WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. senators on Tuesday showed their paralysis over what to do with the Guantanamo Bay prison, voting down dueling bills to loosen and tighten restrictions on transferring detainees.
Almost 12 years after its creation and almost five years since President Barack Obama vowed on his first day in office to close the prison, 164 suspects remain at the U.S. naval facility in Cuba. Restrictions imposed by Congress have brought transfers to a virtual standstill, even though more than half the men there have been cleared for transfer.
An amendment to the Senate's annual defense policy bill proposed by Sens. Carl Levin and John McCain would have eased the Obama administration's ability to detain and try suspects in the United States or release them overseas. But it fell eight votes shy of the 60-vote threshold needed for passage. The vote was 52-46.
McCain read a letter from 38 former U.S. military leaders voicing their support. It called Guantanamo a "symbol of torture" and a recruiting tool for al-Qaida.
Earlier, an opposing amendment championed by Republican senators that would have made it even harder for Obama to move prisoners was defeated 55-43.