Onward and Ever Upward – But Not in a Good Way
Iraq: Between false refuge and the peril of return
Amnesty is a Red Herring
Supreme Court to Bush: You're not above the law
The court's latest rebuke of Guantanamo Bay won't close the prison down. But it's a step toward curbing Bush's unilateral tactics.
Japan Should Become a Champion of Human Rights
The insanity inside Guantánamo
A new report reveals that a number of prisoners – even some long ago cleared to leave – are spiraling into hallucinations, despair and suicide.
42 days is still too long
The government has not yet provided enough evidence that six-weeks' detention is necessary or even judicially viable
Arraigning the 9/11 suspects, Guantánamo-style
Hearings for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others here were marred by intimidation, partial censorship and a ruling that left justice in doubt.
9/11 Victims Deserve Better than Guantanamo
Hope Vetoed
Japan can help Cambodia's quest for justice
Still silenced in Guantánamo
After years spent here, one prisoner pins his hope on a single phone call from the outside world – if it ever comes.
The Forgotten Kid of Guantánamo
A teenager captured in Afghanistan and shipped to the U.S. prison remained unknown to the world for five years. Now he's being tried as an adult.