Center for American Progress Center for American Progress
Issues National Security National Security Strategy

Stop this Fiasco

The Bush administration's latest sideshow at Guantánamo, complete with the unconscionable use of the 9/11 families as props, has completely blown up in its face after Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and the other four defendants asked the judge to accept new guilty pleas Monday. At first glance that might seem a positive development - but only the Bush administration could construct a trial system so flawed that an offer to confess to the most heinous crimes in a generation is an obstacle to justice.

Defence secretary Robert Gates must step in now and end this charade before any more damage is done and the incoming Obama administration is saddled with the hopelessly tainted military commissions.

Read more here.

This article was originally published in The Guardian Online.

To speak with our experts on this topic, please contact:

Print: Suzi Emmerling (foreign policy and security, energy, education, immigration)
202.481.8224 or semmerling@americanprogress.org

Print: Jason Rahlan (health care, economy, civil rights, poverty)
202.481.8132 or jrahlan@americanprogress.org

Radio: John Neurohr
202.481.8182 or jneurohr@americanprogress.org

TV: Andrea Purse
202.741.6250 or apurse@americanprogress.org

Web: Erin Lindsay
202.741.6397 or elindsay@americanprogress.org

Subscribe to RSS Feeds

RSS IconSite-Wide and Issue-Specific RSS Feeds

Related Articles

Does Europe Matter to the Obama Administration?, by Brian Katulis

Quadrennial Defense Review Fails to Match Resources to Priorities, by Lawrence J. Korb, Sean Duggan, Laura Conley

Slimming Down the Defense Budget, by Lawrence J. Korb, Laura Conley, Sean Duggan

Video: State of the Union 2010

Keeping National Security on the Agenda, by Brian Katulis

Also by Ken Gude

Criminal Courts Are Tougher on Terrorists than Military Detention, January 20, 2010

Multilayered Security, January 11, 2010

Excessive Secrecy Undermining Obama's Human Rights Achievements, December 10, 2009