MyWonderfulWorld

Your Voice: The Guantánamo Conundrum

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The closing of Guantánamo Bay was one of President Obama's chief promises on the campaign trail and one of the first executive orders issued this January.  The prison camp, which houses 250 inmates on the southern coast of Cuba, will be gradually shut down over the next year. Yet the question remains as to where former detainees will be sent.  Fifty to one hundred detainees await federal or military trial and will be placed into the U.S. prison system, but nearly one hundred fifty prisoners remain in international limbo. With U.S. penitentiaries protesting the absorption of potentially dangerous prisoners and the prisoners' countries of origin refusing to readmit them abroad, the closing of Gitmo will challenge ideas of federal security and national identity.


We want to know:

How can a geographic perspective help U.S. decision makers solve the problem of what to do with Guantánamo prisoners?


Read more about the Guantánamo Bay conundrum:


CNN.com: "What's next for Guantánamo Bay detainees?"
Al Jazeera English: "Guantánamo Bay: Obama's options"
Citizen Sugar: "Guantánamo"


Image of Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, courtesy NASA.

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2 Comments

An international, geographic perspective can help on where not to send them. Yemen is a failed state and too close to the fight for prisoners to be out of the loop. The People's Republic of China wants the Turkmen prisoners but handing them over is a torture/death sentence for them.

Domestically we should look for secure prisons that can take such high profile terrorists and not be exposed to a significant threat. Also, a place that could use a boost in economy (government spending to help secure the prisoners) could also be a variable.

I agree that a geographic perspective is crucial to deciding how to manage high profile international prisoners. However, when deciding what countries are 'good' and 'bad', we must maintain objectivity in our assessment.

Cameron for My Wonderful World

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This is the blog for the My Wonderful World Campaign, a National Geographic-led initiative to expand geographic learning in school, at home, and in communities.

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Sarah Jane is manager of social media for National Geographic Education more..
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Julia graduated from the University of Kansas with a major in geography and a minor in business more..
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