detainees

Don’t close Gitmo without a plan: Ron Griffin, Gold Star dad

Army Specialist Kyle Griffin was killed in Iraq on May 30, 2003. On Thursday, his father Ron Griffin wrote of his thoughts on the continued detention of the detainees at Guantanamo and their disposition:

As an American citizen, a veteran and the father of a fallen soldier, I cannot agree with closing the doors on Guantánamo and allowing the detainees to become criminal defendants instead of enemy combatants. Announcing the closure of this center, without a plan for what to do with the detainees, just doesn’t make sense. If brought to the United States to be tried as common criminals, these men will be afforded all the rights that law-abiding citizens have in this country. These are rights that I fought for and that my son died defending.

All Gold Star families — those families who’ve lost a loved one serving in the armed forces — deserve to know their children did not die only to have the people they were fighting given the same freedoms they were trying to take away from Americans.

Although it causes me great concern to think of these detainees being housed in the United States, it frightens me more that they will go to countries where their incarceration cannot be guaranteed. Several of the detainees who had been released from Guantánamo Bay are now missing or have rejoined the fight against the United States.

From suicide bombers in Iraq to the current deputy leader of al-Qaeda’s Yemeni branch, the list of confirmed terrorist activities by former Guantánamo detainees seems to grow every day. We cannot quietly stand by and allow those who killed our brave men and women in uniform to be returned to the battlefield, where they will undoubtedly continue their campaign against American soldiers and innocent civilians.

Andrew C. McCarthy: ‘If you didn’t have Gitmo, you’d have to invent it’

As President Barack Obama has stated, the detention camp at U.S. Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba is a professionally operated facility. As he acknowledges, many of those detained there still pose a threat. Our troops and innocent civilians were and are endangered by the 61 previously released who went back to a life of terrorism; a number have been killed or were recaptured.

This morning, Gold Star family members, 9/11 family members, and former members of our military will join Move America Forward at the National Press Club to ask that the decision to close Gitmo be reversed.

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Updated, 1:20 PM Eastern: Video from this morning’s press conference added. Due to technical problems from the source, it begins after Melanie Morgan’s introduction and during questions and answers with Senator James Inhofe. He was followed by brief comments by and a Q & A with Gold Star mother Debbie Lee, 9/11 family members Lorraine Arias-Beliveau, Geraldine Davey, Hamilton Peterson, and Debra Burlingame:

Live Video streaming by Ustream

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Original posted continued:

We ask that you view Move America Forward’s new television advertisement here (or by going to the top right of this site), sign the petition to Keep Gitmo Open, and become better informed about Guantanamo. The terrorists at Gitmo are not common criminals just doing time for their crimes; nearly all remain our sworn enemies, wage a daily war against our heroic troops guarding them, and would return to terrorism if released.

Bringing detainees to within our borders and providing the enemy our Constitutional rights of due process would pose real dangers to our national security and significant legal challenges to the Department of Justice.

We must keep Gitmo open.

Andrew C. McCarthy is the legal-affairs editor at National Review and the author of the national bestseller ‘Willful Blindness: A Memoir of the Jihad’ (Encounter Books 2008).. He explained this morning why keeping Gitmo open and detainees out of our federal courts is imperative: