San Francisco Chronicle

Attorney general visits Guantanamo prison complex

- By Sadie Gurman Sadie Gurman is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Jeff Sessions visited Guantanamo Bay on Friday in a show of support for the prison he has called a “perfectly acceptable” place to detain new terrorism suspects, as opposed to holding them in the U.S. and having his own Justice Department try them in civilian courts.

Sessions was traveling to the military detention facility in Cuba with his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, and National Intelligen­ce Director Dan Coats, to gain “an up-to-date understand­ing of current operations,” Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior said.

“Recent attacks in Europe and elsewhere confirm that the threat to our nation is immediate and real, and it remains essential that we use every lawful tool available to prevent as many attacks as possible,” Prior said.

Even as an Alabama senator, Sessions has long been a vocal supporter of the continued use of Guantanamo and its military commission­s, calling it a “very fine place for holding these kind of dangerous criminals.”

“We’ve spent a lot of money fixing it up,” Sessions told the conservati­ve radio talk show host Hugh Hewitt in a March interview. “And I’m inclined to the view that it remains a perfectly acceptable place. And I think the fact is that a lot of the criticisms have just been totally exaggerate­d.”

President Trump said during the presidenti­al campaign that he wanted the detention facility open and promised to “load it up with some bad dudes.” But he has not publicly announced any policy on the prison’s future.

The embrace of Guantanamo Bay now represents a complete reversal of eight years of efforts to close the detention center, which opened on the base in January 2002 to hold and interrogat­e suspected enemy combatants. The Obama administra­tion sent no new detainees there, and, though it didn’t fulfill a promise to shut it down, whittled the population from 242 to 41. That includes seven currently facing charges by military commission­s. All are in the pretrial stage, including the five men charged with planning and aiding in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack.

Obama’s Justice Department maintained that the U.S. civilian court system was the most legally sound forum in which to prosecute terror suspects captured in the U.S. and overseas and cited hundreds of conviction­s in New York and other cities as proof.

Yet Sessions and other Republican­s have long expressed concern that civilian courts afford legal protection­s to which suspected terrorists are not entitled. He has warned that valuable intelligen­ce can be lost if a detainee is advised of his right to remain silent and to have a lawyer.

Former Attorney General Eric Holder sought unsuccessf­ully in 2009 to move the suspected ringleader of the Sept. 11 attacks, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and four alleged co-conspirato­rs from Guantanamo to New York for trial. The plan was derailed by political opposition.

 ?? Brennan Linsley / Associated Press 2006 ?? A 2006 photo shows U.S. military guards walking into Camp Delta, the prison at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, Cuba.
Brennan Linsley / Associated Press 2006 A 2006 photo shows U.S. military guards walking into Camp Delta, the prison at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, Cuba.

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