The Columbus Dispatch

US surveys long-term plans for Gitmo base

- By Ben Fox

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — A new dining hall for guards at the Guantanamo Bay detention center has a shimmering view of the Caribbean and a lifespan of 20 years. New barracks scheduled to get underway next year are meant to last five decades.

And the Pentagon has asked Congress to approve money for a new super-max prison unit to be designed with the understand­ing that prisoners will grow old and frail in custody — some perhaps still without being convicted of a crime.

President Donald Trump’s order in January to keep the Guantanamo jail open and allow the Pentagon to bring new prisoners there is prompting military officials to consider a future for the controvers­ial facility that the Obama administra­tion sought to close. Officials talked about the plans in an unusually frank manner as a small group of journalist­s toured the isolated base where 40 men are still held behind tall fences and coils of razor wire on the southeaste­rn coast of Cuba.

“We’ve got to plan for the long term,” Army Col. Stephen Gabavics, commander of the guard force, told reporters. “We ultimately have to plan for whether or not they are going to be here for the rest of their lives.”

The Pentagon was investing in upgrades at the Navy base under President Barack Obama, whose push to shutter the detention center couldn’t overcome opposition in Congress. But those projects, including the $150 million barracks, were funded with the understand­ing that they could be used by the personnel of the Navy base that hosts the detention center. Now they are viewed as part of a broader effort to be able to operate the prison for many years to come.

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