Wednesday, November 7, 2007

U.S. lawmaker offends Dutch with Gitmo remark

Chính quyền Mỹ rất thích moi móc mọi nơi trên thế giới này, và dùng rất nhiều thời gian lo moi móc người ta, nhưng lâu lâu có người lên tiếng phê bình mình thì lại tỏ ra bực bội!

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U.S. lawmaker offends Dutch with Gitmo remark

By DESMOND BUTLER - Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Dutch lawmakers who visited the Guantánamo Bay military prison this week said they were offended by a testy exchange in Washington with a senior congressional Democrat.

The lawmakers said that Tom Lantos, chairman of the House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee, told them that ``Europe was not as outraged by Auschwitz as by Guantánamo Bay.''

Lantos, a Holocaust survivor who was born in Hungary, was responding to arguments that the United States should shut down the prison at the U.S. Navy base in Cuba, the lawmakers said. Mariko Peters, a member of the Dutch Green Party, who began the exchange with Lantos, said she took notes during the exchange.

A Lantos aide said he realizes that the Guantánamo facility does harm to the reputation of the United States and has praised judges who ruled in favor of extending legal rights to prisoners. He has not, however, suggested that the prison be closed.

Rep. Tom Lantos speaks during a news conference in Jerusalem in this Aug. 12, 2007, file photo. Dutch lawmakers who visited the Guantanamo Bay military prison this week said they were offended by a testy exchange in Washington with the senior California Democrat.

Rachael Strecher, file / AP Photo
Rep. Tom Lantos speaks during a news conference in Jerusalem in this Aug. 12, 2007, file photo. Dutch lawmakers who visited the Guantanamo Bay military prison this week said they were offended by a testy exchange in Washington with the senior California Democrat.

Before the Guantánamo exchange, the lawmakers had discussed a debate in the Netherlands about whether the country should maintain its 1,600 troops serving in NATO's Afghanistan operations.

''You have to help us, because if it was not for us you would now be a province of Nazi Germany,'' Lantos said, according to the Dutch lawmakers.

''The comments killed the debate,'' said Harry van Bommel, a member of the Socialist Party. ``It was insulting and counterproductive.''

A Lantos spokeswoman said Lantos was not immediately available and had no comment.

The Dutch government soon will announce whether its troops will stay in the southern Afghan province of Uruzgan, where they recently have begun an anti-Taliban offensive backed by British and Afghan forces. Lantos has praised the Netherlands' contribution to the Afghan mission.

''It was a diplomatically strange situation,'' Peters said. ``The mere suggestion that the United States could be compared with Nazi Germany is so flawed.''

It was not the first time that Lantos had offended European political circles. In May, he lashed out at the former leaders of France and Germany. His comments, which included calling former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder a ''political prostitute,'' provoked a rebuke from German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

The lawmakers, from the Dutch House of Representatives' Foreign Affairs Committee, were invited to visit Guantánamo and Washington by the U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands, Roland Arnall. The lawmakers also met senior Bush administration officials, including Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte and Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England.

Members of the delegation said they were given an extensive tour of the Guantánamo Bay prison, which has been heavily criticized by human rights groups.

Some of the lawmakers said that while they found the physical conditions of the prison acceptable, they remain concerned that prisoners were not being given proper legal treatment.

''We have to close Guantánamo because it symbolizes for me everything that is wrong with this war on terror,'' Peters said.

But at least one member disagreed.

''Let's not forget we are in a state of war -- not only the United States but also my country -- with Islamic terrorists,'' said the far right Freedom Party leader, Geert Wilders. ``I think we could only learn from Guantánamo.''

A number of the members said that the United States should consult international institutions and other countries to answer some of the difficult quandaries about closing the facility.

''We need to work out an international deal on the future of Guantánamo Bay,'' said Hans van Baalen, of the Liberals, who led the delegation.

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