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The Least Worst Place: How Guantanamo Became the World's Most Notorious Prison
 
 
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The Least Worst Place: How Guantanamo Became the World's Most Notorious Prison [Hardcover]

Karen J. Greenberg
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: OUP Oxford (19 Mar 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0199557675
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199557677
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 16.2 x 2.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 591,496 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Karen B. Greenberg
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Review

Greenberg is a great storyteller. (Sunday Times )

Read this book for an understanding of the fearsome banality of the workings of arbitrary power. (Frank Furedi, Times Higher Education )

Greenberg tells an excellent human story, efficiently piecing together the accounts of the guards, inmates and lawyers. (Stephen Robinson, The Guardian )

If you thought Guantanamo held no more surprises, this remarkable and timely book will change your mind. Karen Greenberg has unearthed a history we did not know we had, somehow persuading scores of military and intelligence officers-and their former captives-to break a seven-year silence. Packed with revelations, this vivid story shows exactly how nods and winks from Washington led to lawless abuse. Just at the moment we need it most, with a new president vowing to find a way out, Greenberg gives the best account yet of where and how and why the troubles began. (Advance praise from Barton Gellman, author of Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency )

Greenberg tells a gripping and vivid story of the first days of the Guantanamo detainee debacle. In a fast paced and well researched narrative, her characters come alive on this dusty island base as they struggle with the moral and professional dilemmas that are a microcosm of a bigger drama being played out in Washington. Policy was formulated by a small cabal of Pentagon and White House zealots who did not understand the fundamental nature of counterterrorism-and forced their ill-conceived policies on a reluctant but ultimately compliant military, judicial and diplomatic corps. (Advance praise from Michael Sheehan, author of Crush the Cell )

The consequences of Guantanamo on America's standing in the world have been well chronicled, but here, in heartbreaking detail, we learn the story of how it might have been different. Karen Greenberg's surprising and provocative history of the first hundred days of Guantanamo provides an invaluable comment on how the war on terror turned into a moral assault on our on values and institutions. (Advance praise from Lawrence Wright, author of The Looming Tower )

Karen Greenberg's deeply researched account of the early days of Guantanamo shows the legal, political and moral questions that plagued the prison camp from the outset: its dubious legal authority, the uncertain status of the prisoners, and the doubts of key officials who tried to uphold American and international law. The Least Worst Place, which is so well written that it reads in places like a prose poem, is going to be essential reading for anyone who is trying to understand the legal morass surrounding Guantanamo and detainee policy in the 'war on terror.' (Advance praie from Peter Bergen, author of Holy War, Inc. and The Osama bin Laden I Know )

Product Description

Ever since its foundation in 2002, the Guantanamo Bay Detention Facility has become the symbol for many people around the world of all that is wrong with the 'war on terror'. Secretive, inhumane, and illegal by most international standards, it has been seen by many as a testament to American hubris in the post-9/11 era. Yet until now no one has written about the most revealing part of the story - the prison's first 100 days. It was during this time that a group of career military men and women tried to uphold the traditional military codes of honour and justice that informed their training in the face of a far more ruthless, less rule-bound, civilian leadership in the Pentagon. They were defeated. This book tells their story for the first time. It is a tale of how individual officers on the ground at Guantanamo, along with their direct superiors, struggled with their assignment from Washington, only to be unwittingly co-opted into the Pentagon's plan to turn the prison into an interrogation facility operating at the margins of the law and beyond.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Phillip Taylor TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Length: 4:42 Mins
WHICH HAS INSULTED A NEW GENERATION

Reviewed by Phillip Taylor MBE with Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers

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 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' activities, 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 2001 and 31st March 2002 is both 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.

ISBN: 978 019955 7677
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