As of December 8, 2022, Guantánamo Bay detention facility a prison offshore of American justice and built for those detained in this countrys never-ending Global War on Terror has been open for nearly 21 years (or, to be precise, 7,627 days). Thirteen years ago, I published a book, The Least Worst Place: Guantanamos First 100 Days. It told the story of the military officers and staff who received the prisons initial detainees at that U.S. naval base on the island of Cuba early in 2002. Like the hundreds of prisoners that followed, they would largely be held without charges or trial for years on end. Ever since then, time and again, Ive envisioned writing the story of its ultimate closure, its last days. Today, eyeing the moves made by the Biden administration, it seems reasonable to review the past record of that prisons seemingly never-ending existence, the failure of three presidents to close it, and what if anything is new when it comes to one of the more striking scenes of ongoing injustice in American history.
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