On 28 March, a group of five Democrat senators visited the base. In a statement, they said they were "outraged by the scale and wastefulness of the Trump Administration's misuse of our military", and described the camp as "seemingly designed to undermine due process and evade legal scrutiny".
BBC Sport looks at the current laws, when cricket has dabbled with substitutes in the past and asks the Test Match Special team whether it is time for subs to be brought in...Cricket's Laws, set out by the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), state the umpires can allow a substitute if a player "has been injured or become ill and that this occurred during the match" or for "any other wholly acceptable reason".
"A substitute shall not bowl or act as captain but may act as wicketkeeper only with the consent of the umpires," the Law adds.The exception comes if a player suffers a concussion.Replacements for concussion have been allowed since 2019 - Australia's Marnus Labuschagne famously became the first concussion sub in Test cricket when replacing Steve Smith in the Ashes - and are able to bat and bowl.
Covid-19 replacements were brought in after the pandemic but have since been scrapped.There are numerous occasions when injuries have impacted matches.
England effectively played the entire first Test of the 2019 Ashes at Edgbaston with 10 players after James Anderson injured his calf four overs into day one.
In 2023, Australia spinner Nathan Lyon limped out of the second Test at Lord's on day two with a calf injury."There was so much stuff that we couldn't see where we were going," said Mr Swiacki.
Mr Edwards confirmed that the blast "took out all the windows" and they had to climb out of the restaurant through a broken window.The duo went back into the hotel to see if anyone else was hurt, and retrieve some of their belongings.
They also went outside to look for their vehicles, which were "full of aid" but were "all destroyed", Mr Edwards said.Mr Swiacki's van, which he had parked outside the hotel, was "smashed completely to pieces".