“Combat-equipped forces … conduct secure detention operations for the approximately 166 detainees at Guantanamo Bay under Public Law 107-40 and consistent with principles of the law of war,” said the report. The release came Friday afternoon and was buried under a wave of news about the brutal murder spree in a Connecticut school.
The administration tends to release unwelcome news on Fridays, partly because such announcements usually attract less attention during weekends.
Many progressive groups, including lawyers’ organizations and allied Islamic groups, have pressed officials to either release and deport the detained jihadis or send them to U.S. criminal courts for trial under civilian rules of evidence.
Those groups include the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, whose lawyers have received funding from leaders in the Virginia-based International Institute for Islamic Thought.
The institute shares many links to the international Muslim Brotherhood group, an Islamist group elections in Egypt and other countries to achieve the same ideological goals as jihadis in al-Qaida.
The Obama administration’s Friday letter also explained the president’s legal argument for the continuing military operations against the Afghanistan-based Taliban movement, and the various jihadi groups working under al-Qaida’s leadership.
“I am providing this supplemental consolidated report, prepared by my Administration and consistent with the War Powers Resolution (Public Law 93-148), as part of my efforts to keep the Congress informed about deployments of U.S. Armed Forces equipped for combat,” the letter read. “In support of these and other overseas operations, the United States has deployed combat-equipped forces to a number of locations in the U.S. Central, Pacific, European, Southern, and Africa Command areas of operation.”