Obama's terrorist-release program
Sep 26, 2016 |
By
Stephen F. Hayes
and
Thomas Jocelyn
As Barack Obama prepared to enter the final year of his
presidency, he sat down for an interview with Olivier Knox to discuss a
bold new policy change. He had announced a year earlier that the United
States would be ending its decades-long isolation of Cuba and seeking
rapprochement with the authoritarian Communists who run the island
nation 90 miles from Florida. In this December 14, 2015, interview,
Obama described his new approach in greater detail. The change he
proposed dominated headlines for days.
There was other big news in the interview—though this the media
didn't treat as such. The president declared that he remained committed
to closing the detention facility at Guantánamo Bay, despite strong
objections from Republicans and some Democrats. Obama had campaigned in
2008 on closing Guantánamo and as one of his first acts upon taking the
oath of office signed Executive Order 13492 directing his national
security team to shutter the facility within a year:
The detention facilities at Guantánamo for
individuals covered by this order shall be closed as soon as
practicable, and no later than 1 year from the date of this order. If
any individuals covered by this order remain in detention at Guantánamo
at the time of closure of those detention facilities, they shall be
returned to their home country, released, transferred to a third
country, or transferred to another United States detention facility in a
manner consistent with law and the national security and foreign policy
interests of the United States.
Almost seven years later, much to Obama's frustration, the
facility remained open. Closing it had proved much more challenging than
Obama had theorized as a candidate trying to win an election and a new
president acting on his idealism. It turned out that the jihadists who
remained in Guantánamo were there for a reason. Many of them were truly,
as the cliché had it, "the worst of the worst." Al Qaeda leaders, top
Taliban officials, the men who planned the 9/11 attacks, veteran
jihadists caught plotting follow-on attacks on U.S. interests, and even
those al Qaeda operatives believed to be charged with carrying out the
next wave of assaults on the U.S. homeland.
The news in the president's interview wasn't that he intended to
make good on his promise to close Guantánamo, however belatedly. It was
instead the president's attempt to mislead the American people to
accomplish his controversial objective.
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