Reach Out to Cuba to Heal Guantánamo's Wounds
Marcus Raskin & Joshua Frens-String : Cuba
As Obama seeks to remake the US-Cuba relationship, why not form a partnership to transform the prison into a health research center?
Marcus Raskin & Joshua Frens-String : Cuba
As Obama seeks to remake the US-Cuba relationship, why not form a partnership to transform the prison into a health research center?

Jeanne Theoharis : Jails & Prisons
Terror suspects are held in US prisons on dubious evidence under inhumane conditions.

David Cole : Law & Justice
Obama vowed to reverse Bush's excesses. But his resistance to judicial oversight and constitutional restraint may render his promises unenforceable.
Aziz Huq : Civil Rights & Liberties
Yet again the courts have ignored the Constitution and legal precedent, leaving seventeen innocent Guantánamo detainees in legal limbo.
GRIT TV : Law & Justice
Vince Warren of the Center for Constitutional Rights, Lieutenant Col. David Vandeveld, a former prosecutor at Gitmo and others discuss whether our criminal courts can handle terror suspects.
Countdown : Dick Cheney
The Nation's Washington editor Chris Hayes points out the missing pieces in Dick Cheney's defense of torture at Guantánamo Bay.
The Rachel Maddow Show : Barack Obama Administration
Glenn Greenwald discusses the implications of lame duck Bush actions on Barack Obama's plan to close Gitmo.
Michael Ratner & Jules Lobel : Human Rights
Shutting down Guantánamo is long overdue. We shouldn't recreate it by another name.
The Supreme Court's ruling in Boumediene v. Bush affirmed prisoners' right to habeas corpus, but the government is stalling; and such delays may keep detainees imprisoned indefinitely.
Salim Hamdam's conviction and short sentence does nothing to repair the damage the Bush Administration has done.
New evidence sheds light on the inappropriate and corrupting influence of Brig. General Thomas Hartmann on the military commissions process.
By a single vote, the Supreme Court stood up to an Administration that has declared war on the rule of law.
Jonathan Hafetz : Supreme Court
The Supreme Court delivers a dramatic blow to the President's lawless detention policies, overturns an effort by the previous Congress to eliminate the right of habeas corpus and sounds the death knell for Guantánamo Bay prison.
The muted response to revelations of torture raises the question of whether Americans are truly savages or simply tone-deaf on matters of morality.
Those confessions elicited from Gitmo detainees are proving legally worthless--and an enduring indictment of the moral bankruptcy of George W. Bush.
America's legal and moral responsibility to innocent detainees is not more imprisonment, but a new life in the United States.
New revelations of political interference in the prosecution of Gitmo prisoners shows Team Bush scrambling to keep one step ahead of history--and of criminal charges.
