The Justice Department announced this morning that they've transferred two more Gitmo detainees, one from Chad, and one from Iraq, back to their home countries. Since 2004, more than 540 Gitmo detainees have been released. Yesterday, the DoJ announced they had transferred four Chinese Uighurs, who have long been determined not to be enemy combatants but could not be sent back to China for fear they would be tortured, to Bermuda, where they will be settled. The Washington Post also reports this morning that the Obama administration has all but given up on trying to release Gitmo detainees who have been determined not to be dangerous into the United States, which will make the process of closing Gitmo all the more complicated. Many European countries have refused requests to settle detainees from Guantanamo unless the U.S. shows it's willing to do the same. -- A. Serwer