Aftershock: The War on Terror
The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq created a dilemma for the Bush administration: what to do with the thousands of detainees captured during the War on Terror. John Yoo, a White House lawyer, came up with a new legal argument that allowed detainees to be held indefinitely without trial. Habeas corpus was suspended, the constitution upended and Guantánamo Bay became a judicial black hole. More from the LRB The Belgrano Diary: https://lrb.me/belgranowotpod [https://lrb.me/belgranowotpod] Subscribe to the LRB: [https://lrb.me/pod]https://lrb.me/subswotpod [https://lrb.me/subswotpod] Close Readings podcast: https://lrb.me/crwotpod [https://lrb.me/crwotpod] LRB Audiobooks: https://lrb.me/audiobookswotpod [https://lrb.me/audiobookswotpod] Bags, binders and more at the LRB Store: https://lrb.me/storewotpod [https://lrb.me/storewotpod] Get in touch: podcasts@lrb.co.uk Archive in this episode ‘Video of Mahmoud Khalil’s Arrest’/ACLU ‘Bush defends administration detention, interrogation policies’/Associated Press ‘Abu Ghraib hearing’/C-SPAN ‘Rumsfeld on detainees treatment, Amnesty criticism in UK.’/Associated Press ‘Trump: “we will load up Guantanamo Bay”’/ Associated Press ‘More detainees arrive from Afghanistan at US naval base’/Associated Press ‘A DAY IN GUANTANAMO BAY’/Naval Station Guantanamo Bay ‘Judge at Guantanamo throws out second case against prisoner’/Associated Press ‘9/11 TEN YEARS AFTER: TORIE CLARKE WITH JOHN WOO’/WMAL Newstalk ‘Conversations with History’/UC Berkeley Institute of International Studies ‘Navy Lawyer Discusses Hamdan, Guantanamo’/Talk of the Nation/NPR ‘Hardball’/MSNBC Live/MSNBC
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