The use of classified evidence has been a major issue in the
Guantanamo military commissions system. In the commissions system, a
protective order prohibits defense attorneys from disclosing classified
information to unauthorized parties, including their clients, the press,
and nongovernmental bodies. Defense attorneys argue that this
undermines efforts to seek redress for torture victims, such as their
clients, which is a right under international law. Additionally,
defendants can be excluded from pretrial hearings in which classified
evidence used against them will be discussed. Much of that classified
information relates to how the detainees were treated in CIA custody.
All six detainees who are being prosecuted in the military commissions
system were detained and tortured
in CIA black sites before they were sent to Guantanamo in 2006. Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed was waterboarded 183 times, while al-Nashiri was
waterboarded and threatened with a gun and power drill. Defense
attorneys in the respective cases argue that their clients' torture is
mitigating evidence and have been fighting for further disclosure.
Not only is the American-Israeli alliance characterized by $3 billion
in yearly aid from the United States to Israel, along with unyielding political and diplomatic support, it is also characterized by shared values in perpetual war and indefinite detention. ***Read full article here***
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