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Posted: January 20, 2011 06:42 PM

Is the White House's Gitmo Policy Unraveling or Coming Together?


By Dafna Linzer, ProPublica.

Last August, President Obama's national security advisers, including Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Attorney General Eric Holder and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, met in the White House situation room to decide whether and how to go forward with trials for some Guantanamo prisoners.

Congress, even in the hands of Democrats, opposed moving detainees into the United States. And pressure was building from within the Pentagon to start long-promised military commission trials for a number of detainees, including those accused of a deadly attack on the U.S.S. Cole in 2000. Military prosecutors had been preparing cases against those detainees for nearly a year and were anxious for the go-ahead from Gates.

In the situation room, members of Obama's inner Cabinet went back and forth, weighing three factors: the need to bring detainees to justice; a long-standing commitment to prosecutions in federal court; and a desire to avoid trials at Guantanamo, where military commissions were held during the Bush administration.

How, some advisers asked, could the administration successfully argue that it remained committed to closing Guantanamo if it was willing to hold new trials there? How could officials argue they were also committed to trials in federal court if the only trials taking place were in military commissions? Others countered that it was more important to bring whichever detainees they could to justice quickly than to preserve a two-track policy that was unpopular and unraveling.

Details of the meeting, recalled by participants and several others who were briefed, have not been previously reported. But they shed new light on the closed-door struggles of the Obama administration to hold on to its Guantanamo policies.

At the time of the discussion, a single Guantanamo prisoner was on trial in federal court in New York, and another detainee was facing old charges in a military commission. Having separate prosecutions underway simultaneously in both venues seemed possible, and Obama's principal advisers did not want to give up.

According to several officials, Gates, Holder and Clinton left the White House that August day committed to moving forward simultaneously with prosecutions in federal court and military commissions. No military trials would be held anywhere unless trials in federal courtrooms were held at the same time.

That commitment is being tested today. According to a story in the New York Times, Gates will authorize new military commission trials for detainees facing charges brought by the Obama administration. It is unclear where those military trials would be held.

More important is whether this precedes an announcement of trials in federal court. That would determine whether today's news is in fact a change in policy for the White House or a signal that federal prosecutions -- the cornerstone of Obama's Guantanamo policy -- are still to come.

There were indications just last month that the earlier policy could crack. For a year, Holder and Gates displayed a unified public commitment to trials in military commissions and federal court. They jointly announced in November 2009 that five detainees would be prosecuted in federal court and another five in a military commission.

That commitment appeared to hold throughout 2010. As Congress began sealing off options for federal trials, Gates made no moves toward military commissions.

But last month, Holder was alone in asking Congress to ditch new efforts to prevent prosecutions in the United States. For the Justice Department, a ban would make it extremely difficult to hold any trials in federal court. For the Pentagon, it would make it difficult to hold military commission trials anywhere outside Guantanamo. But Gates did not co-sign Holder's letter to congressional leaders or send his own, even when it became clear that the restrictions would be inserted into a defense spending bill. Congress ignored Holder and inserted the restrictions.

Around the same time, military defense lawyers assigned to represent detainees were told by prosecutors to begin preparing for trials. It was unclear which detainees would be charged first, according to several lawyers who discussed the conversations anonymously. But there were indications that prosecutors were readying for trial.

When Obama signed the spending bill earlier this month, he issued a signing statement saying his administration would "work with the Congress to seek repeal of these restrictions, will seek to mitigate their effects, and will oppose any attempt to extend or expand them in the future."

The White House has not said how the administration will "mitigate" the effects, but some experts have suggested that the restrictions affect only the Pentagon. Justice Department funds could still be used to move prisoners to the United States. If that is the White House view, it will be known only when a prisoner is moved to the United States for trial. And only then will it be clear whether the White House policy to move simultaneously on prosecutions in federal court and military commissions still holds.

Spokesmen for the White House, the National Security Council and the Justice Department have not yet responded to requests for comment.

What is clear now is that the month of January has been something of a curse for Guantanamo.

It was January 2002 when the first detainees, shackled, blindfolded and outfitted in orange jumpsuits, arrived at the U.S. Naval Base on the Cuban island. It was January 2004, when military defense lawyers first announced they would challenge the legality of military commissions there in the Supreme Court. Two years later, the lawyers won. Congress passed new legislation authorizing military commissions. Obama, then a senator, voted against the Military Commissions Act.

The following January, in 2007, the Pentagon issued new rules for the military commissions and began preparing trials for top suspects, including those accused of plotting the 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States.

But those trials never fully got under way.

In January 2009, a newly sworn-in President Obama suspended the commissions, promised to bring detainees to trial in federal court and issued an Executive Order to close Guantanamo by January 2010. That was not to be. Instead, in January 2010, the administration, under pressure from Congress, abandoned plans to hold trials in New York for the accused plotters of the 2001 attacks.

One year later, in January 2011, on the eve of the ninth anniversary of the prison, Obama signed the spending bill whose provisions make it difficult to move detainees into the United States. Also this month, Obama is expected to issue a new Executive Order. This one would formalize detention without charge or trial for dozens of detainees.

The news today that the Obama administration has decided to go forward with new military at Guantanamo -- as former President Bush had done -- will test its commitment to a two-track policy and Obama's first promise as president: to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay.

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Jeffrey
04:27 PM on 01/21/2011
If Bush put them there qithout a law from Congress why can't Obama simple put them in a max secure prison in the states . Gitmpo is a stain on America's reputation that well is not in too good of a condition anyway.
jerseyjoe99982002
less government means more in my pocket
12:32 PM on 01/21/2011
I thought Gitmo was to be closed by now. Oh yes, another broken Obama promise that he knew was impossible to be kept. Of course, he did fool all you libs with his retoric .
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
10:06 AM on 01/21/2011
The use of the term "policy" to describe this amorphous, unresolved, immoral and legally indefensible mess, is incorrect.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bioluminescence
09:29 AM on 01/21/2011
The same country which champions human rights and due process prolongs the existence of Gitmo, which is the antithesis of both Are we trying to end the war on terror or escalate it?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
OSCPJ
Want it? Work 4 it. No 1 has ever drown in sweat.
08:45 AM on 01/21/2011
Let me guess.  President Obama just needs to present a better Message, right?  It's not what he's doing, but rather he isn't doing a good enough job of selling the message?  I'm guessing we Americans just aren't smart enough to realize what is going on.


For anyone to believe 2+ years trying to achieve something, failing and will continue to hold Gitmo open is "Success", doesn't get it.


Obama didn't realize the gravity of Gitmo and promised something he had no power to end.  Nor a plan.  Kind of like his brand of Economics.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JimR
12:02 PM on 01/21/2011
I like how you don't even mention Congress, as if they, and their efforts to undermine the president on this issue, simply don't exist.
lastpost
see biography
07:22 AM on 01/21/2011
“How, some advisers asked, could the administration successfully argue that”
the truth won’t set us free? If those detainees were offered the option of interrogation in an MRI scanner, then truth could sought. If guilty of activities buttressed by falsehoods, are not both factions currently a match for each other?

“the closed-door struggles of the Obama administration”
mirror the closed-door struggles of the al-Qaeda organization. Both afraid to put their renditions of reality to a real test, for fear of what may be revealed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
michael j norton
04:54 AM on 01/21/2011
I'd love to know who's in charge. The President or the Sec. of Defense or congress? The way he's "leading" you'd think we didn't elect Obama to be president but rather the 101st senator.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
03:24 AM on 01/21/2011
Rehab it to include a Courthouse. Run it under civilian law. End all torture. Discussion over.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LeftLeanWing
RightKickFoot
01:50 AM on 01/21/2011
I love ProPublica...

It's the only Data Driven News Source out there.

Not all of the
Somebody said something about what they think about what somebody else said they were thinking about what somebody else who said something but should have said something else
01:46 AM on 01/21/2011
I don't know what I find more horrifying--President Obama's continuation and expansion of G.W.'s most heinous legal pretzlings, Constitution-tramplings, and International Law-ignorings or the lack of outrage by the People.
02:28 AM on 01/21/2011
You can't blame the people.. They're spoon-fed this soilent green junk that we call "news", and *poof*, they miraculously become educated and informed citizens (or so they believe).

If you are genuinely horrified and outraged at President Obama because you expected more of him, I say, "rightfully so." If you feel that way because you think he was born in Kenya, he'll throw you in jail for not buying health insurance, or because his socialist agenda is unconstitutional, I say to you, "Yep.. I also want my country back: from you."
08:18 AM on 01/21/2011
We can only blame so much on the MSM propaganda. This doesn't explain the folks who marched with me to protest G.W. doing these things and who worked alongside me campaigning for Candidate Obama ostensibly because he promised to restore the rule of law who do all but stick their fingers in their ears and sing, "La-la-la" when I try to talk with them about President Obama asserting it his Unitary Executive privilege to terminate U.S. citizens without due process, the repetitive use of "state secrets" to derail justice, IRC reports of torture at Bagram, the exportation of torture, dronings of civilians in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, etc., and, and, and... even when I give them a long, long list with documentation...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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GoldwaterKid
Vote Person, Not Party
11:50 PM on 01/20/2011
We all can criticize others, when we have never actually done the job. Now, he has the information, and as President, we have to let him make the decisions.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cliffstep
12:15 AM on 01/21/2011
To me , the whole Gitmo thing is the sprinkles on top of a really ugly ice cream cone. SUre would be nice to have a clean solution , but there sure doesn't seem to be one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
12:47 AM on 01/21/2011
Didn't certain people say the same thing about the previous president?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LeftLeanWing
RightKickFoot
01:51 AM on 01/21/2011
Nope !...

He actually did what he wanted to do... with few exception...
Just what he did...  XUCKED !
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:43 PM on 01/20/2011
"We need GITMO closed" isn't that what Obama preached.... funny how much he has moved passed the center and now is on the right side of center......

Walk a day in his shoes.......
11:27 PM on 01/20/2011
He said that because he wanted to get elected. In Hillary speak we could now say he misspoke.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patches12
10:05 PM on 01/20/2011
It won't be closed for a long time....Obama found out how truly violent these guys are and the Democrat Congress already voted to keep them out of the States....how ironic is that!

But its OK... cause Obama is a Dem and they don't need to be held accoutable.
01:53 AM on 01/21/2011
Uninformed. Try again.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
M Jeffrey
04:29 PM on 01/21/2011
pure nonsense
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10:03 PM on 01/20/2011
What kind of principle is this:"No military trials unless a federal trial is proceeding simultaneously?"

It appears that Obama is applying the same sort of "reasoning" as he did when preparing his Afghan surge: Some advisers wanted 40,000 troops; others wanted 20,000; Obama decided on 30,000.

There IS no rhyme or reason to the Admin's policies on Gitmo or Afghanistan. This is a discomforting, even infuriating thought, but it is true.
02:14 AM on 01/21/2011
I agree. As soon as I began to audibly hear the word "compromise" used during this Administration, I sighed and knew just what that meant. Or did I? This President has taken compromise to such a new level; it's almost like a sad sort of cognitive dissonance wrapped in rationalization and euphemism.

I can imagine that if two asteroids were about to destroy Earth, but we only had the arsenal to destroy one of them, Obama would choose to fire directly down the middle and miss both entirely.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JimR
12:04 PM on 01/21/2011
No, it's not true. Obama has to deal with political reality, even though progressives like to pretend that doesn't exist.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mike dougles
08:35 PM on 01/20/2011
Obama has a GITMO policy, it is the same as Bush had.
Bush know it was a bad idea, yet it is the best idea out there.
Obama has firgured this out now too.
But good for Obama that the Liberals only cared about GITMO when Bush was in office.

Much like the partiot act.
09:36 PM on 01/20/2011
And the wars and high gas prices and wall street lobbyists in the white house and tax cuts for the wealthy and deficit spending... in fact if you subtract Obamacare this would be W's 3rd term.
WHAT HAPPENED TO ALL THE PROTESTS?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
10:57 PM on 01/20/2011
Not all progressives are "pragmatists" who apply a principle only when it's compatible with party loyalty.