Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Margot PattersonJune 05, 2014
U.S. Marine in Afghanistan (CNS photo/Adrees Latif, Reuters)

I seldom remember jokes, but the only joke I’ve ever heard about liturgists is funny and unexpected enough that I’ve never forgotten it.

Question: What’s the difference between a liturgist and a terrorist?

Answer: You can negotiate with terrorists.

Substitute the word “Republican” for “liturgist” and you get a fair description of U.S. politics today, with a Democratic White House and a Republican House at continual loggerheads.

The joke is especially pertinent now given the furor that has greeted President Obama’s decision to exchange five Taliban prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay for U.S. Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who was captured in Afghanistan and has been held by the Taliban for the last five years.

Some Republicans have said that releasing five Taliban prisoners for one U.S. soldier is a bad deal for the United States. Though Qatar will house them for a year before they are transferred to Afghanistan, critics say the price of Sgt. Bergdahl’s return is too high. The United States is releasing dangerous men who may return to the battlefield.

Members of Congress also complain that the Obama administration ignored a law mandating that Congress be informed 30 days in advance of any release of prisoners from Guantanamo Bay. They have a valid point. It did. But with Congress uncooperative, the Obama administration obviously figured it was easier to make a deal with the Afghan Taliban for Sgt. Bergdahl’s return and close on it than to risk the Republicans in Congress torpedoing it. Would Republicans have done so? We’ll never know. But Guantanamo has become so much a casualty of our dysfunctional politics that most of the remaining detainees are no longer being held there because of the fears for the safety of the American public but are instead hostages to the blame game of politicians.

Is the prisoner swap a bad deal for the United States? I don’t think so. The U.S. government is obligated to do its utmost to get back its soldiers, including negotiating their release from enemy hands. As the United States winds down combat operations in Afghanistan, exchanging prisoners would seem to be part of the expected chain of events. That is what countries do when wars end, even when they end inconclusively and ingloriously. Do we want to keep those Taliban prisoners forever?

Those in favor of never-ending war may say yes, but to what end? For the privilege of paying to keep them in the world’s most expensive prison in perpetuity? While this may align with our custom here at home of incarcerating as many people as possible for as long as possible, at a cost of $900,000 per prisoner (and some estimates put the cost per prisoner as more than twice that) Guantanamo is a lot more expensive than the average prison and a source of continuing embarrassment and shame for the United States.

Whatever the circumstances in which Sgt. Bergdahl was captured, his return from Afghanistan is a good thing. Ridding Guantanamo of five more prisoners is a good thing too.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

A child kicks a football in front of a mural of Nelson Mandela, in Soweto, South Africa, as the country celebrates Freedom Day on April 27. (AP Photo)
Polls abound, and the political ground keeps shifting, but one thing is sure: South Africa is likely to experience a significant political realignment on May 29.
An artistic rendering of Dante Alighieri from ‘Dante: Inferno’ to Paradise (courtesy of PBS) 
Ric Burns’s splendid two-part PBS documentary, “Dante: Inferno to Paradise,” has brought Dante’s achievement beyond the groves of academe and into America’s living rooms.
Robert P. ImbelliMay 10, 2024
With “Cowboy Carter,” her eighth studio album, Beyoncé not only explores the longed-for and carelessly and/or intentionally erased Black past in country music, but also moves the genre forward into a hopefully more expansive future.
Kim R. HarrisMay 10, 2024
An image from the film Petite Maman of two sisters sitting next to each other in winter jackets
“Petite Maman” is a magical-realist story about children and parents, the things we can’t say and learning to understand each other.
John DoughertyMay 10, 2024