Alberto Gonzales on Guantanamo Decision
Alberto Gonzales, speaking from Egypt today, says the Supreme Court's Hamdan decision "hampers our ability to deal with terrorists." Shorter version: We're not going to stop holding people indefinitely, without charges and without access to lawyers.
Gonzales emphasized that the court ruling didn't say "that we could not continue to hold enemy combatants indefinitely for the duration of hostilities, which was something the Supreme Court said we could do..." The prison was established in early 2002.
"That path is still available to us. The president of the United States can continue to hold enemy combatants at Guantanamo. But we are looking at ways to provide as many tools as possible to the president of the United States in dealing with terrorists," he added.
Shorter version II: We will use all our political capital to get Congress to approve what the Supreme Court threw out.
Yale law professor Jack Balkin at Balkanization discusses this strategy.
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