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Posted: 2018-01-11T20:21:34Z | Updated: 2018-01-11T20:21:34Z 11 Men Are Trying To Get Out Of Gitmo By Using Trump's Own Words Against Him | HuffPost

11 Men Are Trying To Get Out Of Gitmo By Using Trump's Own Words Against Him

"Trump has explicitly endorsed indefinite detention rather than a detention 'informed by the laws of war,'" lawyers argued in a new legal filing.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump ’s statement  via Twitter last year that “there should be no further releases” from the notorious offshore prison at Guantanamo Bay could have the ironic result of giving some of the 41 remaining prisoners there a new avenue to challenge their detention there.

Lawyers for 11 men who have been held at Guantanamo without charge for over a decade have seized on Trump’s bluster to lay out a clever new legal argument: Trump’s plan to hold Guantanamo detainees forever, regardless of circumstances, makes their detentions arbitrary and manifestly unconstitutional, and U.S. courts must order their release.

“The President has explicitly endorsed indefinite detention rather than a detention ‘informed by the laws of war,’ which was the position of his predecessors,” the detainees’ lawyers wrote in a lawsuit filed in federal court on Thursday, the 16th anniversary of the opening of the prison camp.

The White House did not respond to request for comment. 

Indefinite detention is prohibited under U.S. and international law. In the past, Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama pointed to the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force as the legal justification for detaining suspected militants at Guantanamo. Both administrations had processes in place to review whether continued detention was necessary for each prisoner — and both presidents publicly stated their intention to close the prison.

Human rights lawyers sparred with the Bush and Obama administrations over whether the review processes were sufficient — but accepted the general premise that the U.S. government planned to eventually release or charge with a crime each prisoner at Guantanamo. During his presidency, Bush released 532 detainees. Obama transferred out another 197, leaving the current population at 41 men.

Since Trump came into office, there have been no prisoners released from Guantanamo. The review process to evaluate whether detainees continue to pose a threat has slowed to nearly a halt. Like the lawyers who fought Trump’s travel ban against Muslim-majority countries, the legal team representing the 11 Guantanamo detainees turned Trump’s own statements against him, using them as evidence of his intention to act in violation of the law.

The 11 petitioners come from Yemen, Pakistan, Morocco, Algeria, Kenya, Saudi Arabia and the occupied Palestinian territories. All of them are Muslim men who have filed habeas challenges in the past. The group of men includes Abu Zubaydah , a so-called “high-value detainee” who was waterboarded 83 times in one month after his capture in 2002. Two of the prisoners, Tofiq Nasser Awad al Bihani and Abdul Latif Nasser, have already been cleared for release.

“Both missed their chances at freedom by the slimmest of margins and thinnest of reasons,” the lawyers wrote, referring to al Bihani and Nasser. Toward the end of Obama’s presidency, prison officials put the two men through exit protocols, anticipating that they would be transferred to another country soon. Now, they remain in their cells with no prospect of freedom.

The 11 prisoners have been held between 10 and 16 years. “Another three or seven years under President Trump may mean a death sentence for men like Sharqawi Al Hajj, who is in poor health and damaged by past torture,” Center for Constitutional Rights lawyer Pardiss Kebriaei, who represents al Hajj, said in a statement.

“Given the President’s commitment, in fulfillment of a campaign promise, not to release any detainees during his administration, they face an arbitrary additional term of detention of four, or possibly eight, years,” the lawyers wrote in their filing. “When fundamental legal principles — and human lives — are at stake, the judicial branch is compelled to act,” they wrote.

Read the full legal filing here:

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Before You Go

Inside Guantanamo's Prison Facility
Guantanamo Guard Tower(01 of23)
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Located between Guantanamo's Camp Five and Camp Six. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo detainee received physical therapy(02 of23)
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A skinny Guantanamo detainee receives physical therapy on Tuesday, April 16, 2013. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Empty cell block(03 of23)
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A cell block at Guantanamo's Camp VI that had been occupied until a raid on April 13, 2013. One detainee had written "stop tortur us. stop desclate our relgion" on the wall of his cell. The officer in charge of the facility said that detainees had hoarded all types of materials in the communal area. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo Camp VI video feeds(04 of23)
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A Guantanamo guard looks over a video screen at Camp VI at Guantanamo in April. Detainees had blocked 147 of the prison's 160 cameras, according to a military official. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Weapons(05 of23)
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Water bottles filled with gravel were amongst the weapons officials said they confiscated from detainees after the raid in April. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Weapons(06 of23)
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Other weapons included broom sticks and shanks. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Occupied block(07 of23)
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A guard checks on detainees in a sparsely populated block of Guantanamo's Camp Six in April. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo Medical Facility(08 of23)
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Military officials show journalists the room where some detainees were being force fed during the ongoing hunger strike at the facility. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Force Feeding chair(09 of23)
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A restraining chair used to feed detainees at Guantanamo. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Cans of Ensure at Guantanamo(10 of23)
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A guard displays cans of Ensure used to force feed detainees at Guantanamo. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Detainee handprint(11 of23)
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A handprint is shown on a Camp VI cell block that was occupied by a detainee until a raid in mid-April. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly)
Detainee shoe(12 of23)
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A shoe from a detainee left on the now-empty cell block. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Shower camera(13 of23)
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Cameras are everywhere in Guantanamo's Camp VI, even inside the shower. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Cell block(14 of23)
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The second level of an empty cell block in Camp VI as seen from below. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly)
Camp VI Sign(15 of23)
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A sign outside Guantanamo's Camp VI. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Guantanamo Flag At Half Staff(16 of23)
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A flag flying over Guantanamo's Camp Six flys at half staff in honor of victims of Boston Marathon massacre. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Camp Five Guards(17 of23)
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Guards at Camp Five stand watch during morning prayers. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Camp Five Cell Block(18 of23)
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An empty cell block in Guantanamo's Camp Five. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
"Splash" Shields(19 of23)
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Face shields intended to prevent guards from being hit in the face by "cocktails" of urine, feces and semen. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Water handoff(20 of23)
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A guard hands water to a detainee on the Bravo block of Guantanamo's Camp Five. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Dead Banana Rat(21 of23)
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A dead banana rat on the road to Guantanamo's prison facilities. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Sunrise By Guantanamo's Camp Five(22 of23)
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(credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)
Obama, Hagel On Joint Detention Group Board(23 of23)
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President Barack Obama and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel pictured at the headquarters of Joint Task Force Guantanamo's Joint Detention Group headquarters. (credit:Ryan J. Reilly / Huffington Post)