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Guantanamo Bay Prisoners


Guantanamo Bay Prisoners
This paper discusses the issue of the rights of Guantanamo Bay prisoners versus national security and the effect on international relationships.
2,090 words (approx. 8.4 pages) | 15 sources | MLA | 2006 United States


Paper Summary:

This paper explains that over 500 detainees from countries such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan have been brought to the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba by the U.S. government under the assumption that they are dangerous terrorists and a threat to the United States. The author points out that (1) they were brought to Cuba because it is not U.S. soil thus the military can deny them the rights guaranteed under the United States Constitution, such as due process, independent counsel and a speedy trial, and (2) they do not even have rights under the Geneva Convention since the U.S. has not declared them prisoners of war, instead labeling them "enemy combatants". The paper contends that the fallout from this situation at Guantanamo Bay has been that the world now sees the U.S. as a hypocrite following constitutional rights only when it is in the country's best interests.

Table of Contents
Constitutional Amendments of the United States of America
Introduction
Justice for All
Convenience of the "Enemy Combatants" Label
What's Going on at Guantanamo Bay?
The Abused as Abusers
International Quagmire
Crusade for National Security
The End is Near?

From the Paper:

"There are even conflicting reports from the same agency. The Red Cross released a report in 2002 stating that there was no torture going on at Guantanamo and then later did an about-face and condemned the treatment of those same prisoners (Cole). Some prisoners who were released talked about physical and mental torture, being isolated for months at a time, being led around with a dog collar, being attacked by dogs, having to wear women's clothing and of being subjected to the desecration of the Quran in front of them (having pages ripped out and flushed down the toilet). Many of these "tortures" have been confirmed by the US government, namely the FBI (Ardiente), with a shrug and grin, as if they are a practice so common (or relatively innocuous compared to what else they might do) that they are confused as to why anyone would be upset by them."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Guantanamo Bay Prisoners (2012, January 16). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Argumentative-Essay-Guantanamo-Bay-Prisoners/67757

MLA Citation:

"Guantanamo Bay Prisoners" 16 January 2012. Web. 13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Argumentative-Essay-Guantanamo-Bay-Prisoners/67757>




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Published by:

donnabert US
Publisher Since:
Jun 08, 2006
Associate's degree with emphasis in philosophy, BA in Political Economics, JD from Seattle University School of Law.
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