By Dr Ramzy
Baroud
March 07, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "MEM"
- On 12 February, White House
Press Secretary Jen Psaki was
asked by a reporter whether the new Joe Biden
administration intends to shut down the notorious
Guantanamo Bay Prison by the end of the US
president's first term in office. Her non-committal
answer was, "That's certainly our goal and our
intention."
Psaki may have sounded
reassuring that the untold suffering experienced by
hundreds of men in this American gulag — many of
whom were surely innocent — would finally be coming
to an end. However, considering the history of
Guantanamo and the trail of broken promises by the
Barack Obama administration, the latest "goal and
intention" is hardly encouraging.
Compare the new
language with that of Obama's impassioned diatribes
about humanity, justice and American values, which
he utilised whenever he spoke of Guantanamo. "Gitmo
has become a symbol around the world for an America
that flouts the rule of law," Obama
said in a speech at the National Defence
University in May 2013.
Enamoured with his
every word, Obama's audience applauded
enthusiastically, but when he delivered that
particular speech, he was serving his second term in
office. He had already had ample time and
opportunity to shut down the prison which
operates with no international monitoring and
entirely outside the realms of international and US
laws.
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Obama is likely to
be remembered for his words, not his actions.
Not only did he fail to shut down the prison
which was
erected by his predecessor, George W. Bush,
in 2002, but the Guantanamo industry also
continued to thrive during his time in the White
House. For example, in his speech, Obama made
reference to the high cost of "a hundred and
fifty million dollars each year to imprison 166
people."
According to the New Yorker in
2016, Guantanamo's budget had grown to "$445
million" while Obama was in office.
Yet, as the budget
grew by leaps and bounds, the number of Guantanamo
prisoners dwindled. There are now just
40 prisoners in the massive edifice of metal,
concrete and barbed wire built within a US naval
base at the eastern tip of Cuba on land 'leased'
by the US in 1903.
It is easy to conclude
that the US government keeps the prison open only to
avoid international accountability and, arguably, to
extract information by torture, an act that is
inconsistent with American law. But this cannot be
right. The wars against Afghanistan and Iraq were
illegal under international law, but that didn't
stop the US and its allies from savagely
invading, humiliating and torturing entire
populations with no regard whatsoever to legal or
moral arguments.
Moreover, Guantanamo
is merely one of many American-run prisons and
detention centres operating around the world
according to the most ruthless tactics and no rule
book. The tragedy of Abu Ghraib, a US military
detention centre in Baghdad, only became famous when
direct evidence of the degrading and incredibly
violent conduct that was taking place within its
walls was
produced and publicised. Furthermore, many US
officials and members of Congress at the time used
the Abu Ghraib scandal in 2004 as an opportunity to
whitewash and rebrand American crimes elsewhere and
to present the misconduct within the prison as if it
was an isolated incident involving "a few bad
apples".
This argument was
made by George W Bush. It was more or less the
same logic utilised by Obama when he championed the
closure of Guantanamo. Indeed, both presidents
insisted that neither Abu Ghraib nor Guantanamo
should be made out to represent what America is
really all about.
"Is this who we are?"
asked Obama passionately as he made the case for
the closure of Guantanamo, speaking as if he was a
human rights advocate rather than the
Commander-in-Chief with the authority to shut down
the entire facility immediately. The truth is that
the Abu Ghraib tortures were not "a few bad apples"
and Guantanamo is, indeed, a microcosm of exactly
what the US is, or has become.
From Bagram in
Afghanistan, to Abu Ghraib in Iraq, to Guantanamo
Bay in Cuba, to the many "floating prisons" — news
of which was
leaked by US media in 2014 — the US government
continues to make a mockery of international and
humanitarian laws. Many American officials who
genuinely advocate the closure of Guantanamo refuse
to acknowledge that the prison is a symbol of their
country's intransigence, and refuse to accept that,
like any other country in the world, it is
accountable to international law.
This lack of
accountability has exceeded the US government's
insistence on "acting alone" and launching wars
without international mandates. One US
administration after another has also made it clear
that, under no circumstances, would they
allow American citizens accused of war crimes to
be investigated, let alone stand trial, before the
International Criminal Court (ICC). The message here
is that even America's "few bad apples" can
potentially walk free, regardless of the heinousness
of their crimes.
Just months after the
Trump administration
imposed punitive sanctions on ICC judges for
having the audacity to look into possible
investigations of US crimes in Afghanistan, it freed
the convicted criminals who carried out horrific
crimes in Iraq. On 22 December, Trump
pardoned four American mercenaries from the
private military company Blackwater. These convicted
murderers were involved in the
killing of 14 civilians, including two children,
in Baghdad in 2007.
What became known as
the "Nisour Square massacre" was another example of
whitewashing, as government officials and mainstream
media insisted that the massacre was an isolated
episode, even while expressing outrage at the
unlawful killing. The fact that hundreds of
thousands of Iraqis, mostly civilians, were killed
as a result of the US invasion seems irrelevant in
America's skewed logic as it pursues its
never-ending "war on terror".
Whether Biden fulfils
his promise to shut down Guantanamo or not, little
will change if the US remains committed in its
contempt for international law and to its undeserved
view of itself as a country that exists above the
universal rights of everyone else.
That said, Guantanamo
on its own is a crime against humanity and there can
never be any rational explanation or justification
for holding hundreds of people indefinitely, without
trial, without due process, without international
observers and without ever seeing their families and
loved ones. The explanation often offered by the
pro-Guantanamo pundits is that the prison inmates
are dangerous men. If that was indeed the case, why
were these supposed criminals not allowed to have
their day in court?
According to a report
by Amnesty International
published in May last year, of the 779 men who
were taken to the prison, "only seven have been
convicted". Worse, five of them were convicted "as a
result of pre-trial agreements under which they
pleaded guilty, in return for the possibility of
release from the base." According to the rights
group, such a trial by military commission "did not
meet fair trial standards".
In other words,
Guantanamo is — and has always been — a fraudulent
operation with no real inclination to hold criminals
and terrorists to account and prevent further
crimes. Guantanamo is an industry, and a lucrative
one. In many ways, it is similar to the American
prison military complex, ironically dubbed the
"criminal justice system". Referring to the unjust
"justice system", Human Rights Watch
derided the US for having "the largest reported
prison population in the world".
"The (US) criminal
justice system — from policing and prosecution,
through to punishment — is plagued with injustices
like racial disparities, excessively harsh
sentencing and drug and immigration policies that
improperly emphasise criminalisation,"
stated HRW on its website.
The above can also be
considered an answer to Obama's rhetorical question,
"Is this who we are?" Yes sir, Mr President, this is
precisely who you are.
While offering the
world's most miserable detention conditions to
hundreds of potentially innocent men, Guantanamo
also offers career opportunities, military perks and
honours, and a seemingly endless budget for a small
army to guard only a few shackled, gaunt-looking men
in a foreign land.
Even if Biden is able
to overcome pressure from the military, the CIA and
Congress and succeeds in shutting Guantanamo down,
justice will still be absent, not only because of
the numerous lives that are forever shattered, but
also because America still refuses to learn from its
mistakes. Guantanamo Bay Prison is indeed America's
enduring shame.
Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author
and editor of Palestine Chronicle. He has
authored a number of books on the Palestinian
struggle including 'The
Last Earth: A Palestinian Story'
(Pluto Press, London). Baroud has a Ph.D. in
Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter
and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Centre
for Global and International Studies, University
of California Santa Barbara. His website is
www.ramzybaroud.net.
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