The Gitmo Five: a hypothetical threat?

The Gitmo Five: a hypothetical threat?

The idea that only some are entitled to due process continues to afflict US foreign policy.

The release of five Taliban members from Guantanamo in exchange for a US soldier who went AWOL five years ago has generated heated debate on the worthiness (or otherwise) of the deal that was facilitated by Qatari officials. The bulk of the commentary in mainstream Western media focuses on whether Obama and his Congressional, Republican opponents are justified in supporting or challenging the release of the Gitmo Five.

The five former detainees who were held in captivity for more than a decade were never charged, prosecuted or allowed their day in court in order to challenge their incarceration. Their extra-judicial and prolonged imprisonment as 'unlawful combatants' (or some version of this designation) persisted, notwithstanding Obama's declared intent to close Guantanamo before he became President, and his subsequent 2009 executive order to close the facility. He also vowed to close an assortment of 'black sites' linked to night raids and other CIA activities in Afghanistan. Obama, who has played fast and loose with the law, did not repudiate 'extraordinary rendition' – a practice which involved the abduction and transfer of suspected Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives to countries not adverse to the use of 'enhanced interrogation' techniques, otherwise known as torture.

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Himal Southasian
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