The first sign that Obama wouldn’t be able to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay came when he couldn’t even resettle two innocent detainees in the United States.
It was the 17 Uighur detainees at Gitmo who immediately put the lie to former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s declaration, in 2002, that the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay only held “the worst of the worst.” The last three Uighur detainees held at Guantanamo were transferred to Slovakia, the Pentagon announced Tuesday, ending a decade-long saga in which the United States held a group of men it knew almost from the beginning to be innocent. The transfer leaves 155 detainees at Gitmo, down from nearly 250 when Obama took office and 166 at the beginning of 2013.
According to national security journalist Daniel Klaidman’s book Kill or Capture, the U.S. government knew by 2003 that the Uighurs, an ethnic Muslim minority from China, were not terrorists. But the U.S. wouldn’t send them back to China, where Uighurs had faced torture and repression, but neither would they release them into the United States.
Congressional resistance to an Obama administration plan to resettle two Uighur detainees in the United States first foreshadowed the massive political resistance to closing Gitmo and convinced the administration itself not to waste precious political capital on the project, according to Klaidman. Republicans, stung by Obama’s attack on the Bush era as one of national security lawlessness, saw an opportunity to keep Gitmo open and saddle Obama with his predecessor’s legacy. It was not yet clear just how much of Bush-era policy on national security the candidate of hope and change would ultimately embrace.
The original plan, Klaidman reported, was that two Uighur detainees would be resettled in the U.S. as a good-faith gesture to persuade other nations to take detainees in an effort to empty the prison. When the recently retired Virginia Republican Rep. Frank Wolf got wind of the plan in May 2009, he took to the floor of the House to accuse the Obama administration of wanting to let terrorists run free in American cities.
“Let’s be clear: these terrorists would not be held in prisons but released into neighborhoods,” Wolf said. “They should not be released at all into the United States. Do members realize who these people are? There have been published reports that the Uighurs were members of the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Movement, a designated terrorist organization affiliated with Al Qaeda.” Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said the Uighurs “instructed by the same terrorists responsible for killing 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001.” He then urged Obama to send them back to China. One of the prisoners responded to Gingrich through their attorney: “Why does he hate us so much?”









