It's fundamentally different. The U.S.-run facilities were built by the United States, or funding was provided for the ANDF. The detention facility in Parwan was physically constructed by the United States.
In both facilities the United States was involved with training and mentoring Afghan officials to take over each role. For example, at the ANDF, if you were to enter the guard tower, you would see a U.S. guard sitting at a computer, next to an Afghan guard. The U.S. guard would be training the Afghan on how to use the equipment. And every other aspect of the facility is like that.
The U.S. facility in Parwan is run by the U.S. military. Starting tomorrow, 250 Afghan guards will report for duty, where they will begin training in anticipation of the ultimate handover of the facility to Afghan control. The facility will only be handed over to the custody of the Afghans when the U.S. is confident they have sufficiently trained and mentored the guard force as well as every other officer who operates in the facility. They are also training judges and they're training national security prosecutors on how to run a case specifically on the evidence collection that I referred to briefly in my earlier remarks. The U.S. military is training the Afghans on how to build a case without a confession, to take away the incentive for torture.