Politics | Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani Why Bother Putting Terrorists on Trial? ...Since we're not going to release them By Kevin Spak Posted Dec 10, 2010 12:24 PM CST Copied In this 2009 courtroom sketch, Guantanamo detainee Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, left, listens as his civilian lawyer Scott Fenstermaker, right, speaks at his arraignment in U.S. Federal Court in New York. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Williams, File) Why does the Obama administration insist on trying terrorists when it has no intention of freeing them? In October, the federal judge in the trial of Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, an alleged conspirator in two US embassy bombings, complained that even if Ghailani were found innocent, the government could continue detaining him as an “enemy combatant” until the war on terror is over. “So what exactly is the point of the trial?” asks Jacob Sullum in Reason. Because al-Qaeda will never formally surrender, Ghailani will be imprisoned for life no matter what. The Pentagon and administration have all but confirmed this. Is the world really supposed to applaud because we gave a prisoner a trial with a pre-determined outcome? Even seeking the death penalty seems like a pointless exercise—the administration already claims the right to kill terrorists without trial in the field. “The government could simply let him go—and then kill him.” Read These Next Officials say ICE agent who shot Renee Good had internal bleeding. Dems and Republicans team up to block Trump on Greenland. Tennis player celebrates win—before losing to an American. Verizon finally got phones out of SOS mode. Report an error