The Politics of the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp

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The Politics of the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp

Guantanamo Bay, also known as Gitmo, is a United States Detention Camp located in the Guantanamo Naval Base in South Eastern Cuba. The United States gained control of the Guantanamo Bay area in the 1903 Cuban-American treaty in which the United States gained the right to control the Cuban territory while at the same time recognizing the Cuban state sovereignty (Nofi, 112). In the year 1970, the United States began to use part of the Guantanamo Naval Base as a detention camp for Cubans and Haitians that were caught in the high sea trying to get into the United States illegally (Gott, 78). However, the detention camp later became a political tool, which politicians used for their selfish political agendas. This paper is a research paper on Guantanamo Bay; the paper explores the topic focusing on the political dimension of the detention camp.

Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp was established in the year 2002, when Donald Rumsfeld was the United States secretary of defense. Rumsfeld stated that the main intention of building the Guantanamo Bay Prison was to detain prisoners of war and to try criminals accused of odious crimes (Rose, 32-33). Moreover, was turned into a full-fledged ultra-modern detention camp for the criminals guilty of extra-ordinary crimes (Smith, 21). Although Rumsfeld had said during the opening of the Guantanamo Bay Camp that the aim of the detention camp would be to detain criminals convicted of crimes of very high magnitude, it later proved that the camp was actually just a political tool.

In the book titled Bad Men: Guantanamo Bay and the Secret Prison the author C.S. Smith argued that the Bush administration targeted prisoners of war from Iraq, Iran, an...

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...ic that his administration values fairness and change.

Works Cited

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Gott, R. Cuba: A New History. USA: Yale University Press, 2004. Print.

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Nofi, A. The Spanish American War. Pennsylvania: Combined Books, 1996. Print.

Rose, D. Guantanamo: The War on Human Rights. USA: New Press, 2006. Print.

Smith, C.S. Bad Men: Guantanamo Bay and The Secret Prisons. USA: Phoenix, 2008. Print.

Worthington, A. The Guantanamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s illegal Prison. USA: Pluto Press, 2007. Print.

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