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Obama signs defense bill, but denounces the Guantanamo prison it pays for

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The administration has estimated the cost of keeping a prisoner captive at Guantanamo at more than $800,000 per year. A Government Accountability Office study on the possibility of moving captives to U.S. soil estimated the cost of one year’s federal confinement in a maximum security lockup at $34,627.55 a year. It did not predict costs if the military were responsible for Guantanamo captives moved to U.S. facilities.

The last two detainees to leave Guantanamo were a Yemeni man who the military says committed suicide by overdose in a maximum-security lockup, and convicted war criminal Omar Khadr who went to a prison in his native Canada under a negotiated plea deal.

Early in Obama’s presidency, diplomats negotiated transfer agreements to third countries for resettlement (Germany, Bermuda, El Salvador and Palau are some examples). But the diplomatic talks ground to a halt because of Congress’ restrictions on transfers.

The Justice Department has notified the federal court that it has cleared 55 captives for release, many of them Yemenis and Syrians who can’t be safely repatriated to their homelands. They have nowhere to go, so they remain in detention because of the restrictions. 

Obama’s signing statement casts the restrictions as an encroachment on executive powers. 

By forbidding federal trials for Guantanamo captives, he said, the law he signed “substitutes the Congress’ blanket political determination for careful and fact-based determinations, made by counterterrorism and law enforcement professionals, of when and where to prosecute Guantanamo detainees.

“Removing that tool from the executive branch undermines our national security. Moreover, this provision would, under certain circumstances, violate constitutional separation of powers principles.”

And echoing past statements, Obama also left open the possibility that administration attorneys might interpret the restrictions as overreaching and inapplicable.

“In the event that these statutory restrictions operate in a manner that violates constitutional separation of powers principles, my administration will implement them in a manner that avoids the constitutional conflict,” he said.

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