THINK PROGRESS
The Progress Report
HUMAN RIGHTS
Getting Out Of Guantanamo
Since the Supreme Court delivered a "stinging
rebuke of the Bush
administration's flawed detention policies" last month by
ruling that prisoners at Guantanamo Bay are entitled
to habeas corpus rights, the
White House has been scrambling to
respond. Last week, ABC News reported that "[h]igh-level
discussions among top advisers
have escalated," and officials may
ask Congress to "spell
out procedures for scores of
suspected terrorists whom the
government does not plan to bring to trial." Roughly 270 detainees
remain at Guantanamo, and a total of just 20 men "have been charged as
part of a military
commission system set up by
Congress in 2006, including five
accused of participating in the conspiracy that led to the Sept. 11
attacks." In the past, senior administration officials -- including Defense
Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice --
have reportedly pushed for the closure
of
the detention facility but been blocked
by Vice President Cheney. This
time may not be any different.
President Bush insisted to Fox News on Thursday, "We're analyzing the
decision and how to move forward, and there's no
decision
that is imminent on Guantanamo."
The issue remains as urgent as
ever. Last month, former Navy general counsel Alberto Mora told the
Senate Armed Services Committee, "[T]here are serving U.S. flag-rank
officers who maintain that the first
and second identifiable causes
of U.S. combat deaths in Iraq --
as
judged by their effectiveness in recruiting insurgent fighters into
combat -- are, respectively the symbols of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo."
BLOCKED
BY CHENEY: The desire
to close Guantanamo Bay has been on the minds of administration
officials for years. "I'd
like to close Guantanamo," Bush
said in 2006. When he first took
office that same year, Gates urged the President to shut
down the detention facility "as quickly as possible"
because it had
become "so tainted abroad that legal proceedings...would be viewed as
illegitimate." Yet voices for closure have been blocked by opponents
such as Cheney and former attorney general Alberto
Gonzales. In September 2007,
Gates told Congress that his push to
close the facility was running into "obstacles"
from administration lawyers. A few months later, a senior
administration official told the Financial Times that the effort "lost
the intensity needed to have a
realistic chance of closing the
prison during the Bush administration." Although Gonzales is gone,
Cheney is still around, leaving open the possibility that he will once
again block any progress. Additionally, Gonzales has been replaced by
Michael Mukasey, who told the Senate during his confirmation hearing, "I
can't
simply say we have to close Guantanamo."
A
PLAN FOR CLOSURE: According
to the Washington Post, administration officials are considering a
proposal where "about
80 detainees would remain at the
facility in Cuba to be tried by
military commissions, and about 65 others would be turned over to their
native countries." The issue still left to be resolved is "what to do
with about 120 remaining prisoners, who are viewed by the
administration as too dangerous to release but who are unlikely to be
brought before military commissions because of a lack of evidence." The
Center for American Progress's Ken Gude has put forth a
five-phase plan to close Guantanamo over an 18-month period.
The
plan includes bringing "a small number of detainees into the United
States to stand trial in regular federal or military courts," rather
than under the flawed Military Commissions. It would create "a
resettlement and rehabilitation program in partnership with allied
countries and international organizations to find homes for detainees
that can't be returned to their home countries" and transfer the
remaining detainees to stand trial in the United States. Those
detainees would be housed at either the U.S. Penitentiary
Administrative Maximum Facility in Florence, CO, or at the U.S.
Military Detention Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth, KS. Detainees captured
in Afghanistan who are not candidates for trial but are too dangerous
to be released would be transferred back to Afghanistan and held in a
NATO-controlled detention program.
'MISLEADING
AND INACCURATE' EXCUSES:
Shortly after the release of the American Progress report, Sen. Sam
Brownback (R-KS) responded by describing the analysis as "misleading
and inaccurate," asserting that
"Fort Leavenworth has neither
the space nor the security arrangements to handle detainees from
Guantanamo Bay." But as Gude explains, Brownback's claim seems to be
nothing more than an excuse to "prevent any Guantanamo detainees ending
up in his home state of Kansas."
Leavenworth is the only maximum
security facility in the entire military prison system and has a
state-of-the-art detention center with a special housing unit for
maximum security prisoners. In fact, Brownback's close ally, Sen. John
McCain (R-AZ), has gone even further than Gude, proposing to move all
detainees to Leavenworth. In 2007, McCain promised that as president,
he would "immediately close Guantanamo Bay, move
all the prisoners to Fort Leavenworth
and truly expedite the
judicial proceedings in their cases."
Under the Radar
IRAQ
-- MALIKI PUSHES FOR SHORT-TERM
SECURITY PACT WITH WITHDRAWAL TIMELINE: Over
the weekend, "large
crowds of Shiites" in Iraq
gathered to protest the long-term security agreement that
the U.S. and Iraq governments are currently debating, shouting, "No,
no to colonization! Out, out you
occupier!" With widespread
opposition to the original long-term security pact -- which would grant
nearly
60 permanent military bases to
American troops -- Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki signaled today that he's discussing "a
short-term memorandum of understanding" which
"would keep U.S. troops in Iraq after the U.N.
mandate expires at the end of the year." Notably, Maliki's proposal
"includes a formula for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq."
Allies of the Bush administration had previously dismissed the Iraqis'
fierce opposition to the security pact. Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT)
claimed the anger "is
a
sign of our success in Iraq,
which is that Iraq now has a sovereign, independent, self-government."
Bush agreed, claiming the opposition was proof of Iraq's "vibrant
democracy," and White House
Press Secretary Dana Perino insisted it was a "very
positive thing" that Iraqis were
"using politics and the press as a
way to get their message out."
MEDIA -- NEW YORK TIMES CALLS
OUT FOX NEWS'S 'PROPAGANDA'
OF DOCTORING
PHOTOS: On June 28, New
York Times reporter Jacques Steinberg
wrote that Fox News "has seen its once formidable advantage
over CNN erode...as both CNN and
MSNBC have added viewers at far
more
dramatic rates," even though Fox remains number one in the ratings. In
response, Fox News anchors Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade aired a
report
calling Steinberg and his editor, Steven Redicliffe, "attack
dogs"
and called the article was a "hit piece." Fox accompanied the
report with digitally
altered photos of Steinberg and
Redicliffe, in which "the
journalists'
teeth
had been yellowed, their facial features exaggerated, and
portions
of Reddicliffe's hair moved further back on his head," Media Matters
noted. Times Culture
Editor Sam Sifton called the photos "disgusting."
He added that the paper did not plan to respond to Fox because "it
is fighting with a pig. Everyone
gets dirty and the pig likes it."
But in the Times today, media critic David Carr takes Fox to
task
for its "scorched earth" reaction to criticism. In particular, Carr
writes that the anti-Semitic overtones to the
distortion of
Steinberg's photo recall "a technique familiar to students of
vintage
German propaganda" as "his ears were pulled out, his teeth splayed
apart, his forehead lowered and his nose was widened." Fox News has yet
to
apologize for the altered
photos, though a spokesperson told Carr
that "altering photos for humorous effect is a
common practice on cable news
stations."
JUSTICE
-- REJECTED JUSTICE DEPARTMENT JOB APPLICANT
SUES OVER HIRING IMPROPRIETIES:
Sean Gerlich, a young lawyer who
now works for a firm in Brussels, Belgium, has filed
a class-action lawsuit against
the Department of Justice alleging
that he was rejected by the DOJ's honors program because of an illegal
screening process that filtered out applicants who appeared to be
liberal. Gerlich's lawyers are charging
that the department politicized the selection process, mishandled the
applications, and failed to maintain the records, in violation of
the Privacy Act, the Civil Service Reform Act and the Federal Records
Act. Despite his work the previous summer for a DOJ department chief
and his noteworthy academic credentials, Gerlich believes he was
rejected because of his volunteer work for Amnesty International and
for a Democratic congressional candidate. Revelations about
the
highly politicized hiring process came about when a report
released by the DOJ inspector general that found that starting in 2002
and continuing for five years, honors program screening committees "improperly
deselected candidates for
interviews based on political and
ideological affiliations." "It appears the politicization at Justice
was so pervasive that even interns had to pass a partisan litmus test,"
House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-MI) said last week.
Think Fast
"A suicide bomber has rammed a car full of explosives into the gates of the Indian embassy in the Afghan capital, killing 41 people and injuring 141."
Ohio election officials are concerned that the state's high foreclosure rates will create problems for voters in November, potentially forcing voters with outdated addresses to face pre-election challenges, take trips to multiple polling places, or cast provisional ballots that might not be counted. Ohio ranks ninth among the 50 states for foreclosures, with one in 410 homes filing for foreclosure.
USA Today writes that security gains in Iraq "may lead to pullouts." After the withdrawal of nearly 25 percent of U.S. combat brigades, security in Iraq continues to improve, "increasing the prospects of further cuts in American forces."
Upon returning to work this week, Senate conservatives will be "under pressure after a barrage of radio and television advertisements blamed them for a 10.6 percent cut in payments to doctors who care for millions of older Americans." The ads, by the American Medical Association, urge the senators to reverse themselves and help pass the Medicare legislation needed to fend off the cut.
President Bush on Sunday defended his decision to attend the opening ceremony of the Olympics in China, despite concerns over the country's human rights record. "I guess I don't need the Olympics to express my concerns. I've been doing so," he said.
Five years ago yesterday, former ambassador Joseph Wilson published an op-ed in the New York Times asserting that the Bush administration manipulated intelligence about Saddam Hussein's weapons programs. The next day, the administration "admitted that accusations included in the president’s 2003 State of the Union address had turned out to be inaccurate."
And finally: President Bush "kept up his tradition of informal relations" with world leaders by casually summoning Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, "a rather stiff and shy figure." Footage of a G8 lunch "showed Bush talking to Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua and saying 'Yo Harper! The president of Nigeria,'" Reuters notes. At a 2006 summit, "Bush landed ally Tony Blair in some trouble by calling out 'Yo Blair!'"
Good News
Toyota will use reportedly use solar panels in its next-generation Prius hybrid cars to be sold starting 2009.
State Watch
RHODE
ISLAND:
"Under spending cuts that took effect this month to close the state's
$384 million budget gap, grants to senior centers are being cut in half
to $1.1 million."
NEW
JERSEY: The "state has an
estimated 1.3 million people without
health insurance who cannot pay a doctor or a hospital bill."
IMMIGRATION:
Several states are making it harder for undocumented immigrants to
attend college "by denying in-state tuition benefits or banning
undocumented students."
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: Flashback: Ten years
ago, Osama bin Laden demanded that a
barrel of oil should cost $144.
WONK
ROOM: Video: Virginia lets
energy company Dominion Resources tear down state for coal profits.
OPEN
LEFT:
Conservative bloggers use non-story to claim that "Bush was right"
about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
ABU
AARDVARK: U.S. military efforts
to partner with the Iraqi media are
not run by the Public Affairs office.
Daily Grill
"They [terrorists]were intending to besiege Baghdad and control it. ...
But thanks
to the will of the tribes, security forces, army and all Iraqis, we
defeated them."
-- Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, 7/5/08
VERSUS
"A wave of attacks in Baghdad and areas north of the capital Sunday
shattered a relative lull in violence by killing 16 people and injuring
15."
-- AP, 7/7/08
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