As Amnesty International urged the George W. Bush
administration to "close Guantánamo and disclose the situation in
the USA's shadowy network of detention centers around the globe," a subsidiary
of Halliburton, the oil services group once led by U.S. Vice President Dick
Cheney, won a $30 million contract to help build a new permanent prison for
terror suspects at the U.S. Navy's controversial detention center in Cuba.
The Pentagon said that Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root would
be building a two-story jail with air conditioning and exercise and medical
facilities.
The plan is seen as a sign that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld plans to
keep the jail in operation, despite a growing chorus of criticism and mixed
signals from the White House.
Amnesty International, the human rights advocacy group, drew world attention
to the Guantanamo facility in its recently released annual report, which referred
to the detention facility as "the gulag of our times."
The organization said keeping the prison open was the "wrong decision
and will fuel worldwide concern over the stories of torture and ill-treatment,
religious humiliation, and arbitrary detention that are seeping from the facility."
Amnesty said the Bush administration "plans to memorialize in bricks and
mortar its decision to operate outside of the law," according to Curt Goering,
senior deputy executive director.
The group called for "an independent investigation into U.S. policies
and practices on detention and interrogation, including torture and ill-treatment,
[which] would reassure the world that the U.S. administration has nothing to
hide."
Key lawmakers have said they will press Congress to intervene in detainee policies
despite the administration's claim that running the detention camp is the province
of the executive branch and the military.
"This has become the greatest propaganda tool that exists for recruiting
of terrorists around the world," said Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. of Delaware,
the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He has proposed
that an independent 9/11-type commission investigate Guantánamo Bay and
make recommendations.
Former president Jimmy Carter has also added his voice to those urging the
U.S. to close the camp. "The U.S. continues to suffer terrible embarrassment
and a blow to our reputation
because of reports concerning abuses of
prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo," Carter said.
Last week, at a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee, some Republicans
agreed that Congress has been too passive in allowing detainees to be held for
years without trials or consultations with lawyers.
Some senators objected when an administration official said detainees could
be held at the prison forever. But others said criticisms of the prison camp
might endanger U.S. military morale.
The U.S. Constitution "explicitly confers upon Congress" the power
to define appropriate treatments for captured foreign suspects, said Judiciary
Committee Chairman Arlen Specter, a Republican from Pennsylvania.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, a conservative Republican from South Carolina and former
military judge, suggested that Congress develop "some statutory provisions
defining enemy combatant status and standardizing intelligence-gathering techniques
and detention policies."
Pentagon and Justice Department officials have defended the administration,
saying the approximately 520 detainees are not covered by legal protections
afforded criminal defendants or prisoners of war. Most of the detainees at Guantanamo
were captured in Afghanistan, although some were apprehended in Bosnia, the
United States, Pakistan, and elsewhere.
Pressure has mounted on Congress in recent weeks to address allegations of
detainee abuse at the prison, opened in January 2002 at a Navy base in Cuba
leased by the U.S.
Some detainees have complained about physical abuse and religious humiliation,
though many claims are unverified. Rights groups have assailed the government
for holding some prisoners for more than three years without trial.
President Bush has left open the possibility of closing the facility, but he
and Rumsfeld also have defended treatment of Guantanamo Bay captives and said
the government must have a facility where it can hold terrorism suspects.
Several senators said U.S. detention policies are undermining the nation's
moral authority and inflaming the Islamic world. The situation "is an international
embarrassment to our nation and to our ideals, and it remains a festering threat
to our security," said Sen. Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, the Judiciary
Committee's top Democrat.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, said abuses at Guantanamo Bay
"have shamed the nation in the eyes of the world and made the war on terror
harder to win. Our moral authority went into a free fall."
Several prominent Republicans among them Sen. Mel Martinez of Florida,
a former Bush cabinet member also have publicly argued that the damage
to Washington's image caused by the prison now outweighs any practical benefits
it might have.
And Sen. Chuck Hagel of Nebraska has warned that Guantanamo is "going
to end in disaster if we don't wake up and smell the coffee."
Other observers think closing the base would not go nearly far enough. Beau
Grosscup, professor of international relations at the University of California,
told IPS, "Closing Gitmo is the easy thing to do but has only symbolic
value if the torture is not ended."
And Brian J. Foley, a professor at Florida Coastal School of Law, told IPS,
"At this stage, closing Gitmo would be an empty gesture unless the abhorrent
policies of torture, rendition, and imprisoning people without appropriate evidentiary
hearings to determine guilt or innocence are changed."
"Otherwise it's just a shell game, and these activities will simply be
offshored elsewhere," he said.
Like Guantanamo, Halliburton has become a magnet for critics of the Iraq war.
It is among a small group of U.S. companies awarded no-bid contracts, and its
work has been criticized for massive cost overruns and inflated billing.
Edward Herman, emeritus professor at the Wharton School at the University of
Pennsylvania, told IPS, "The combination of looting and conflict-of-interest
makes the selection of Halliburton for construction of the new Guantanamo prison
something you might expect to see in Doonesbury, not in a real world
supposedly democratic state."
(Inter Press Service)