[Mb-civic] Beyond Guantanamo - Matthew Waxman - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Aug 20 08:06:24 PDT 2005
Beyond Guantanamo
By Matthew Waxman
Saturday, August 20, 2005; Page A17
This month the United States and the government of Afghanistan reached
an understanding that will allow for the gradual transfer of Afghan
detainees now held by the Defense Department at Guantanamo Bay and in
Afghanistan to the control of Afghan authorities. This is not only a
significant step forward in the U.S.-Afghan security relationship but
the latest example of how the United States and its coalition partners
can share the burdens in mitigating the dangers terrorist fighters pose.
Terrorists must be captured and prevented from returning to the global
battlefield. But it need not -- nor in many cases should it -- be the
United States that detains them for the long term. All nations that have
joined forces in the global war on terrorism share responsibility for
keeping captured terrorists from returning to violence.
American armed forces will continue to capture and detain terrorist
fighters like the approximately 510 enemy combatants currently at
Guantanamo. The principle that a state is legally entitled to detain
enemy fighters until the enemy -- in this case, al Qaeda and its
affiliates, including the Taliban -- is defeated is not a new one; it is
deeply rooted in international law. The Geneva Convention, for example,
reflects the well-established notion that captured enemy fighters can be
kept off the battlefield until the war is over.
But at the same time, the United States has no interest in holding
anyone unnecessarily. Besides the moral cost, unnecessary detentions
would undermine our message of freedom and democracy, which is essential
to combating violent extremism. And beyond these humanitarian and
political reasons, detaining anyone unnecessarily would divert valuable
military resources in the war on terrorism.
To balance these demands, the United States has taken the extraordinary
step during an ongoing war of instituting individual review processes to
release detainees assessed as no longer constituting a significant
threat, and to transfer other detainees to their home countries or other
countries for possible detention, investigation or prosecution as
appropriate.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/19/AR2005081901461.html
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