Guantanamo Bay.
The name of the U.S. Naval Base located on a small sliver of Cuba likely brings up many different associations: A relic of the Cold War, or a military prison for suspected terrorists.
And for some in a post-9/11 world, it's a symbol of torture.
But for the military personnel stationed here — mostly sailors and Marines, it's just Gitmo. It's a tougher duty station than most. Unlike other places in the U.S. military, troops don't get to venture out in town, and guards in the detention facility often endure 12-hour shifts for four days straight, with two days off.
Robert Johnson, our own Military & Defense Editor, recently visited the base.
Just getting there was a challenge.
Finding the charter flight to Guantanamo Bay is not easy. Turns out it's here, the last gate at the Fort Lauderdale airport, under the overpass: at arrivals.
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Every other gate had destinations. Ours had only this.
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Aside from that, everything else around the gate was Florida airport normal.
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See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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