I found this info on the Washington Post's website and put it into an Excel spreadsheet, which is attached in zipped format.
According to the Post,
It looks like the number of Guantanamo detainees is 780, of which 253 have been released. Column F is headed "NLEC, meaning, "No Longer Enemy Combatants;" there were 31 of them.
So of 780 people captured on or near the battlefield in Afghanistan (less a few who were sent to Guantanamo from secret CIA interrogation locations), almost a third have been released. I'm guessing that the 222 not classified NLEC were in fact innocent bystanders who somehow got caught up in the fighting - or maybe were ratted out by neighbors with a grudge.
According to the Post,
I took out the hyperlinks attached to a number of the names; they link to .PDF files that show the transcripts from the tribunal hearings that got them released, or to .PDF files showing the formal charges lodged against them. You can find the original Post article here.From 2002 to May 2006, Washington Post researchers compiled the names and countries of origin of detainees in Guantanamo from unofficial, public sources: news accounts, legal documents (such as habeas corpus petitions and from the CSRT tribunals), interviews with attorneys and relatives, and information from detainee support sites on the Web. The Post printed only names that it had verified from a single reputable source or multiple sources. Some names were transliterated from Arabic or had alternative spellings. The collection was the largest list of names made public at that point, encompassing: more than 550.
Many names came from two Web sites that monitor the status of Guantanamo detainees: the Arabic-language Alasra and the Britain-based CagePrisoners. The two sites, which advocate the release of the detainees, have published lists of names, photographs and documents provided by families. Alasra is registered to an unknown individual in Saudi Arabia, and CagePrisoners is registered to a group of Muslim computer programmers based in Britain.
The Pentagon List
On May 15, 2006, the Pentagon released to the Associated Press the first comprehensive list of everyone who has been held at Guantanamo Bay, more than four years after it opened the detention center. Two-hundred and one of the names had not been disclosed by the Defense Department before. That more complete register follows below. Post researchers will continue to monitor the names on this new list to verify the information previously reported and will provide updates as they are available.
It looks like the number of Guantanamo detainees is 780, of which 253 have been released. Column F is headed "NLEC, meaning, "No Longer Enemy Combatants;" there were 31 of them.
So of 780 people captured on or near the battlefield in Afghanistan (less a few who were sent to Guantanamo from secret CIA interrogation locations), almost a third have been released. I'm guessing that the 222 not classified NLEC were in fact innocent bystanders who somehow got caught up in the fighting - or maybe were ratted out by neighbors with a grudge.