The orange jumpsuits of the blindfolded prisoners at Gitmo detention camp, are already one of the enduring images of our post 9/11 world. Were these prisoners "the hardest of the hard-core" Al Qaeda terrorists, ruthless men "involved in a plot to kill thousands of ordinary Americans" as the Bush administration has maintained?
The orange jumpsuits of the blindfolded prisoners at Gitmo detention camp, are already one of the enduring images of our post 9/11 world. Were these prisoners "the hardest of the hard-core" Al Qaeda terrorists, ruthless men "involved in a plot to kill thousands of ordinary Americans" as the Bush administration has maintained?
Praised as a "tour-de-force deconstruction of Bush's supermax gulag" (San Diego Union Tribune) when first published in hardcover, Guantánamo makes shocking allegations about the infamous U.S. detention camp in Cuba. Award-winning journalist David Rose argues that the camp not only constitutes a grotesque abuse of human rights but is also ineffective as a tool for combating terrorism.
Through firsthand research in Cuba, government documents, and dozens of interviews with guards, intelligence officials, military lawyers, and former detainees, Rose sheds light on Gitmo's ugly inner workings. He reveals that, contrary to the Bush administration's claims, the prisoners at Guantánamo are not "the hardest of the hard-core" Al Qaeda terrorists, ruthless men "involved in a plot to kill thousands of ordinary Americans." And he provides solid evidence that the brutal interrogations that supposedly justify the camp's existence have yielded very little useful intelligence.
“"Combines a harrowing account of physical and psychological abuse . . . with a finely honed analysis of the policies governing the lawless world of 'Gitmo.'" -- The Nation "Rose offers a substantial body of reporting in his concise book. . . . Guantnamo is most valuable for its eloquent dissection of the methods used by the United States to gather intelligence from detainees." -- Legal Affairs”
"Combines a harrowing account of physical and psychological abuse . . . with a finely honed analysis of the policies governing the lawless world of `Gitmo.’" —The Nation
"Rose offers a substantial body of reporting in his concise book. . . . Guantánamo is most valuable for its eloquent dissection of the methods used by the United States to gather intelligence from detainees." —Legal Affairs
David Rose is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and has worked for The Guardian, The Observer, and the BBC. He is the author of numerous books, including Guantánamo: The War on Human Rights and The Big Eddy Club: The Stocking Stranglings and Southern Justice, both published by The New Press. He lives in Oxford, England.
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