BIRMINGHAM,
England -- Former President Carter said Saturday the detention of terror suspects
at the Guantanamo Bay Naval base was an embarrassment and had given extremists
an excuse to attack the United States.
Carter also criticized the U.S.-led
war in Iraq as "unnecessary and unjust."
"I think what's
going on in Guantanamo Bay and other places is a disgrace to the U.S.A.,"
he told a news conference at the Baptist World Alliance's centenary conference
in Birmingham, England. "I wouldn't say it's the cause of terrorism, but
it has given impetus and excuses to potential terrorists to lash out at our country
and justify their despicable acts."
Carter said, however, that terrorist
acts could not be justified, and that while Guantanamo "may be an aggravating
factor ... it's not the basis of terrorism."
Critics of President Bush's
administration have long accused the U.S. government of unjustly detaining terror
suspects at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base on the southeastern tip of Cuba. Hundreds
of men have been held indefinitely at the prison, without charge or access to
lawyers.
"What has happened at Guantanamo Bay ... does not represent
the will of the American people," Carter said Saturday. "I'm embarrassed
about it, I think its wrong. I think it does give terrorists an unwarranted excuse
to use the despicable means to hurt innocent people."
Earlier this
month, Carter called for the Guantanamo prison to be shut down, saying reports
of abuses there were an embarassment to the United States. He also said that the
United States needs to make sure no detainees are held incommunicado and that
all are told the charges against them.
Carter, who won the 2002 Nobel Peace
Prize, has been an outspoken critic of the Iraq war.
"I thought then,
and I think now, that the invasion of Iraq was unnecessary and unjust. And I think
the premises on which it was launched were false," he said Saturday.
The
Baptist World Alliance, comprising more than 200 Baptist unions around the world,
was formed in London in 1905. The headquarters of the alliance, which meets in
a different location every five years, moved to the United States in 1947.
An
estimated 12,700 delegates gathered in the city of Birmingham in central England
for the conference. Carter, a Sunday school teacher in his hometown of Plains,
Ga., was due to lead a Bible study lesson during the conference.
He praised
British police and intelligence services for the swift arrests in connection with
the July 21 failed bombing attempts on London's transit system.
"I'm
very proud to be in a nation that stands so stalwart against terrorism with us,"
he said. "The people of my country have united our hearts and sympathy for
the tragedy that you have suffered from terrorism."
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© 2005 The Associated
Press