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dave wrote:
Brody wrote: dave wrote: Brody wrote: dave wrote: Brody wrote: beyond bizzare.. by this logic, every Jap and German POW should have had a US lawyer and his day in a US court, and presumably release on bond until his court date Most of the people at Guantanamo were turned-in for bounty or otherwise the result of something other than capture on the battlefield source ? The media and public fascination with who is detained at Guantanamo and why has been fueled in large measure by the refusal of the Government, on the grounds of national security, to provide much information about the individuals and the charges against them. The information available to date has been anecdotal and erratic, drawn largely from interviews with the few detainees who have been released or from statements or court filings by their attorneys in the pending habeas corpus proceedings that the Government has not declared “classified.” This Report is the first effort to provide a more detailed picture of who the Guantanamo detainees are, how they ended up there, and the purported bases for their enemy combatant designation. The data in this Report is based entirely upon the United States Government’s own documents.1 This Report provides a window into the Government’s success detaining only those that the President has called “the worst of the worst.” Among the data revealed by this Report: 1. Fifty-five percent (55%) of the detainees are not determined to have committed any hostile acts against the United States or its coalition allies. Only 8% of the detainees were characterized as al Qaeda fighters. Of the remaining 2. detainees, 40% have no definitive connection with al Qaeda at all and 18% are have no definitive affiliation with either al Qaeda or the Taliban. The Government has detained numerous persons based on mere affiliations with a 3. large number of groups that in fact, are not on the Department of Homeland Security terrorist watchlist. Moreover, the nexus between such a detainee and such organizations varies considerably. Eight percent are detained because they are deemed “fighters for;” 30% considered “members of;” a large majority – 60% -- are detained merely because they are “associated with” a group or groups the Government asserts are terrorist organizations. For 2% of the prisoners their nexus to any terrorist group is unidentified. 4. Only 5% of the detainees were captured by United States forces. 86% of the detainees were arrested by either Pakistan or the Northern Alliance and turned over to United States custody. This 86% of the detainees captured by Pakistan or the Northern Alliance were handed over to the United States at a time in which the United States offered large bounties for capture of suspected enemies. * The authors are counsel for two detainees in Guantanamo. Your source is the terrorists lawyers here is my source http://www.defenselink.mil/home/features/gitmo/ http://www.defenselink.mil/news/news....aspx?id=14844 You mean the detainees' lawyers. no.. I mean the terrorists lawyers.. I'll believe them before I'll believe some DOD flack for the Bush Crime Family. Of course you would... and in WWII you and your liberal friends would take the word of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan's propagandists before the word of the Allies. |
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