January 25, 2010 5:59 PM

One Year Later, Guantanamo Still Open

(CBS/AP)  Last updated 6:30 p.m. ET

As President Barack Obama neared his self-imposed deadline to close the Guantanamo Bay prison, the Justice Department offices of the terrorist detention task force were bustling - not with lawyers but construction workers tearing apart the walls, ripping out any trace of the secretive work, though Mr. Obama's goal is still far off.

The staffers were gone, having completed recommendations on detention policy. This Wednesday, the Guantanamo task force made its final recommendations for all of the 196 remaining detainees awaiting transfer, trial or further detention.

Attorney General Eric Holder has reviewed the bulk of those recommendations and decided that the most feared detainee - the self-declared mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks Khalid Sheikh Mohammed - and four henchmen should face trial in New York.

For all that work, the Obama administration is still struggling to find the political muscle, diplomatic dexterity and cash from Congress to implement those tough, often unpopular decisions about the remaining detainees.

As one of his very first acts as president, Mr. Obama signed an executive order to close the military prison for terror suspects within a year. The one-year mark arrives Friday, and he will miss it by a wide margin, likely a year or more.

He has not offered a new deadline.

A new Justice Department task force concludes 50 of the 196 terror suspects held at Gitmo can't be tried - but are too dangerous to be released, reports CBS News correspondent Bob Orr. That means President Obama may be forced to continue the Bush Administration policy of "indefinite detention."

"It is illegal, it is against over 200 years of United States law that we don't hold people indefinitely without charge," said Christopher Anders of the ACLU.

On Thursday, a protest over the delay led to 42 arrests. Members of the group Witness Against Torture gathered at the steps of the Capitol, where protesters dressed in jumpsuits held banners with such phrasing as "Broken Promises" or "Broken Laws" or "Broken Lives."

Unless he decides to change course, to close Gitmo the president must still find support in Congress to pay for a super-secure prison in Illinois for some of the detainees he wants to continue holding. He must also get additional money, likely hundreds of millions of dollars, to provide extra security to put some suspects, including Mohammed, on trial in federal courts.

Since Mr. Obama took office a year ago, more than 40 detainees have been removed from the naval base in Cuba - sent off to their homelands or to other countries. If the administration cannot quicken that pace, it would take until a hypothetical second Obama term to actually empty the site.

But the recent Christmas bombing attempt of a Detroit-bound airliner only gave further fuel to those urging the president to apply the brakes to the prison closure.

The young Nigerian accused in that attempt allegedly told investigators he was trained by al Qaeda operatives in Yemen.

That detail has huge implications for closing Guantanamo, where about 90 - or nearly half - of the remaining detainees are Yemenis, many with no clear place to go even if senior administration officials decide they can be released.

"It would be foolhardy politically as well as from a national security perspective to send hardened al Qaeda members back to Yemen," said CBS News national security analyst Juan Zarate.

U.S. officials are increasingly worried that the group that claimed responsibility for the bombing attempt, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, is so firmly entrenched in parts of that country that sending detainees back to Yemen could provide fresh troops to the terrorists.

The Obama administration, which sent a group of Yemenis home from Guantanamo just days before the failed airliner bombing, has halted any further transfers to Yemen for the near future.

Len Goodman, a Chicago lawyer who just returned Tuesday from a visit to the prison, said the delays have only embittered his client Shawali Khan, an Afghan detainee who was captured in 2002 and has long claimed he is innocent.

"His level of frustration is greater than I've ever seen it," said Goodman. "Everyone had high hopes for Obama, but sadly I think nothing has changed from Bush to Obama, except the conditions are better inside for the detainees. But all in all, it's just promises made and promises not kept."

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said again Thursday he doesn't know when the facility will close. But he said the president "pledged to close Guantanamo Bay and he'll do that."

The high-security military prison, the administration argues, actually weakens national security because it serves as a recruiting tool for terrorists and undermines the United States' moral authority in combatting such killers. Critics of the closure plan, principally Republicans, say bringing detainees to the U.S. to face trial or shipping them overseas only increases the risk of attacks.

Still others are urging the president to try new tactics - such as creating a new type of court proceeding combining civilian trials and military commissions.

Glenn Sulmasy, a law professor whose book "The National Security Court System," argues for such combination courts, said the president's difficulties in the past year have come mainly from Congress and an alternate approach could overcome that resistance.

"I think the administration took the right step to say they're going to close it," said Sulmasy. "But if you have a hybrid warrior fighting in a hybrid battlefield, it seems logical to produce a hybrid court.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 31 Comments
by Leaderless January 26, 2010 2:04 PM EST
These scumbags are detained in Guantanomo because of their actions.
There's no place in the civilized society for people who thinks that it's perfectly OK to fly airliners full of civilians into buildings full of civilians. That's a a crime against humanity, wonder how the liberal geniouses misses that.
barack obama is so naive and that's further weaken our country. Appeasing to these animals only served their cause, they only listen to their god and the god's voice in their head is telling them to kill us with any means necessary.
Reply to this comment
by brucearnold January 25, 2010 6:34 PM EST
Al Qaeda's Many "Masterminds": Recruited from MENSA? Or Made Up for the Media?

[ ldrlongdistancerider.com/05 ] Even after removing all references to "al quaeda" and "mastermind" that also mention any of these names...

abed abssi ahmed amara aqeel awlaqi badawi badri barot hammoud
khalid kini masri mejjati nashiri noordin osama rachid rami rangzieb
rauf saleh sayyid shahri zafar zakaria zarqawi zawahiri zubaydah

...our top three search engines--Google, Yahoo and Bing--still serve up six-figure results regarding a host of supposedly brainy bad guys, which should be more than enough to keep the American Sheeple scared, silent and submissive...

http://***********/masterminds-google

http://***********/masterminds-yahoo

http://***********/masterminds-bing

Is Al Qaeda recruiting from MENSA, perhaps? Or is this ceaseless succession of Jihadist genuises--which we are told we must corner, collar, cripple or kill---as fake as some of the faces of Osama Bin Laden they try to sell us?

http://***********/ydpq436

http://***********/ydy8hv7

http://***********/y956rl9

Oh well ... there's money to be made ... "the War" must go on. And we can't sell bullets without bad guys to blast. So even if Benazir Bhutto really was assassinated for spilling the beans about Bin Laden being blown away...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1uLdmct8_E

...you can bet your baby's combat boots that America's masters will never let the mental midgets in our media run short of talented terrorists to talk about.
Reply to this comment
by inventagod January 24, 2010 11:42 AM EST
Your CIA/Defense masters were never really closing their play-cage.
And as long as you don't ask the hard questions, you remain media-slaves.
Reply to this comment
by RobAla January 23, 2010 12:42 PM EST
There was never any legitimate reason to close GITMO. The US spent tons of money to make this a secure and comfortable place for terrorist, and now we will spend tons more money to close it and open up other facilities on the mainland. We should leave terrorist there and have military tribunals. What a waste, and there is no reason to endanger Americans on the mainland.
Reply to this comment
by sjc_1 January 23, 2010 6:06 PM EST
To just throw people in dog cages for 8 years with no charges violates what we stand for. It was cowardly of Bush to just try to ignore them and the rest of the world knew it was criminal and inhuman.
by 50BMS13 January 24, 2010 3:19 AM EST
RobAla
You are absolutely correct. The fact that it is still open testifies to this.
by babooph January 23, 2010 9:43 AM EST
The damage idiot Bush did can NEVER be undone-what a mess-a sword through the heart of the old USA....
Reply to this comment
by retm-w January 23, 2010 10:31 AM EST
Oh yes it can, you just need someone who can lead. Not to mention the fact that this administration has a whole crew of advisors and czars that don't have a clue. They all got their positions because of political paybacks, not for what they know.
by sjc_1 January 23, 2010 3:18 PM EST
Bush never set any goals where the measured progress would show that he is not getting things done. At least President Obama is setting goals where you can measure progress. They may be a bit ambitious, but at least he is getting there and you can see the progress.
See all 4 Replies
by JoelB January 22, 2010 10:54 PM EST
Bob Orr and Juan Zarate both missed key points. First of all not all of the prisoners at Guantanamo were hardened terrorist, at least when they arrived there, although the US treatment of the prisoners sure didn't help our cause and ultimate safety one bit. Second, the reason for the counter productive use of Gitmo stems from the Bush Administration that had a real talent for setting policy that would make the US less safe by helping terrorists recruit more nuts. Third, Orr missed the underlying reason for why Obama couldn't close the prison when he wanted to: The Bush administration did such a poor job of keep records organized so that they would be accessible made an efficient, prompt and accurate review impossible. So Bush's bungling lives on past his departure.
Reply to this comment
by armyoftwelve January 22, 2010 10:47 PM EST
This really isn't a surprise. I like B.O. but he never should have made closure a campaign promise because Bush was right to pursue this policy even though it may have some flaws.
Reply to this comment
by jgg000101 January 22, 2010 9:04 PM EST
why is gitmo good enough for hatian refugees but not good enough for terrorists?
Reply to this comment
by slownewsday______ January 22, 2010 10:12 PM EST
What's good enough for actual terrorists?

And how would they equate to refugees?
by jgg000101 January 22, 2010 11:16 PM EST
a dirt nap is good enough for terrorists. And the equation with refugees are the gitmo accomodations.
by stn_sage January 22, 2010 8:57 PM EST
How appropriate! While Obama is in Ohio claiming, ' I won't stop working for you'...meaning the American population...the deadline for shutting down Guantanamo expires and ANOTHER of his campaign promises is broken!

I would dare to point out, BEFORE one 'won't stop working for you (us)', Mr. Obama needs to BEGIN working for us! Which, he has NOT! Instead, the only consistency he has shown in "working for the American public" has been to break his progressive campaign promises and act on corporate America's agenda! So, he needs to BEGIN before he can CONTINUE!

Finally, my commenting is coming to an end on this site. I won't be offering too many more comments. There are too many hostile, mean-spirited, intellectually lazy people who don't want to exchange ideas, views, and opinions, but would rather propagandize, obscure, and lie to promote their own agenda of destruction and control...and they are often helped in their aims!

I hope those who remain to post will try to keep informed...those who easily accept the ten second sound bites that they use to base their entire views upon...and in so doing, keep them from becoming totally oblivious to what's going on around them in the world today! I cannot...I've totally lost my patience with those whose interest is to
make the world a worse place to live! To all, I say, good luck ahead!
Reply to this comment
by ToolMangler1 January 22, 2010 9:43 PM EST
You have a good time posting on Faux News. I am sure they will treat you as you wish as long as you agree with them.
You can get GITMO shut down by agreeing to take the inmates and caring for them yourself. Don't let the door hit you where you can't see on the way out. You might have been fun to cross swords with but you were too "Anti everything Democratic" to have a meaningful viewpoint.
by retm-w January 22, 2010 10:24 PM EST
ToolMangler1

What's the difference you are "Anti Republican everything.
by 50BMS13 January 22, 2010 8:32 PM EST
KEEP GUANTANIMO OPEN! Obama finally has seen why it has its uses. Keep the trash off our shores. Broken promise or not, it is wise to leave it open.
Reply to this comment
by stychokiller January 23, 2010 3:33 AM EST
Rather than continue the Hypocrisy of running an American Gulag, give the remaining prisoners a choice:
a. Remain in Gitmo for the rest of your natural life, or
b. Offer them a sailboat capable of holding all of them and 4 months of supplies, along with enough training and navigation equipment to operate the boat, then send them on their merry way from Gitmo.
Allow them to prove their faith in Allah -- either Allah will protect them until they cross the Atlantic or ..., well sharks have to eat too!
We could even surreptitiously video tape them and turn it into a new reality TV show -- my preliminary working title "Sinbad and the 46 Terrorist's Adventurous Voyage."
Even Al-Jaziryah would fight tooth and nail for a chance to broadcast the show, but they would probably give it a different political spin: "The Righteous Yemeni Freedom-Fighters and their perilous flight from the Great Satanic Clutches of the USA.", and so it goes...
See all 31 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook