WASHINGTON (Sputnik), Leandra Bernstein — "We were told that we could be guided by it but we didn’t need to follow it," Lehnert said on Wednesday of international law under the Geneva Conventions and additional protocols.
In prosecuting the War on Terror, "I think we could have learned to apply the Geneva Convention in this conflict and done it very effectively," Lehnert added.
Lehnert, who was appointed to oversee the initial opening of the detention center at Guantanamo Bay in January 2002, noted that the Bush administration’s decision to avoid applying international law was "unfortunate."
The administration also "did a poor job of sorting" terrorist suspects under Article 5 of the Geneva Convention, requiring a tribunal at the point of capture, Lehnert explained.
After numerous reports of human rights violations and degrading treatment of prisoners at the Guantanamo Bay, the military detention facility has largely become synonymous with prisoner abuse and torture.
Despite reported human rights violations, there has not been a single high-level prosecution of a US official for violating international law relating to the treatment of prisoners of war or enemy combatants.