By Terri Moon Cronk DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, September 2, 2015 — A Defense Department
assessment team is surveying Joint Base Charleston’s Navy Consolidated Brig in
South Carolina as a potential prison to house detainees after the wartime
prison at Naval Base Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, closes, Pentagon spokesman Navy
Capt. Jeff Davis told reporters today.
As directed by Defense Secretary Ash Carter, a DoD
assessment team is working with prison staffs to determine the costs of housing
detainees, in addition to assessing the facilities for force protection, troop
housing, security, transportation, information security, contracting and other
operational issues, Davis said.
The facilities also are assessed for their ability to serve
as a military commissions site, he added.
The Charleston visit is the second survey following the
assessment at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas, Davis said.
While Fort Leavenworth and Charleston are the only military
facilities the team has visited so far, said Davis, noting other military sites
could not be ruled out.
“But those are the only two we’re planning on now,” he
added.
Non-DoD Sites to be Surveyed
“We want to emphasize no facilities have been selected yet,”
Davis said, adding it’s likely that non-DoD detention facilities also will be
considered.
“We do not know what those [non-DoD sites] are yet,” he
said.
DoD is working closely with interagency partners to
determine which non-DoD facilities could be assessed in the near future, he
added.
While no deadline exists for the assessments, Davis said
DoD’s intent is get the work done very quickly, based on President Barack
Obama’s commitment to closing the wartime prison before the end of his
presidency.
Thorough Analyses Involved
“There is a lot of work to be done,” Davis explained.
“Congress wants specific cost information included … It
isn’t just a matter of changing legislation to allow detainees to be brought to
the United States,” he said, adding that DoD wants to provide Congress with “a
full picture” of the surveys.
In an Aug. 20 briefing with reporters, Carter said he
directed assessment teams to perform the facility surveys so that DoD, the
White House and Congress can “chart a responsible way forward and a plan, so
that we can close the detention facility at Guantanamo and close this chapter
in our history once and for all.”
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