Guantánamo Bay

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  • Quote of the day

    At Nuremberg, people got off -- we can't have that, can we?
  • Our shameful Guantanamo anniversary

    The appalling fact that innocents have been locked up and abused at the U.S. prison for six long years is not the only reason we must close it now.
  • CIA coverups and American injustice

    How the Bush administration's policies in the war on terror are coming back to haunt us.
  • Joe Lieberman and three Republicans

    The question: Who blocked a Senate vote on habeas corpus rights for detainees at Guantánamo Bay?
  • Did Chertoff lie to Congress about Guantánamo?

    He told the Senate that Pentagon interrogation methods were "plain vanilla," but e-mails reveal his top staff met weekly with FBI officials who said they were torture.
  • The dismal legacy of Bush's top yes man

    Alberto Gonzales' successor will face a heckuva job rectifying the damage the attorney general did to American justice.
  • Jihadis in the eye of the beholder

    The military says the data shows Gitmo prisoners are very bad people.
  • Decorated lawyers

    A number of military lawyers have stepped forward at great risk to their careers to do the right thing.
  • 16 transferred from Guantánamo to Saudi Arabia

    The Pentagon announced the largest release of prisoners from the controversial prison in six months Monday.
  • Supreme Court switches gears on Guantánamo

    The justices say they will hear a challenge they refused just two months ago.
  • Whither Guantánamo?

    The White House is said to be close to a decision to close the facility, but Dick Cheney has other ideas.
  • The CIA's torture teachers

    Psychologists helped the CIA exploit a secret military program to develop brutal interrogation tactics -- likely with the approval of the Bush White House.
  • The CIA's favorite form of torture

    If the Bush administration forces the CIA to drop "tough" interrogation techniques like waterboarding, the agency will probably fall back on a brutal method that leaves no physical marks.
  • The end of Bush's kangaroo courts?

    The dismissal of two cases in Guantánamo Bay dealt a rightful blow to the administration's quasi-justice system for alleged terrorists.
  • It's not just Khadr

    A judge's ruling in the trial of one suspected terrorist detained at Guantánamo Bay may throw a monkey wrench in the works of other trials there.
  • The corporate takeover of U.S. intelligence

    The U.S. government now outsources a vast portion of its spying operations to private firms -- with zero public accountability.
  • The military's interrogation secrets

    A newly declassified Pentagon report details the development of interrogation methods used at Guantánamo Bay and Abu Ghraib.
  • Court rules against Guantánamo detainees

    A federal appeals court ruled today that imprisoned terror suspects do not have the right to challenge their detention in U.S. courts.
  • New detainee rules "too little and too late"

    British attorney general Lord Peter Goldsmith strikes out again at the Bush administration's treatment of detainees, calls for closure of Guantánamo.
  • Why I defend "terrorists"

    An open letter to Cully Stimson, deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, from a lawyer representing five men at Guantánamo.
  • Guantánamo: Five years and counting

    I wish this dark period of detention and torture were over. But rolling back the Military Commissions Act and restablishing the rule of law are monumental tasks.
  • Bush: Move detainees, but deny them rights anyway

    The president's double-edged plan for 14 high-level suspects and other Guantánamo detainees.
  • Psychological warfare

    Angered that their professional organization has adopted a policy condoning psychologists' participation in "war on terror" interrogations, many psychologists are vowing to stage a battle royal at the APA's annual meeting.
  • Checks and balances? Not even within the administration

    Report: Cheney's office crafted military tribunal plan without telling other administration officials.
  • A chicken hawk takes on a "hydra-headed enemy"

    Clarence Thomas says his colleagues aren't familiar with the ways of war. Tell it to John Paul Stevens.
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