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by serve_yay 4196 days ago
I am not sure why this would affect that, as far as I know that part of Cuba is considered to be US soil.
1 comments

Guantanamo Bay isn't US soil, it's Cuban soil indefinitely leased to the US for the purpose of maintaining a naval base. (The concentration camp is a side benefit, constructed to evade laws against building concentration camps on American soil.)
OK, I guess that is a distinction.
Indefinitely leased is nitpicking but at least you got to say concentration camp twice.
It's not nitpicking when it is what provides the legal foundation for Gitmo in the first place.
Are there practical differences between ownership and indefinite lease? I mean can the lease be cancelled or terms changed unilaterally?
The Castro government doesn't recognize the lease as legal. So at least in some sense it is being maintained unilaterally.

(I'm having trouble finding something to link that is not charged, but I think that is a fair characterization of it)

ownership != sovereign soil
Again what are the practical differences? All I can find is stuff about mineral rights.