Two court cases from detainees captured in Afghanistan ask federal judges to consider at what point a conflict is over and whether Obama, in a speech last December, crossed that line when he said the US "combat mission in Afghanistan is ending."
The questions are important since the Supreme Court has held that the government may hold prisoners captured during a war for only as long as the conflict in that country continues.
The court challenges are the latest example of the yearslong legal wrangling tied to Guantanamo, whose status as a prison for terror suspects has long defied resolution. Obama promised to close the prison and has transferred out more than half the detainees who were there when he took office in 2009.
In just the last week, six detained Yemenis were relocated to Oman, leaving 116 prisoners.
Over the last decade, detainees have challenged the military tribunal process used to prosecute them, their treatment behind bars and efforts to force-feed them, among other issues.
The latest arguments, which could presumably be adopted by other detainees captured in Afghanistan, have played out in recent months in the federal court in Washington. No judge has yet ruled, though legal experts say they expect an uphill battle for the detainees, given the deference courts generally afford to the government on matters of national security.
The two men, both held without charges, argue that an end to the fighting in Afghanistan means their detentions are now unlawful under the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force. That law provided the legal justification for the imprisonment of foreign fighters captured on overseas battlefields.
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