Summary: CIA director, Obama in opposition over Gitmo terrorist detentions

Panetta and Obama appear to have different views when discussing incarceration of terrorists. Photo: Daily Mirror
Although President Barack Obama promised during his presidential campaign in 2008 to close down theĀ Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, military detention center that holds inmates captured during the war on terrorism, the Central Intelligence Agency director, Leon Panetta, appears to have missed Obama’s Gitmo message.
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caption id alignalignleft width129 captionPanetta and Obama appear
to have different views when discussing incarceration of
terrorists. Photo Daily Mirror img
srchttpcdn2b.examiner.comsitesdefaultfilesstyleslargehash647cPenetta.jpg
alt width129 height96 captionAlthough President Barack Obama
promised during his presidential campaign in 2008 to close down the
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, military detention center that holds inmates
captured during the war on terrorism, the Central Intelligence
Agency director, Leon Panetta, appears to have missed Obamas Gitmo
message.Testifying before the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee,
Panetta contradicted Obama when he said, We would probably move
them quickly into military jurisdiction at Bagram Air Force base in
Afghanistan for questioning and then, eventually, move them
probably to Guantanamo.If ever a situation arose where Al Qaeda
leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman AlZawahiri were captured, they
would be kept at Guantanamo Bay, Leon Panetta told a panel of
Senators on Thursday.Press Secretary Jay Carney replied to
questions regarding Panettas testimony during his daily press
briefing saying, Im not going to speculate about what, you know,
would happen if we were to capture Osama bin Laden. I can tell you
that this government is very focused on bringing to justice a
perpetrator of the attacks on 911.Carney reiterated the White House
talking point that the President was committed to closing
Guantanamo, despite legislation he signed last month that would
effectively bar the transfer of prisoners to the U.S. mainland.The
committees vicechairman, Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss, agreed
with Panettas statement, saying, Guantanamo would probably be the
best choice for detaining a highvalue suspect like bin Laden or
AlZawahiri.Meanwhile on Friday, after deliberating for about five
hours and thirty minutes, a military commission panel sentenced
Sudanese detainee Noor Uthman Muhammed to 14 years of confinement
at the Guantanamo Bay detention center.However, if Noor fully
cooperates with U.S. intelligence and law enforcement agencies, his
incarceration will less than three years until December 2013,
according to Cheryl Pellerin of the American Forces Press Service
who covered Noors Gitmo trial.The protections afforded to Noor
Uthman in this military commission are unprecedented in the history
of military commissions, Navy Capt. John Murphy, chief prosecutor
for the Office of Military Commissions, told reporters after the
trial.Full cooperation cuts across every aspect of our work
testimony, debriefing, meeting with agents, preparing other cases,
providing intelligence information, and also being fully available
to assist the government in any forum, he said, noting that
potential forums include federal court, military commissions, grand
juries, civil proceedings and others.If Noor does not cooperate,
Murphy added, he would face serving the original 14year sentence.
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