Los Angeles Times

Why is Gitmo still open?

- Ne of

OPresident Obama’s first acts in office was to promise that he would close the military prison at Guantanamo Bay in order to “restore the standards of due process and the core constituti­onal values that have made this country great even in the midst of war, even in dealing with terrorism.” Six years later, the facility is still open, although the population has dwindled to 116, 52 of whom have been cleared for transfer if security conditions can be satisfied.

Part of the problem has been congressio­nal obstructio­nism, but Obama also is to blame. Rather than veto defense authorizat­ion bills that limited his ability to transfer inmates, he has signed them, while raising questions about whether they intruded on his constituti­onal authority. And he hasn’t pressed the Defense Department hard enough to approve the release and resettleme­nt of detainees who aren’t deemed a threat.

Now the White House says it is preparing to present Congress with a new plan to close the facility. That effort is welcome, but it will fully succeed only if the administra­tion recognizes that the problem with Guantanamo isn’t just its location, but that the prison has become a symbol of a denial of due process.

Opposition to closing Guantanamo involves two issues. One is whether even “lowrisk” detainees should be released to their homelands or to some other country. The other is whether inmates — including dozens of more dangerous detainees the administra­tion says it can neither release nor try — should be moved to the United States. The administra­tion argues persuasive­ly that “supermax” prisons in this country provide adequate protection for public safety.

We agree with Obama that Guantanamo has been a stain on America’s reputation and a recruiting tool for terrorists. The administra­tion should make good on its threat to veto a new National Defense Authorizat­ion Act if it makes it harder to release detainees or to shut down the prison. But even if the administra­tion wins congressio­nal support for closing the facility and accelerati­ng the release of some detainees, it shouldn’t be content with simply relocating the rest and continuing to hold them without charge or trial.

In a 2013 speech, Obama acknowledg­ed that indefinite­ly detaining suspected terrorists without a trial was a problem but said it could be resolved “consistent with our commitment to the rule of law.” The way to do so is to urgently revisit the question of whether supposedly high-risk detainees really pose a danger if they are released. The government should also take a fresh look at whether it really is impossible to prosecute some detainees because of missing or compromise­d evidence.

In the same speech, Obama warned that “history will cast a harsh judgment on this aspect of our fight against terrorism and those of us who fail to end it.” The way to forestall such a judgment is to close Guantanamo and not reconstitu­te it elsewhere.

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