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Politics & Government

Obama’s new Guantanamo envoy begins work, tours detention center

By Hannah Allam - McClatchy Washington Bureau

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July 03, 2013 08:58 PM

The State Department’s new special envoy for the closure of the prison camp at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba began work this week with a one-day trip to the notorious site and said Wednesday that closing it was a national priority.

Clifford Sloan, a former publisher of Slate magazine and a Washington attorney who’s worked in all three branches of government, told McClatchy that he spent Tuesday touring the camp – learning about operations from its military commanders and talking with medical officials, presumably about the hunger strike that’s now spread to 106 of the 166 prisoners.

Sloan’s arrival this week rejuvenates diplomatic efforts that had been scaled back after his predecessor, Ambassador Daniel Fried, was moved to another department and the position vacated in January. Sloan said that he visited the prison camp on the second day of his new job because he considered it “essential” to have a feel for the place as he forges ties with Congress and foreign governments to move quickly toward the goal of repatriating detainees or finding countries willing to take prisoners in need of resettlement.

“President Obama has been very clear as he laid out the goal, and the objective is to close Guantanamo,” Sloan said in a 15-minute interview, the first since his appointment last month. “Our marching orders are clear.”

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Sloan was reluctant to divulge details of the visit, however. He declined to say whether he’d toured the secret Camp 7, where 16 prisoners once held in clandestine CIA prisons overseas are now held, or whether he’d witnessed any detainees being force fed, a controversial process of forcing nutritional supplements into some hunger strikers via a tube inserted in the nose and snaked down the throat into the stomach.

More than 40 detainees undergo that process daily; human rights groups have deemed such feedings as unethical.

“I did have a chance to talk to medical officials,” is all Sloan would say on the matter.

Sloan also confirmed that he met with the detention facility’s current commander, Navy Rear Adm. John W. Smith Jr., and the de facto warden, Army Col. John V. Bogdan. Sloan said military officials gave him “a very thorough” tour of the premises, though he couldn’t give specifics on which parts of the compound he saw.

Photos of his visit posted on the Pentagon’s website showed that Sloan also visited Camp 6, at one point staring into an empty recreational yard, and the detention center’s hospital.

Sloan deferred to the military on operational issues, such as whether the detainees could expect an easing anytime soon of the lockdown mode that’s been imposed since early February, when guards went through captives’ cells and, according to the detainees, seized personal property and disrespected Islam’s holy book, the Quran. Prison officials have said they seized contraband, including weapons, during the raids. The searches touched off the hunger strike.

“I felt like I gained a very helpful understanding from going there,” Sloan said.

In May, President Barack Obama gave a speech in which he renewed his first-term pledge to close Guantanamo.

Sloan said he reports to Secretary of State John Kerry but also will work closely with the White House on the diplomatic end of emptying the prison. In addition to Sloan, the State Department’s Office of Guantanamo Closure includes a deputy and two advisers – all attorneys – and two others to work on issues related to parole-style hearings known as Periodic Review Boards.

A federal task force that was assembled in 2009 concluded that, of the 166 men still at Guantanamo, 46 should be held indefinitely, without trial or charge, and that 56 were approved for transfer. Another 30 Yemenis were deemed eligible for transfer under certain conditions. The rest – 32 – were referred for prosecution.

“We are working as hard as we can and as promptly as we can with foreign governments to move forward,” Sloan said.

Under Fried, Sloan’s predecessor, 29 detainees were repatriated and another 42 resettled in other countries for a total of 71 released. Since 2011, however, such transfers require certification from the Department of Defense, which hasn’t approved a single one and has yet to name its own envoy to work on the prison’s closure.

Carol Rosenberg of The Miami Herald contributed to this report.

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