posted on Mar, 8 2023 @ 10:55 PM
Joe Biden picked up where Barack Obama (under whom he served as vice president) had left off when it came efforts to close the detention center at the
Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in eastern Cuba after he returned to the White House for the first time since he handed over the keys of the vice
presidency, and he has released six terrorists from the detention center at Gitmo, while hoping to have all Yemeni detainees at Gitmo currently
cleared for release sent to a safe location in the Middle East due to Yemen being in a state of civil war. However, if all terrorists are freed from
the detention center at Gitmo and the detention center itself is shuttered, the fate of the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base remains up in the air. I vividly
remember that amid the 1994 Cuban
balsero crisis and political turmoil in Haiti, several Cuban and Haitian refugees were detained at the base's
McCalla Field airport in the 1990s, and I recently learned that the Clinton administration in the late 1990s floated the idea of using Gitmo as a
shelter for Kosovar Albanian refugees from the conflict over Kosovo in the first half of 1999, but decided against doing so. Since the Guantanamo Bay
Naval Base is the last remaining US base in Cuba, given that three other US bases in Cuba that existed during the first 50 years of the existence of
the Republic of Cuba were shut down and turned over to the Cuban government and military, the US Navy might shutdown Leeward Point Field in the event
that an earthquake along the northern margin of the Caribbean Plate causes damage to Leeward Point Field, and it could relocate all of its naval
assets to the main naval station on the eastern shore of Guantanamo Bay.
edit on 8-3-2023 by Potlatch because: Added more emphasis