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Obama reverses Bush, will close Guantanamo

Philip Elliott The Associated Press

Issue date: 1/23/09 Section: News
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President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President, and retired military members, gestures in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2009, where he began overhauling U.S. treatment of terror suspects by signing executive orders and a presidential directive aimed at closing the Guantanamo Bay detention center.
Media Credit: J. Scott Applewhite
President Barack Obama, accompanied by Vice President, and retired military members, gestures in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2009, where he began overhauling U.S. treatment of terror suspects by signing executive orders and a presidential directive aimed at closing the Guantanamo Bay detention center.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama moved quickly Thursday to reshape U.S. national-security policy, ordering the Guantanamo Bay prison camp closed within a year, forbidding the harshest treatment of terror suspects and naming new envoys to the Middle East and Afghanistan-Pakistan.

"We have no time to lose," he said at the State Department as he welcomed newly confirmed Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to help him forge what he called "a new era of American leadership" in the world.

He said his administration is committed to lead. "We can no longer afford drift, and we can no longer afford delay, nor can we cede ground to those who seek destruction," he said.

On his second full day in office, Obama moved to reverse some of the most contentious policies of his predecessor, George W. Bush.By ordering shut the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, closing any remaining CIA secret prisons overseas and banning harsh interrogation practices, Obama said he was signaling that the U.S. would confront global violence without sacrificing "our values and our ideals."

"First, I can say without exception or equivocation that the United States will not torture," he said. "Second, we will close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and determine how to deal with those who have been held there."

The president and Clinton jointly announced the appointment of former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, a veteran troubleshooter who helped broker peace in Northern Ireland, as special envoy to the Middle East. Former U.N. Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, who helped write the peace deal that ended Bosnia's 1992-95 war, was named special envoy for Pakistan and Afghanistan.
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coffee

posted 1/23/09 @ 11:17 AM MST

Obama is smart on so many levels for ordering the closure of Guantanamo. It has been a long time coming -- well done Mr. President.

(4 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

Peace Love

posted 1/28/09 @ 7:35 AM MST

With undergrads as ignorant as this, does anyone now still wonder why college diplomas from CSU are not worth the paper they are written on?

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Lost Cause?

posted 1/28/09 @ 11:23 PM MST

Man, anyone who tries to discredit an individual and a website through innuendo is a lost cause before he clicks on the "Post" button.

[QUOTE id="e43d9855-3e87-41df-bfa4-cec3d2ccf48d"]
Man anyone that reads the Huffington Post is a lost cause before they open their mouth. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

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