Yahoo – AFP,
23 Oct 2015
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US
President Barack Obama vetoes the National Defense Authorization Act in the
Oval Office of the White House on October 22, 2015 (AFP Photo/Brendan
Smialowski)
|
Washington
(AFP) - US President Barack Obama vetoed a $612 billion defense spending bill
Thursday, saying it prevented the closure of Guantanamo Bay prison and wasted
money on unwanted programs.
Making a
rare public show of rejecting a law, Obama said the text agreed by the
Republican-controlled Congress "falls woefully short" in key areas.
Obama said
the bill did "a number of good things," including reforming military
retirement and funding cyber security, but "resorts to gimmicks" and
funded unwanted programs.
He zeroed
in on provisions that would restrict the transfer of prisoners from Guantanamo
Bay on the tip of Cuba, to the United States.
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Speaker of
the House John Boehner holds
a news conference on October 21, 2015
(AFP
Photo/Chip Somodevilla)
|
"Guantanamo
is one of the premier mechanisms for jihadists to recruit, it is time for us to
close it. It's outdated, it's expensive."
After
embarrassing false starts, Obama is making a final push to close Guantanamo
prison.
But to
fulfill that glaringly incomplete campaign promise he faces unpalatable
compromises and internal resistance.
But the
fate of those deemed too dangerous to release -- but too difficult to prosecute
-- has stymied his efforts.
The
administration is looking at military facilities like Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
or the Navy Brig in Charleston, South Carolina as possible destinations for
inmates.
But
Congress wants to have control of any transfer and to ensure that prisoners do
not have full rights afforded to American civilians.
The
American Civil Liberties Union, which has campaigned for the prison's closure,
welcomed the move.
"The
president clearly did the right thing by rejecting the bill's restrictions on
transferring Guantanamo prisoners who have been locked up without charge or
trial for years on end," said executive director Anthony Romero.
"Now
Congress needs to send back the president a bill that will let him close
Guantanamo and end indefinite detention, and he needs to take decisive action
to make his promise to close the prison a reality.
"He
needs to do this soon, before his legacy is irreparably tarnished by the stain
of Guantanamo."
Obama also
said the budget "prevents a wide range of reforms that are necessary for
us to get our military modernized."
"We
have repeatedly put forward a series of reforms eliminating reforms that the Pentagon
does not want, Congress keeps stuffing 'em back in," he said.
"We
end up wasting money, we end up diverting resources from things that we do
need."
House
Speaker John Boehner instantly lambasted Obama as "placing domestic
politics ahead of our troops."
He added:
"President Obama has put America's national security at risk."


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