WASHINGTON — The Obama administration may restart the Bush-era military trial system for suspected terrorists as it struggles to determine the fate of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay and fulfill a pledge to close the prison by January.
The move would further delay terrorism trials and, coupled with comments by military and legal officials, amounts to a public admission by President Barack Obama’s team that delivering on that promise is easier said than done.
Almost immediately after taking office, Obama suspended the tribunal system and ordered a review of the cases against the 241 men being held at the Navy prison in Cuba. That review was supposed to end May 20. But two officials said Saturday on condition of anonymity that the administration wants an extension.
The delay means that legal action on the detainees’ cases would continue to be frozen.
One official said the Obama administration planned to use the extra time to ask Congress to tweak the existing military tribunals system that was created for the detainees. Critics of former President George W. Bush have said the system violated U.S. law because it limits the detainees’ legal rights.
Now, faced with looming deadlines and few answers for where to transfer the detainees, the Obama administration may keep the tribunal system — with a few changes.
Among the planned changes to the measure, both officials said, would be limits on the evidence used against the detainees.
by the associated press
The move would further delay terrorism trials and, coupled with comments by military and legal officials, amounts to a public admission by President Barack Obama’s team that delivering on that promise is easier said than done.
Almost immediately after taking office, Obama suspended the tribunal system and ordered a review of the cases against the 241 men being held at the Navy prison in Cuba. That review was supposed to end May 20. But two officials said Saturday on condition of anonymity that the administration wants an extension.
The delay means that legal action on the detainees’ cases would continue to be frozen.
One official said the Obama administration planned to use the extra time to ask Congress to tweak the existing military tribunals system that was created for the detainees. Critics of former President George W. Bush have said the system violated U.S. law because it limits the detainees’ legal rights.
Now, faced with looming deadlines and few answers for where to transfer the detainees, the Obama administration may keep the tribunal system — with a few changes.
Among the planned changes to the measure, both officials said, would be limits on the evidence used against the detainees.
by the associated press
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