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Hardcover The Least Worst Place: Guantanamo's First 100 Days Book

ISBN: 0195371887

ISBN13: 9780195371888

The Least Worst Place: Guantanamo's First 100 Days

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

Named one of the Washington Post Book World's Best Books of 2009, The Least Worst Place offers a gripping narrative account of the first one hundred days of Guantanamo. Greenberg, one of America's leading experts on the Bush Administration's policies on terrorism, tells the story through a group of career officers who tried--and ultimately failed--to stymie the Pentagon's desire to implement harsh new policies in Guantanamo and bypass the Geneva Conventions...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Guantanamo, like it or not

This is a story about Military men and women who tried to make the best out of a bad situation. This is also the story of a Government trying to get information from detainees that may or may not have had any useful information on terrorist plots in the wake of 9/11. This is the story of men who tried to uphold the Geneva Convention only to find out the people high up in Government had a very different idea of how Guantanamo should be run. The Author Karen Greenberg details the trials and tribulations behind Guantanamo and how it came to be. Guantanamo became Guantanamo because the military didn't want to house the "detainees" on American or foreign soil because there would be some non military oversight and the Government wanted to conduct interrogations and by free of oversight. Guantanamo is unique because of its location and the fact that there would be no oversight by the Cuban Government. When they were trying to figure out where to house this detainee's Guantanamo in the beginning was an after thought Greenberg discusses what the military went through to convert Guantanamo from nothing to a make shift detention center in a short amount of time. Getting the right people in place for this operation, making sure that at least the bare essentials would be available, food, clothing, housing, dealing with language, social and religious barriers etc. for not only the hundreds of incoming soldiers but the detainee's as well. This was a monumental operation. Greenberg also details what life was like at Guantanamo for the detainee's and the military men and women working there in the early days of the operation. She discusses how several different legal barriers where overcome. Greenberg describes how the decisions were made on the ground that conflicted with decisions made by people in Washington and who was involved in those decisions. Greenberg interviewed a lot of people that were on the ground at Guantanamo in the beginning. Her research for Guantanamo the first 100 days is extensive. Everything she details in the book has a time line to help the reader understand the sequence of events and the decision making behind those events. Greenberg does an excellent job of presenting the subject matter in an unbiased way. Guantanamo the first one hundred days is an excellent book; it really details the confusion within the Government as to how to deal with the detainee's. Very thoroughly researched and well worth the price.

Great!

Karen takes us on an enlightening and visceral journey to Guantanamo in this highly informative and enjoyable read. 5 stars!

Groundbreaking, clear, sober and immensely valuable

Karen Greenberg has done the best kind of contemporary nonfiction, discovering a history we did not know we had. We all know what Guantanamo Bay has become; Greenberg shows exactly how it began, and how the good intentions of honorable people were subverted.

The creation of a monster

In The Least Worst Place, Greenberg presents a detailed history, in strikingly readable format, of the way in which one of the nation's most embarrassing mistakes came to be. From Greenberg's description the reader discovers, first, that the detention mission in Guantanamo did not have to devolve into indignity (although what caused it to do so, namely the creation of an unlawful interrogation facility, may have been the intent of its creators from the very beginning); second, that what caused it to devolve was the hijacking of a military mission away from the professional military leadership by civilian leadership; third, the efforts of on-the-ground, military leadership to maintain a lawful, upstanding detention facility; and fourth, the efforts and manipulations by the administration to undermine the ability of the military to do so. Greenberg's book is vital not only to an understanding of the mistakes and abuses of the past administration, but in order to understand how those mistakes could have been avoided, how they can be in the future, and what about our system works well. While many may find the history outlined in this book to be a source of anger and frustration, it may also be a source of optimism; about the professionalism that can be, and historically has been, created in our military, and about the possibility for our country to handle war and detention in a manner that we can be proud of. To address these issues, The Least Worst Place follows not only the facts but also the people involved. Greenberg's description of the marines, soldiers and JAG lawyers at Guantanamo makes the book interesting and easy to read. I recommend it wholeheartedly to anyone with any interest in the subject whatsoever.

An imprisoned ideology insulting a new generation

I come to this book from a very different standpoint to that of Karen Greenberg because I have served in the armed forces, and I am a practising lawyer. For anyone involved in law enforcement and custodial systems, certain rules must be followed in a civilised society- they weren't here. Greenberg, from her perspective, outlines (with edge) the initial phase of this 'custodial operation' beginning with the concept of confinement which gives the public a rest from these alleged terrorists' acivities, to outright torture...without trial. The 'T' word (torture, not trial) must be used sparingly but the evidence which Greenberg assembles from observers and participants between December 21, 2001 to March 31, 2002 is compelling...and damning. The book makes disturbing reading, especially for Obama supporters who now see some idea of the measure of responsibility and the task set for the new President to make amends. There is only one conclusion to this book- it mustn't happen again. And how many times have we heard that before? The title 'The Least Worst Place' is just the start of the twisting and the bending of policies which Allies and supporters had trustingly placed in Bush's administration. To say the US has lost its moral bearings with this camp is strong but just when Greenberg provides excellent footnotes to justify her assertions albeit it from her left wing perspective which I have no quarrel with here as this is not about 'left' or 'right' wing to me. This book should be read to remind people of how not to behave when we are the 'good guys' for fear of turning us into the 'bad guys'...which is exactly what has happened with Guantanamo. As a lawyer, my basic creed, like that of saving life with a doctor, is to try people fairly, telling them what they are accused of- not to lock people up without trial and throw away the key whilst the inmates suffer serious violence. The behaviour at this prison was not acceptable and I find no words in mitigation. I am glad Karen Greenberg has written this book- she ends it with 'what goes around comes around'- the conclusion of the man on the Clapham Omnibus is that the circle must be stopped in the 21st century, and there are no excuses in a civilised society.
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