Guantánamo [videorecording] / PJ Productions in association with Washington Media Associates ; produced by Sherry Jones.

Contributor(s): Material type: FilmPublication details: [s.l.] : PJ Productions, c2004.Description: 1 videodisc (41 min.) : sd., col. ; 4 3/4 inOther title:
  • Title on DVD surface: Peter Jennings reporting - Guantánamo
Subject(s): Production credits:
  • Senior editor, Peter Jennings ; co-producers, Christopher Buchanan, Christina Lowery ; photographed and edited by Foster Wiley ; sound, Paul Rusnak, Brian Buckley ; music, Richard Fiocca ; executive producer, Tom Yellin.
Cast: Peter Jennings ; President George W. Bush (televised footage) ; Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (televised footage) ; interviewees: U.S. Navy Admiral Don Guter ; Mark Jacobson of the Office of the Secretary of Defense ; Bradford Berenson of the White House counsel's office ; military intelligence veteran Lt. Col. Anthony Christino III ; Rear Admiral John D. Hutson, former Judge Advocate General of the Navy ; Brigadier General Jay W. Hood, former Guantánamo commander ; interrogations chief Steve Rodríguez ; Marines defense counsel Michael Mori ; Anthony Lester, Baron of Herne Hill ; psychiatrist Daryl B. Matthews ; attorney Gareth Peirce.Summary: According to the Bush Administration, the war on terror requires new tactics and new thinking - including departure from the Geneva Conventions when deemed necessary - ever since the September 11 terrorist attacks, 2001. Afghanis and others captured at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border who were suspected of being terrorists, rightly or not, were imprisoned at Guantánamo, which was described by one official as "the legal equivalent of outer space." This program shows how George Bush's policies are implemented at Camp Delta, how they are vigorously defended in the name of national security, and how they are contested just as passionately on behalf of personal freedom and human rights. Reporter Peter Jennings interviews Gitmo's commanding general and former Administration insiders, shedding light on decision-making within the White House - while reports of innocents such as Kuwaiti Fawzi Al Odah and first-hand accounts of experiences inside the prison compose the darkest dimensions of the story.
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DVD release of the 2004 program.

Senior editor, Peter Jennings ; co-producers, Christopher Buchanan, Christina Lowery ; photographed and edited by Foster Wiley ; sound, Paul Rusnak, Brian Buckley ; music, Richard Fiocca ; executive producer, Tom Yellin.

Peter Jennings ; President George W. Bush (televised footage) ; Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld (televised footage) ; interviewees: U.S. Navy Admiral Don Guter ; Mark Jacobson of the Office of the Secretary of Defense ; Bradford Berenson of the White House counsel's office ; military intelligence veteran Lt. Col. Anthony Christino III ; Rear Admiral John D. Hutson, former Judge Advocate General of the Navy ; Brigadier General Jay W. Hood, former Guantánamo commander ; interrogations chief Steve Rodríguez ; Marines defense counsel Michael Mori ; Anthony Lester, Baron of Herne Hill ; psychiatrist Daryl B. Matthews ; attorney Gareth Peirce.

According to the Bush Administration, the war on terror requires new tactics and new thinking - including departure from the Geneva Conventions when deemed necessary - ever since the September 11 terrorist attacks, 2001. Afghanis and others captured at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border who were suspected of being terrorists, rightly or not, were imprisoned at Guantánamo, which was described by one official as "the legal equivalent of outer space." This program shows how George Bush's policies are implemented at Camp Delta, how they are vigorously defended in the name of national security, and how they are contested just as passionately on behalf of personal freedom and human rights. Reporter Peter Jennings interviews Gitmo's commanding general and former Administration insiders, shedding light on decision-making within the White House - while reports of innocents such as Kuwaiti Fawzi Al Odah and first-hand accounts of experiences inside the prison compose the darkest dimensions of the story.

DVD.

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