
Pentagon: 61 ex-Guantanamo inmates return to terrorism
3:32pm EST, By David Morgan
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
Pentagon said on Tuesday that 61 former detainees from its
military prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, appear to have
returned to terrorism since their release from custody.
Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said 18 former detainees are
confirmed as "returning to the fight" and 43 are suspected of
having done in a report issued late in December by the Defense
Intelligence Agency. |
Morrell declined to provide details
such as the identity of the former detainees, why and where they were
released or what actions they have taken since leaving U.S. custody.
"This is acts of terrorism. It could be Iraq, Afghanistan, it could be
acts of terrorism around the world," he told reporters.
Morrell said the latest figures, current through December 24, showed
an 11 percent recidivism rate, up from 7 percent in a March 2008
report that counted 37 former detainees as suspected or confirmed
active militants.
Rights advocates said the lack of details should call the Pentagon's
assertions into question.
"Until enough information is provided to allow the press and the
public to verify these claims, they need to be viewed with a healthy
degree of skepticism," said Jennifer Daskal, a Washington-based lawyer
for Human Rights Watch.
Rights advocates contend that many Guantanamo detainees have never
taken up arms against the United States and say the Defense Department
in the past has described former detainees as rejoining "the fight"
because they spoke out against the U.S. government.
"The Defense Department sees that the Guantanamo detention operation
has failed and they are trying to launch another fear mongering
campaign to justify the indefinite detention of detainees there," said
Jamil Dakwar, human rights director at the American Civil Liberties
Union.
President-elect Barack Obama, who takes office next Tuesday, is
expected to issue an executive order to close the Guantanamo Bay
prison. Defense Secretary Robert Gates also favors shuttering
Guantanamo.
But the prison is unlikely to shut until after U.S. officials settle a
myriad of legal and logistic issues, including a solution on where to
house its occupants.
About 255 men are still held at the U.S.-run naval base in Cuba, a
symbol of aggressive interrogation methods that exposed the United
States to allegations of torture.
Pentagon officials say that about 110 detainees should never be
released because of the potential danger they pose to U.S. interests.
Washington has cleared 50 of the detainees for release but cannot
return them to their home countries because of the risk they would be
tortured or persecuted there.
The Pentagon said it considers a former detainee's return to terrorism
"confirmed" when evidence shows direct involvement in terrorist
activities. U.S. officials see a "suspected" terrorism links when
intelligence shows a plausible link with terrorist activities.
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