Ever since President Obama signed an executive order, on his second day in office, to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Republicans have blocked the effort with a steady stream of obstacles, including cutting funding for prisoner transfers to the U.S. and calling for impossible guarantees that released detainees would never pose a threat to America. As the White House’s political will to overcome these hurdles waned, Obama’s supporters had reason to wonder if he would make good on his promise.
But when Obama exchanged five Taliban prisoners being held at Guantanamo for U.S. soldier Bowe Bergdahl, he demonstrated that despite the best efforts by Republicans to keep scores of men – most of them never charged with any crime – detained indefinitely, he has the power to both move prisoners and close the prison he once called a “stain on America.” And he stands by his decision.
At a press conference in Brussels Thursday with British Prime Minister David Cameron, Obama said he would “make absolutely no apologies” for the swap, and that “this basic principle that we don’t leave anybody behind and this basic recognition that often means prisoner exchanges with enemies is not unique to my administration, it dates back to the beginning of our republic.”
Since 2010, Congress has included provisions in the annual National Defense Authorization Act that have made it more difficult for Obama to complete detainee transfers. Those restrictions have been relaxed over the years, but they have still left 149 men under heavy guard and subject to brutal treatment, thousands of miles from their homes.
Even some Republicans who decried the prisoner swap that ended Bergdahl’s five years in captivity have supported closing Guantanamo. Last July, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., one of the most vocal critics of the deal, called for the prison to close after a visit there with Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. “We continue to believe that it is in our national interest to end detention at Guantanamo, with a safe and orderly transition of the detainees to other locations. We intend to work, with a plan by Congress and the Administration together, to take the steps necessary to make that happen,” they said in a statement.
But that was last year. This year, with periodic review boards clearing detainees for transfer, more than half of the men who sit in Guantanamo still wait, and innocent men are again called hardened criminals. Once the review boards finish going through all the cases, more than 100 could be eligible for release or transfer. Congressional leaders have complained that they were not notified in advance of the prisoner trade, as the law says, but since taking office, Obama has kept Congress informed of efforts to relocate prisoners and eventually close the prison.
“These circumstances were unique in terms of why the notice was not complied with,” Pardiss Kebriaei, senior attorney at Center for Constitutional Rights who represents several Guantanamo detainees, told msnbc. Fears that the President will cut Congress out of the loop are unfounded based on the administration’s earlier prisoner transfers. “Every other transfer by this administration has complied with the security and notice requirements.”
“He’s demonstrated that he has the ability to move prisoners from Guantanamo when he’s willing to invest the political capital to make it happen,” former Guantanamo chief prosecutor Col. Morris Davis said in an interview. If Obama determined he had the power to make that deal, there’s no reason he can’t act faster on other transfers. “Now that he’s done it [and gone around Congress], he shoots in the foot the argument that congress has made it impossible” to release detainees and close the prison.
Whether he works within the existing legal framework or invites the wrath of congressional Republicans by sending detainees home unilaterally, there are ways to deal with the different groups that make up the prison’s population.
Most of the men cleared for release or transfer are from Yemen, and the administration banned transfers for years over political concerns. While the U.S. wants some of these men to be released under restrictions similar to those placed on the Taliban fighters released to Qatar, others could be settled in third countries.









