In US White House reviewing Pentagon plan to close Guantanamo prison
Obama told the Pentagon to reduce the cost in its latest draft, which is now at the White House.
The White House has received an updated proposal from the Pentagon to close the Guantanamo prison
for foreign terrorism suspects, and is in the "final stages" of
reviewing it before releasing it to Congress, an administration official
said on Friday.
The administration has been trying for years to make good on a pledge Obama made
at the beginning of his presidency in 2009 to close down the military
prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, but has faced stiff political
opposition.
Its latest plan, which
includes a recommendation that prisoners who cannot be prosecuted or
transferred to other countries be sent to a U.S.-based prison, has been
delayed for several months.
Obama told the Pentagon to reduce the cost in its latest draft, which is now at the White House.
"The president's national security team is in the final stages of reviewing the proposal recently submitted by the Pentagon," said the senior administration official.
The White House declined to say when the plan would be released. Lawmakers, especially Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona, have been calling for the plan for some time.
The
prison was opened in 2002 by Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, to
house foreign terrorism suspects but quickly drew international
criticism from human rights activists and many foreign governments.
There are 93 prisoners still housed there.
Republicans
and some Democrats in Congress largely oppose proposals to move any of
the prisoners to U.S. soil, an option currently prohibited by law.
U.S.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter said on Thursday he had proposed to Obama
bringing some detainees to a secure location in the United States,
adding Congress had indicated a willingness to consider such a proposal.
Senator Kelly Ayotte, an ally of McCain's, said the administration's plan should involve keeping the prison open.
"If
the Obama administration were to move Guantanamo detainees to the
United States, that would ignore the will of the majority of Americans,
make all of our citizens less safe, and represent a blatant and serious
violation of the plain language of the law," she said in a statement.
The
plan was not filled with surprises and would be presented to Congress
and the public when it was ready, White House spokesman Josh Earnest
told reporters. Echoing an argument the administration has made
frequently, he said it cost $4 million a year per prisoner to keep the
prison open.
The White House believes closing it would reduce costs and take away a recruiting tool for militant Islamist groups overseas.
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