Obama Guantanamo Closing: White House Regroups After Missteps

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First Posted: 09-25-09 12:06 AM   |   Updated: 09-25-09 08:49 AM

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Guantanamo

This article by Dafna Linzer, ProPublica, and Anne E. Kornblut, Washington Post, was published by ProPublica under a Creative Commons license.

With four months left to meet its self-imposed deadline for closing the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the Obama administration is working to recover from missteps that have put officials behind schedule [2] and left them struggling to win the cooperation of Congress.

Even before the inauguration, President Obama's top advisers settled on a course of action they were counseled against: announcing that they would close the facility within one year. Today, officials are acknowledging that they will be hard-pressed to meet that goal.

The White House has faltered in part because of the legal, political and diplomatic complexities involved in determining what to do with more than 200 terrorism suspects incarcerated at the prison. But senior advisers privately acknowledge failing to devise a concrete plan for where to move the detainees and mishandling Congress.

To address these setbacks, the administration has shifted its leadership team on the issue. White House Counsel Gregory B. Craig, who initially guided the effort to close the prison and who was an advocate of setting the deadline, is no longer in charge of the project, two senior administration officials said this week.

Craig said Thursday that some of his early assumptions were based on miscalculations, in part because Bush administration officials and senior Republicans in Congress had spoken publicly about closing the facility. "I thought there was, in fact, and I may have been wrong, a broad consensus about the importance to our national security objectives to close Guantanamo and how keeping Guantanamo open actually did damage to our national security objectives," he said.

In May, one of the senior officials said, Obama tapped Pete Rouse -- a top adviser and former congressional aide who is not an expert on national security but is often called in to fix significant problems -- to oversee the process. Senior adviser David Axelrod and deputy communications director Dan Pfeiffer were brought in to craft a more effective message around detainee policy, the official said.

"It was never going to be easy, but we have worked through some of the early challenges and are on a strong course," Pfeiffer said.

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In order to empty the prison, the administration will need to find facilities to house 50 to 60 prisoners who cannot be released and who cannot be tried because of legal impediments, according to an administration official. The administration must also win congressional funding for the closure process, find host countries for detainees cleared for release, and transfer dozens of inmates to federal and military courts for prosecution.

Three administration officials said they expect Craig to leave his current post in the near future, and one said he is on the short list for a seat on the bench or a diplomatic position. Craig has long made clear his desire to be involved in foreign policy, but he declined to comment on his plans.

President Barack Obama presents a birthday cake to senior adviser Pete Rouse in the Oval Office. Rouse has been tapped by Obama to lead the administration in closing the military prison at Guantanamo, according to one senior official. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
President Barack Obama presents a birthday cake to senior adviser Pete Rouse in the Oval Office. Rouse has been tapped by Obama to lead the administration in closing the military prison at Guantanamo, according to one senior official. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)
Several White House officials remain involved in Guantanamo, including Thomas E. Donilon, the deputy national security adviser; John O. Brennan, the counterterrorism adviser; and David Rapallo, an official on the National Security Council.

"Guantanamo was everyone's part-time job," said a senior official, one of several interviewed for this article who insisted on anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. Now, the official added, Rouse is coordinating them.

Setting a Deadline

Before the election, Craig met privately with a group of top national security lawyers who had served in Democratic and Republican administrations to discuss Guantanamo. During the transition, he met with members of the outgoing administration, some of whom warned him against issuing a deadline to close the facility without first finding alternative locations for the prisoners.

Although the move was approved by all of the president's senior advisers and, ultimately, the president himself, the deadline came at the suggestion of Craig, according to two senior government officials involved in the process. Craig declined to comment on internal discussions.

Craig oversaw the drafting of the executive order that set Jan. 22, 2010, as the date by which the prison must be closed.

"It seemed like a bold move at the time, to lay out a time frame that to us seemed sufficient to meet the goal," one senior official said. "In retrospect, it invited a fight with the Hill and left us constantly looking at the clock."

"The entire civil service counseled him not to set a deadline" to close Guantanamo, according to one senior government lawyer.

In those early months, Craig was unquestionably the central figure in the effort to shut Guantanamo. In an interview with The Washington Post in February, Craig said he was managing the closure "on a day-to-day basis."

Craig began personally reviewing the cases of each detainee at the facility, and was one of the first senior officials to travel to the prison, visiting Guantanamo on Feb. 18, ahead of Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.

But as time wore on, congressional staffers said, they stopped hearing from Craig. Although there were periodic briefings with members of the Justice Department's task forces, there was no longer a point person from the White House who appeared to be shepherding the issue, according to one Republican aide. Craig became involved in other issues, such as vetting, ethics and the nomination of Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court.

Obstacles and Setbacks

Senior administration officials said the central roadblock during those early months was the condition of the detainee files, which had been left in disarray by the previous administration.

"We assumed that for each detainee there was going to be a file somewhere," one senior administration official said. "Some of the intelligence files were not even organized by detainee. You had to go into a mainframe database and search the name of the detainee to put together a file. So there were weeks, if not months, of putting together the files of detainees that then could be reviewed by the fresh eyes that we wanted."

This photo, reviewed by the U.S. military, shows a military trooper standing in front of an old airplane hangar, before dawn, at Camp Justice, in July 2009. (Brennan Linsley/AFP/Getty Images)
This photo, reviewed by the U.S. military, shows a military trooper standing in front of an old airplane hangar, before dawn, at Camp Justice, in July 2009. (Brennan Linsley/AFP/Getty Images)
As the process was getting underway [2] in the spring, the administration began losing support for shutting the facility, in part, officials now say, because the White House did not present a concrete plan for what it would do with the remaining terrorism suspects.

After news reports that 17 detainees -- Chinese Muslims known as Uighurs -- were going to be moved to the Virginia suburbs, lawmakers balked.

Then in May, the Senate decided, by an overwhelming vote of 90 to 6, to block funding for shutting Guantanamo -- Obama's first major legislative setback as president.

Public displeasure with the decision to close Guantanamo grew. Fifty percent of those surveyed in June said they disapproved of closing the facility, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll, up significantly from a Pew poll in February.

Republicans pounced on the Guantanamo closure, alleging that it would make America "less safe." Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid, D-Nev., protested that Democrats would "under no circumstances" move forward without more specifics. The following month, Congress passed an appropriations bill that required the administration to report its plans before moving any detainee out of Guantanamo and prevented it from using available funds to move detainees onto U.S. soil.

Six pending pieces of legislation would make it harder for Obama to close the prison and transfer detainees to the United States or foreign countries.

After the congressional setbacks, Craig orchestrated the release of four of the Uighurs, flying with them and a State Department official from Guantanamo to Bermuda, a self-governing British territory whose international relations are administered by Britain.

The transfer produced a diplomatic rift. British and U.S. officials said the Obama administration gave Britain two hours' notice that the Uighurs were being sent to Bermuda. "They essentially snuck them in, and we were furious," said a senior British official. The move also caused friction between Britain and China, which seeks the Uighurs for waging an insurgency against the Chinese government.

Late Thursday, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel offered a defense of Craig, saying he "played a critical role in pursuing the president's goal of ensuring that we protect our nation's security interests in a manner that is consistent with our laws and our values."

One administration official was more effusive. "Greg Craig is a hero," the official said. "He took responsibility for this policy from the beginning, and he has guts and character. If we can't get it done by the deadline, then at least we'll have done as much as we can as smoothly as we could have."

In coming weeks, officials say, they expect to complete the initial review of all the files of those held at Guantanamo.

Washington Post staff writer Peter Finn, polling director Jon Cohen and staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.

This article by Dafna Linzer, ProPublica, and Anne E. Kornblut, Washington Post, was published by ProPublica under a Creative Commons license. With four months left to meet its self-imposed deadline...
This article by Dafna Linzer, ProPublica, and Anne E. Kornblut, Washington Post, was published by ProPublica under a Creative Commons license. With four months left to meet its self-imposed deadline...
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I seem to recall both parties saying "not in my backyard" when Obama spoke of closing Gitmo and transferring the prisoners to SuperMax facilities. When the public was polled it said the same thing. It seems there was a town with a empty new prison willing to take the Gitmo detainees and still nothing. It seems to me the real question is are we serious about closing Gitmo or holding on to the fear closing Gitmo may bring? It seems to me that the American people and our government doubt we can do anything. I always hear what we can't do, but never what we can. America, IMO has lost confidence in its ability to do anything. If this is suppose to be Home of the Brave, prove it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 PM on 09/26/2009

Yep. It is, and always will be, BusHitler's fault. Our great one has the answers, our great one knows all. I think I'll write a song about how wonderful and all-knowing he is. /sarc

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 09/26/2009
- hamchunk I'm a Fan of hamchunk 20 fans permalink

When will Obama take ownership of the Presidency? When will he and his administration take responsibility for the few actions and policies they have been able to push forward? There comes a time where you have to grow up and quit blaming others, as is wont of a majority of posters on this site.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 PM on 09/26/2009
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How come I hear in the news, Obamacare, Obamanomics, Afghanistan is Obama's Viet Nam. It sounds to me as if he has accepted the challenge. Now, doing things the way you want him too, not so much!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 09/26/2009
- Weirdwriter I'm a Fan of Weirdwriter 331 fans permalink
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Gitmo would have been closed by now if the Republicans hadn't decided to make this yet another "make-Obama-fail" issue and obstruct the dispersal of the detainees to regular prisons.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 AM on 09/26/2009
- sviolette I'm a Fan of sviolette 96 fans permalink
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You only have to look at why it was opened in the first place to figure out why it's so hard to close. When something is opened to do illegal activity it will never be closed until you rid yourself of the people that supported the illegal activity. The republicans are the ones obstructing everything. If Obama said that he wanted Gitmo to remain open the republicans would be calling for it's closure. If Obama said that he would veto any healthcare reform bill the republicans would be asking why he hates the American people. They would be pushing single payer. A democratic president will never have the right idea as far as the republicans are concerned.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 PM on 09/26/2009
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SEPT. 15, 2009 11:16 EDT
Bagram: The sham of closing Guantanamo

Yesterday, the Obama DOJ -- as expected -- filed a legal brief (.pdf) which adopted the arguments originally made by the Bush DOJ to insist that detainees whom they abduct from around the world and then ship to Bagram (rather than Guantanamo) lack any constitutional rights whatsoever, including habeas review.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/09/15/bagram/index.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 AM on 09/26/2009
- blimie I'm a Fan of blimie 14 fans permalink

He's as bad as Bush. You're right it is a sham.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 PM on 09/26/2009
- sviolette I'm a Fan of sviolette 96 fans permalink
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He's doing it to make the courts prove that the Bush arguments are unconstitutional. Once the courts debunk the Bush reasoning the prison camps will be closed immediately. All of them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 PM on 09/26/2009
- hamchunk I'm a Fan of hamchunk 20 fans permalink

What conspiracy website did you pull that off of?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 PM on 09/26/2009
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Obama. The "fierce urgency of ... whenever".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 AM on 09/26/2009
- Bill125 I'm a Fan of Bill125 3 fans permalink
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One way to close the prison is to release the 60 individuals onto the Naval base. Give them a BOQ to sleep in and a stipend so they can buy food at the PX or base restaurants. They could walk around the base freely until they get a country to take them in. The prison would be abandoned but preserved as a crime scene. If any former prisoner committed a misdeed they could be charged under the base legal system. Somehow I think, if the prisoners are released onto the base, the Navy will figure out how to relocate them in short order.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 09/25/2009
- hoopesaz I'm a Fan of hoopesaz 23 fans permalink

This was Obama's "Mission Successful" moment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:19 PM on 09/25/2009
- Swankie I'm a Fan of Swankie 16 fans permalink

He had that moment a few hours after the inaguration. it's over...time for the grown ups to take charge.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 AM on 09/26/2009

All that gitmo stuff was just one of many tools to use against Bush and Republicans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:25 PM on 09/25/2009
- Rog49Thomas I'm a Fan of Rog49Thomas 192 fans permalink

A key element in leadership is understanding the difficulty of the battles before one launches the campaign.

This is just happening too frequently to be bad luck or coincidence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 09/25/2009
- hamchunk I'm a Fan of hamchunk 20 fans permalink

Expound upon that, please. I would like to hear it explained further.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 PM on 09/26/2009
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I don't think he anticipated his own party siding with the Republicans "not in my backyard" chorus when he mentiond transferring Gitmo detainees to SuperMax facilities. The public even jumped on the bandwagon and it was that same public that was arguing for Gitmo to be closed. Obama actually thinking he had support for closing Gitmo, only to have the same people screaming for it to be left open, that to me was Obama's slogan "Change We Can Believe In" going to " Wait a Minute, Not So Fast".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 09/26/2009
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What kind of picture is that, with Obama in front of a stained glass window? It looks like the photo ops when they tried to put a halo on Dubya or silhouette him against Mt. Rushmore. I support him (Obama), but please, let's not descend to that kind of thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 09/25/2009

Are you kidding me? You must not be familiar with the legions of photos of our chosen one, with halo around head. Look around. They're everywhere. You desceneded to that kind of thing long, long ago.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 09/25/2009
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What kind of picture is yours? I'm all of a sudden hungry for Lido Peppridge Farm cookies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 AM on 09/26/2009
- tnkeating I'm a Fan of tnkeating 21 fans permalink
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None of this is important, the leadership team needs to focus on Afghanistan and support our troops, no one ever won a war lolly gagin about what to do, the last time we had a war run by politicians instead of generals it was called vietnam, we don't want another vietnam. If the generals ask for something you give to them, Obamas has no business trying to run a war, he needs to leave that to the professionals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 09/25/2009
- Rog49Thomas I'm a Fan of Rog49Thomas 192 fans permalink

May I suggest you read up on irregular/non conventional war.

Colin S. Gray, Jeffrey Record would be good places to start.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 PM on 09/25/2009
- Ventoi I'm a Fan of Ventoi 6 fans permalink
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I would like to sit among the detainees...
to get a sense of who they really are and possess...

Nice photo of Obama in the Church.
Makes me think about the whole birther issue.
I was just looking at a photo of Sotomayer and got to thinking about our roots in this world...
my roots can only be traced...with CERTAINTY...back to my great, great grandparents...
if it makes him feel better...

I've never been to 'the old world' and my nuclear family only ever vaguely mentioned our roots there anyway...

which allows me to reinforce the point
that we
were all given
MADE UP NAMES

to allocate us

soto means just sitting or silent illumination
mayor means mayor

so is she a puppet
is God talking her...
does she know who makes her decisions
does she even worry about this?

should WE worry?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 PM on 09/25/2009
- marbiol I'm a Fan of marbiol 6 fans permalink

if god didnt have a plan--in advance--a viable plan--on how to close guantonomo then he should not have campaigned that it would close the prison in a year.

"Craig said Thursday that some of his early assumptions were based on miscalculations, in part because Bush administration officials and senior Republicans in Congress had spoken publicly about closing the facility. "I thought there was, in fact, and I may have been wrong, a broad consensus about the importance to our national security objectives to close Guantanamo and how keeping Guantanamo open actually did damage to our national security objectives," he said. ' FROM THE POST STORY.

if they didnt have this plan right---after campaigning on it--why should we rush thru anything this potus proposes? lets have time to digest, evaluate, critique, tweak, whatever. the guantonomo example doesn bode well for rushing anything [look at how we seem to be seeing backtracking on afghanistan--arent we supposed to have 92,000 more troops in the training pipeline...as promised?]

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 09/25/2009

Let's see, make an announcement without a plan? Who would have thought there would be any problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 09/25/2009

Obama the professor of Constitutional law, didn't properly understand the legal complexities of closing Gitmo (of course meaningless since gitmo is only a location) and determining what to do with the prisoners (the real issue). Apparently, the renowned Professor of Constitutional Law, Obama, lecture notes don't cover these issues. Professor of Constitutional voting present.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 09/25/2009
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