Originally posted by ceo_esq
I'm not sure about prisoners being treated better than guards. However, the eminent humanitarian law expert (and Human Rights Watch bigwig) Kenneth Anderson wrote in the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy:Source: Kenneth Anderson, “What to Do With Bin Laden and Al Qaeda Terrorists: A Qualified Defense of Military Commissions and United States Policy on Detainees at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base”, 25 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 591 (2002).
Notwithstanding the shrillness of the criticism, there appears to be little if any substance to the complaints about treatment of the [Guantanamo Bay] detainees. The detainees, according to all the accounts of journalists and visitors to the camp of which I am aware, including a U.S. congressional delegation, are receiving a quality of care, in the way of housing, food, medical attention, and religious requirements, that far exceeds the standard of the Third Geneva Convention, even assuming that it applied. As a British journalist who visited the Guantanamo facility has said, "There are 161 medical staff treating the [158] detainees. I have talked to surgeons who told me that hardened fighters suffering from shrapnel and bullet wounds had thanked them after being operated on."