Few realize how expensive it is to keep Guantanamo Bay prison operational. The Joint Task Force (JTF) detention center, which opened in 2002, costs US taxpayers $140 million a year, breaking down to about $800,000 per detainee.
The JTF was never meant to be permanent, yet twelve long years after the first round of prisoners arrived, 149 prisoners remain detained there indefinitely.
The oft-repeated lie that these men are the “worst of the worst” has clouded the reality that the vast majority are completely innocent, and were simply swept up in a dragnet in Afghanistan. 78 have already been deemed innocent and cleared for release, yet pure political theater keeps them imprisoned.
Moreover, only six of the 149 men have been formally charged with a crime. Five are being tried together as alleged co-conspirators of 9/11, although they are all said to have had varying operational levels, and one stands accused of masterminding the USS Cole bombing. Yet the commissions’ process is completely corrupted by absurd levels of government secrecy, classification and intrusion.
A few weeks ago I traveled to Cuba to cover the continuing plight of these men and conduct an in-depth investigation for Breaking the Set. The report details how America came to host one of the most notorious prisons in Cuba, the brutal and systematic torture that took place, the sham of the 9/11 military commissions, the ongoing prisoner hunger strike and how Guantanamo Bay prison could be closed for good.
Gitmo Exclusive Part I: An Untold History of Occupation, Torture & Resistance
Gitmo Exclusive Part II: Media Brainwashing, Sham Trials & Closing Gitmo for Good
Abby Martin, host of
RT's Breaking The Set show
This story first appeared here.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.