I'd argue the vast majority are terrorists if they are picked up in the first place..
AQAP is an "insurgency" so is the Taliban -so is Boko Haram -all of which are international recognized terrorists organizations.
I'm hard pressed to think of any Gitmo detainees that aren't ?
It's not just "against the USA" either - with the exception of the Afghan Taliban - which can possibly be seen as an insurgency.
But they still support AQ, and they still link up with the TTP.
The TTP ( Pakistani) Taliban are clearly terrorists. look at the
2014 Peshawar school massacre and..
National Counter Terrorism Guide
.. So I'm really not seeing anything specific to your claim.[/
We need to stay out of other countries civil wars and quit interfering, one man's insurgient is another man's patriot, just look at the discussions of our own civil war.
Again, if the remaining prisoners are so diabolical, we need to try them and send them to a prison in the US, GITMO is unConstituonal.
The takeover of a country by Islamic terrorism an insurgency????
Thats a stretch ..... maybe ISIS in Iraq is then an insurgency of a sort....there are certainly a number of Iraqis that are with ISIS.....
Gitmo most certainly IS NOT unconstitutional.......and not in violation of the Geneva convention....
The Gitmo detainees committed no crime in the US, they are not criminals to be tried....they are prisoners captured on the battlefield, enemy combatants,... following the
September 11 attacks of 2001, fighters captured on the battlefield have been labeled “unlawful combatants” and have not been afforded protections guaranteed under the Geneva Conventions.
The Geneva Conventions apply in wars between two or more sovereign states. Article 5 of the Third Geneva Convention states that the status of a detainee may be determined by a "competent tribunal". Until such time, he must be treated as a prisoner of war. After a "competent tribunal" has determined that an individual detainee is an unlawful combatant, the "detaining power"
may choose to accord the detained unlawful combatant the rights and privileges of a prisoner of war as described in the Third Geneva Convention,
but is not required to do so. An unlawful combatant who is not a national of a neutral state, and who is not a national of a co-belligerent state, retains rights and privileges under the Fourth Geneva Convention so that he must be "treated with humanity and, in case of trial, shall not be deprived of the rights of fair and regular trial"