Two Guantanamo Bay detainees returned to their home country over the weekend, the Department of Defense announced Sunday. Their release to the custody of the Saudi Arabian government, coupled with the release of two Algerian citizens less than two weeks ago, were signs of progress in the effort to close the decade-old military prison.
Saad Muhammad Husayn Qahtani, 35, and Hamood Abdulla Hamood, 48, once suspected to be members of al-Qaeda and at high risk of rejoining the terrorist network, were taken home by Saudi military jet. Both men were recommended for transfer by a U.S. task force in 2009. Neither had been charged with a crime.
“The United States is grateful to the Government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia for its willingness to support ongoing U.S. efforts to close the Guantanamo Bay detention facility,” Paul Lewis, the Special Envoy for closing Guantanamo, said in a statement. Lewis said the transfers occurred with “appropriate security assurances” between the Saudi Arabia and US and were “consistent with our humane treatment policy.”
Qahtani and Hamood are among dozens of Guantanamo detainees who have been transferred to Saudi Arabia to complete a rehabilitation program and then be released.
“The practice of the Saudis sending a jet to pick up their own citizens and putting them through the rehabilitation program is something that’s been going on for many years and long predates this administration,” Patricia Bronte, a lawyer for Qahtani, told msnbc.
Lewis, the special envoy appointed in October to breathe new life into President Obama’s 2008 campaign promise to close the detention facility, said that the release of the two men to Saudi Arabia represented “real progress” in the administration’s efforts to transfer detainees “despite the burdensome legislative restrictions that have impeded our efforts.”
One hundred and sixty detainees remain at the military installation built on Cuba’s southeastern tip in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. It represents a fraction of the prison’s population at its peak, when it held four times as many people nearly a decade ago. More than half of the current detainees have been approved for release. The administration maintains that it’s had difficulty finding countries willing to resettle the individuals, and the latest Defense Authorization Act – despite being heralded as a step closer to closing Gitmo – includes a Republican-bartered provision banning detainees from trial, detainment, emergency medical treatment, or release in the U.S. through the end of 2014.
Yet the compromise loosens restrictions on the transfer of detainees to other countries, allowing Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel more leeway to negotiate resettlement with other countries so as long as a review board finds that the detainee does not present a threat to the U.S., while taking into account the influence of terrorist groups in that nation.
The administration repatriated two Algerian citizens less than two weeks ago, marking the first transfer from the base in 21 months (when 11 ethnic Uighurs were sent to El Salvador rather than their native China, where they feared retribution). Lawyers for the Algerian men maintained that their clients also feared for their safety in their home country, which they fled two decades ago amid civil war.
Bronte told msnbc that her client willingly went to Saudi Arabia, where he has siblings.
“My client doesn’t like to complain to me about things that are happening to him,” Bronte said, but noted that he took part in the massive hunger strike that rocked the military installation this year. She did not know whether he was among the dozen or so men who were force-fed.









