September 11 hijacked plane attacks in 2001 and thought the captives sent there would provide "a treasure trove of information and intelligence."

He quickly became convinced that most of them never should have been sent there because they had little intelligence value and there was insufficient evidence linking them to war crimes, he wrote.

"We squandered the goodwill of the world after we were attacked by our actions in Guantanamo, both in terms of detention and torture," Lehnert wrote. "Our decision to keep Guantanamo open has helped our enemies because it validates every negative perception of the United States."

Congress is debating an annual defense bill containing language that would give President Barack Obama more flexibility to repatriate or resettle Guantanamo detainees.

But the proposal maintains an "unwise and unnecessary ban" on transferring any to the United States, Lehnert said.

"Still, this is a step forward toward closing our nation's most notorious prison — a prison that should never have been opened," he wrote.

The first detainees arrived on January 11, 2002, one week after Lehnert was ordered to build the first 100 cells. The crude chain-link cages known as Camp X-Ray were used for about three and a half months and replaced by a series of more permanent prisons.

The United States has since held 779 men at the facility and 162 remain. Lehnert noted that many had been cleared for transfer by U.S. defense and intelligence agencies but were "stuck by politics."

He said a handful should be transferred to the United States for prosecution or incarceration. He acknowledged the risk that some released detainees could go on to plan attacks against the United States, but said the U.S. Constitution and the rule of law trump that risk.

"It is time that the American people and our politicians accepted a level of risk in the defense of our constitutional values, just as our service men and women have gone into harm's way time after time to defend our Constitution," Lehnert wrote. "If we make a mockery of our values, it calls us to question what we are really fighting for."

He added, "It is time to close Guantanamo. Our departure from Afghanistan is a perfect point in history to close the facility."

(Reporting by Jane Sutton; Editing by Vicki Allen)


Comshaw
 
What a benighted liberal apologist who excuses the actions of all those ragheads that can't even speak United States of America and should be killed.
 
SO why didn't he, Marine Officer and intelligent person, object to the establishment of the prison in the first place? Because "because we were legitimately angry and frightened"?
Poor Marine frightened of a few hundred ragheads?:confused:

I knew that it was a bad idea when it farted out of "W's" lips in the first place. Any sane person understood that subverting American values ( the rule of law, human rights, etc) is counter productive.

Pussy just like W and Dick.:mad:
 
A lot of people didn't and were frightened. It was excusable but it's been a decade.
 
Dick and W were stupid sure but not evil and most presidents would have come to a similar conclusion.
 
Dick and W were stupid sure but not evil and most presidents would have come to a similar conclusion.

They weren't stupid, well maybe W, but they were scared shitless and showed their lack of ethics and morals. The fucken pussys.
 
So did America for the most part. They flew planes into buildings. People were understandably spooked. What's not acceptable is that we are still acting like this.
 
So did America for the most part. They flew planes into buildings. People were understandably spooked. What's not acceptable is that we are still acting like this.

They flew planes into the buildings, just as the intel said they would, if the fucken pussies had listened and not use it as an excuse to fuck over Iraq
 
Iraq is a separate issue.

And intel says a lot of things, that was a fairly radical threat.
 
By Jane Sutton

MIAMI (Reuters) - The U.S. general who opened the Guantanamo detention camp said Thursday it was a mistake and should be shut down because "it validates every negative perception of the United States."

"In retrospect, the entire detention and interrogation strategy was wrong," Marine Major General Michael Lehnert wrote in a column published in the Detroit Free Press.

Lehnert, now retired from the military and living in Michigan, was the first commander of the task force that opened the detention camp in January 2002 at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base in Cuba.

He said the United States opened it "because we were legitimately angry and frightened" by the September 11 hijacked plane attacks in 2001 and thought the captives sent there would provide "a treasure trove of information and intelligence."

He quickly became convinced that most of them never should have been sent there because they had little intelligence value and there was insufficient evidence linking them to war crimes, he wrote.

"We squandered the goodwill of the world after we were attacked by our actions in Guantanamo, both in terms of detention and torture," Lehnert wrote. "Our decision to keep Guantanamo open has helped our enemies because it validates every negative perception of the United States."

Congress is debating an annual defense bill containing language that would give President Barack Obama more flexibility to repatriate or resettle Guantanamo detainees.

But the proposal maintains an "unwise and unnecessary ban" on transferring any to the United States, Lehnert said.

"Still, this is a step forward toward closing our nation's most notorious prison — a prison that should never have been opened," he wrote.

The first detainees arrived on January 11, 2002, one week after Lehnert was ordered to build the first 100 cells. The crude chain-link cages known as Camp X-Ray were used for about three and a half months and replaced by a series of more permanent prisons.

The United States has since held 779 men at the facility and 162 remain. Lehnert noted that many had been cleared for transfer by U.S. defense and intelligence agencies but were "stuck by politics."

He said a handful should be transferred to the United States for prosecution or incarceration. He acknowledged the risk that some released detainees could go on to plan attacks against the United States, but said the U.S. Constitution and the rule of law trump that risk.

"It is time that the American people and our politicians accepted a level of risk in the defense of our constitutional values, just as our service men and women have gone into harm's way time after time to defend our Constitution," Lehnert wrote. "If we make a mockery of our values, it calls us to question what we are really fighting for."

He added, "It is time to close Guantanamo. Our departure from Afghanistan is a perfect point in history to close the facility."

(Reporting by Jane Sutton; Editing by Vicki Allen)


Comshaw
It should be expanded so we can help allies send their terrorists to it.

Not to mention Julian assange and Glenn Greenwald and Snowden
 
It should be expanded so we can help allies send their terrorists to it.

Not to mention Julian assange and Glenn Greenwald and Snowden

Expanding concentration camps to house political enemies seems to be very much in favor with you Zionists lately.

#TheMoreJewKnow
#WeGonnaGetHeilHeilHeil
#FinalSolutionsRUs
 
But if we do shut it down, where should we send all the bad people, you know, the ones that want to kill us? Maybe Texas, or Arizona, or New Jersey, how about California, tough selection, so many cool states and so little time to pick just one.
 
Of course, this is now a retired general with (1) nothing to lose by saying the above and (2) no actual influence on policy any more.
 
Expanding concentration camps to house political enemies seems to be very much in favor with you Zionists lately.

#TheMoreJewKnow
#WeGonnaGetHeilHeilHeil
#FinalSolutionsRUs
Difference between a concentration camp which was a Nazi invention (btw the Palestinians and other islamists are the Nazi spirtiual sucessors) and a prison for terrorists.

Where every Hamas, Hezbolah, al Quada and every other islamic terror group belong.
 
Famous last words from Marine Major General (ret) Michael Lehnert.

It is time to close Guantánamo. Our departure from Afghanistan is a perfect point in history to close the facility.
 
Difference between a concentration camp which was a Nazi invention (btw the Palestinians and other islamists are the Nazi spirtiual sucessors) and a prison for terrorists.

Where every Hamas, Hezbolah, al Quada and every other islamic terror group belong.

Which of the above terrorist groups do Assange, Greenwald and Snowden belong to? Seems to me they fall under the heading of "political prisoners", which the Nazis often put into concentration camps.

Try again.
 
Assange is a supporter of al Quada as is Greenwald in addition to be a goebeelis like speaker for Hams and Hezbollah. Traitors like Snowden and Manning belong with the terrorists
 
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