SPECIAL PREVIEW. The Gitmo Myth and the Torture Canard »
Posted By galletta6121 7 months, 1 week ago in NewsOn January 21, 2009, President Barack Obama issued his first executive order: He was closing the detention center at the Guantá namo Bay Naval Base in Cuba and calling a halt to the military commissions created in late 2001 to try terrorist suspects detained there. Like the startling opening chord of a Beethoven symphony, Obama’ s action was intended to herald a new tone in America’ s “ war on terror” and a restoration of America’ s moral standing. The response was electric. The facility at Guantá namo (Gitmo for short) had become “ America’ s most notorious prison,” as Fox News put it. In the minds of many, it was the American equivalent of the Bastille or the KGB’ s Lubyanka prison: a dungeon used to isolate, intimidate, and torture generally hapless inmates, many of whom were innocent of any crime against the United States. Dana Priest of the Washington Post took to the paper’ s front page to proclaim joyously that “ with the stroke of his pen,” Obama had “ effectively declared an end to the ‘ war on terror,’ as President George W. Bush had defined it.” Now Obama could begin the process of rehabilitating America’ s image around the world, the very image Gitmo had done so much to blacken.
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