[Ppnews] Ghost Prisoners Speak After Five And A Half Years
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Thu Sep 13 13:00:34 EDT 2007
http://www.counterpunch.org/worthington09132007.html
September 13, 2007
The Guantánamo Transcripts: Ghost Prisoners
Speak After Five And A Half Years, And 9/11
hijacker Recants His Tortured Confession
By ANDY WORTHINGTON
In another resounding demonstration of the
importance of legally constituted checks and
balances on executive power in the United States,
the Associated Press, after filing a request to
the Pentagon under the Freedom of Information
Act, has secured 58 transcripts from the latest
round of annual Administrative Review Boards at
Guantánamo, convened to assess whether the
detainees still pose a threat to the US, or if
they are still presumed to have ongoing intelligence value.
This is just the latest in a series of important
actions undertaken by the AP with regard to
Guantánamo. Previously, the agency secured the
right to reproduce 60 habeas petitions, and
obtained the 517 Summaries of Evidence for the
Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRTs) held at
Guantánamo. Used to assess whether the detainees
had been correctly designated as enemy
combatants, these documents were analyzed by
Mark and Joshua Denbeaux of Seton Hall Law School
to produce a ground-breaking report in February
2006, which demonstrated that, according to the
governments own allegations, only 8 percent of
the detainees were accused of having any kind of
affiliation with al-Qaeda, 55 percent were not
determined to have committed any hostile acts
against the US or its allies, and 86 percent were
not captured by US forces, but by their Pakistan
and Afghan allies, at a time when the Americans
were making bounty payments, equivalent to an
average workers lifetime salary, for the
delivery of al-Qaeda and Taliban suspects.
Subsequent revelations have done little to
suggest that even these lowly figures are
reliable, and the recent testimony of Lt. Col.
Stephen Abraham, who was involved in compiling
the evidence for the Tribunals, has been
particularly damaging to the governments case.
Abraham declared that the gathering of materials
for use in the tribunals was severely flawed, and
frequently consisted of intelligence of a
generalized nature often outdated, often
generic, rarely specifically relating to the
individual subjects of the CSRTs or to the
circumstances related to those individuals
status, and concluded that the whole system was
geared towards rubber-stamping the detainees
prior designation as enemy combatants.
In spring 2006, the AP secured its greatest
victory, after taking the government to court
over its refusal to reveal the names and
nationalities of the Guantánamo detainees, as
well as 8,000 pages of transcripts from their
CSRTs and the first round of ARBs. A treasure
trove of information (though not necessarily in
the way that Donald Rumsfeld had in mind when he
declared, in December 2001, that the first
prisoners captured crossing from Afghanistan to
Pakistan should be a treasure trove of
intelligence leads), these documents not only
revealed for the first time in four years,
scandalously who was actually held in
Guantánamo, but also provided, through the
transcripts, the first opportunity for the
detainees to tell their stories to the world.
Although the tribunals and review boards were
and are as monstrously illegal as the rest of
the Guantánamo regime, with lawyers excluded from
the hearings and decisions based largely on
secret evidence obtained through torture,
coercion and bribery, the information contained
in the transcripts was so compelling that, when
cross-referenced with the detainees names and
arranged chronologically, it provided the basis
for my forthcoming book The Guantánamo Files,
which unveils the story of Guantánamo and the
majority of its detainees for the first time.
The latest documents secured by the AP have just
been released to the public by the Department of
Defense, and it would, I think, be fair to say
that they are the second most important set of
documents relating to Guantánamo that have been
released by the Pentagon (following the spring
2006 documents described above). As well as
containing the 58 transcripts from the Second
Round of the ARBs, the documents also include,
for the first time, the evidence in the form
of the Unclassified Summaries of Evidence so
heavily criticized by Stephen Abraham for all
the Tribunals with the names of the detainees
included (they were previously redacted), as well
as all the Unclassified Summaries for both rounds
of the ARBs. Also included are transcripts of the
habeas corpus petitions of 179 detainees, and the
whole set of documents is indexed so thoroughly
that it appears, implausibly, to have been
compiled as a testament to the importance of
Freedom of Information legislation, with the aim
of facilitating a greater understanding of
Guantánamo and its detainees than has previously been possible.
These documents will provide lawyers, human
rights activists and researchers with an
invaluable base from which to gain at least a
glimpse into the lives of the many dozens of
detainees without legal representation, who have
never taken part in any tribunals or review
boards and whose stories were hitherto completely
unknown. More crucially, perhaps, they will also
enable critics of the regime to follow the ways
in which additional allegations produced under
dubious circumstances in countless interrogations
both at Guantánamo and in secret prisons have
mounted up against the detainees during the long
years of their illegal imprisonment.
The only disappointment is that the documents
relating to the decisions made by the review
boards about whether to release detainees, or to
continue to hold them, are so heavily redacted as
to be all but useless, but even on this point
other documents the Indexes to Transfer and
Release Decisions provide invaluable, and
previously concealed information about who has
been released, and, more crucially, about the
many dozens of detainees at least 70, according
to my first analysis who have been cleared for
release through the ARBs but are still held at
Guantánamo because the US government cannot reach
a satisfactory agreement with their home
governments (as in the cases of the Yemenis), or
is unwilling to return them to regimes where,
ironically, after years of lawless and brutal
detention in US custody, they face the prospect
of torture or other ill-treatment. While
information about who has been cleared is made
available to individual detainees lawyers, the
value of these documents is that they enable this
information to be extended to those particularly
vulnerable individuals without legal representation.
Of particular interest, for now, are the
transcripts of the ARBs, especially as the AP
trailed the release of the documents with a
series of press releases over the weekend,
picking out a few stories that contain important
information. Chief amongst these is the
transcript of the review board hearing of
Mohammed al-Qahtani, one of several men presumed
to be the intended 20th hijacker on 9/11.
Al-Qahtanis story has been widely reported,
particularly in 2005 when Time obtained a
day-to-day transcript of the enhanced
interrogation techniques to which he was
subjected over a 50-day period from November 2002
to January 2003, when he was, amongst other
things, interrogated and kept awake for 20 hours
a day on most days, stripped naked, sexually
humiliated, and forced to bark like a dog.
Although al-Qahtanis lawyer reported in March
2006 that he had recanted his confession, the
transcript of his ARB hearing is the first time
that he has denied the 9/11 allegations in
person, telling his review board, this is the
first statement I am making of my own free will
and without coercion or under the threat of
torture, and stating, I am a businessman, a
peaceful man. I have no connection to terrorism,
violence or fighters. Refuting allegations that
he admitted traveling to Afghanistan in 2001,
that he attended a training camp, and that met
Osama bin Laden and agreed to participate in a
martyr mission for al-Qaeda, al-Qahtani said
that the statements were not true and that he had
only admitted to them while he was being
tortured at Guantánamo, and included his
allegations of torture in a statement that was read out to the board.
In other press releases over the weekend, Andrew
O. Selsky and Ben Fox of the AP focused on the
story of Ayman Batarfi, a Yemeni doctor caught up
in the failed Tora Bora campaign, in November and
December 2001, when the US military allowed Osama
bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri and numerous other
senior figures in al-Qaeda and the Taliban to
escape across the unguarded Pakistani border.
Explaining that he was not a terrorist but had
been caught up with al-Qaeda in the Tora Bora
mountains, Batarfi said that he met Osama bin
Laden in the mountains, to explain to him that
the defense of Tora Bora was a lost cause,
because Most of all the total guns in the Tora
Bora area was 16 Kalashnikovs and there are 200
people. He noted, however, that bin Laden did
not prepare himself for Tora Bora and to be frank
he didn't care about anyone but himself. He came
for a day to visit the area and we talked to him
and we wanted to leave this area. He said he
didn't know where to go himself and the second
day he escaped and was gone. Abandoned in the
mountains, Batarfi said that he struggled to tend
to the wounded and dying, who were overwhelmed by
American air power. I was out of medicine and I
had a lot of casualties, he explained. I did a
hand amputation by a knife and I did a finger
amputation with scissors, and if someone was
injured badly I was just operating on the table.
Batarfis story is not widely known, although I
was able to cover it in depth in my book because
he has taken part in previous tribunals and
review boards. As a result, I was more interested
in uncovering the stories of other detainees
whose voices had, until these documents were
released, not been heard at all despite having
spent over five and half years in US custody.
Although these men are not strictly ghost
prisoners because their names and nationalities
were released under duress last year, as opposed
to the thousands of unknown, unrepresented and
unreported prisoners held in Afghanistan, Iraq
and other undisclosed locations there is still
something deeply disturbing about the fact that,
after all this time, in which they have been held
without charge or trial, in conditions of almost
total isolation that would be difficult for even
the most hardened of convicted criminals on the
US mainland to endure, the voices of these men
are being heard for the first time.
They include Hani al-Khalif, a former Saudi
soldier, who served with US soldiers during the
first Gulf War, who maintained that he had
traveled to Afghanistan in the winter of 2000 to
fight with the Taliban against the Northern
Alliance, and explained, The Taliban government
is the right side to belong to because the other
side has come out of the Taliban which is wrong,
and another Saudi who didnt wish to be
identified who said that he wanted to
participate in jihad for religious purposes to
help people in need of food distribution,
because this would strengthen his relationship
with God, and described how he had made the
decision because of emotion, because I saw a
picture of a little baby that had dirty clothes
and her hair was not combed or cut. He insisted
that his goal was to help for two months and
then return home, but said that on arrival in
Afghanistan he was tricked into attending the
al-Farouq camp (a camp for Arab recruits that was
affiliated with al-Qaeda), where he was dismayed
to discover that it was a terrorist training
camp with political motivations, not religious goals.
Also included is the testimony of Hisham Sliti, a
Tunisian client of the London-based legal charity
Reprieve, which represents dozens of Guantánamo
detainees. Clive Stafford Smith, Reprieves legal
director, reported Slitis story in his book Bad
Men: Guantánamo and the Secret Prisons, in which
he portrayed an affable former drug addict,
imprisoned for many years in prisons in Italy and
Belgium, who reminisced at length about the
quality of the European prisons compared to
Guantánamo. In Italy the prison was wide open
for six hours a day, he explained. You could
have anything in your room I had a little
fornello, a gas cooker. Can you imagine the
Americans allowing that? Here, we call a plastic
spoon a Camp Delta Kalashnikov, as the soldiers
think were going to attack them with it. In the
first hearing that Sliti deigned to attend, he
lived up to Stafford Smiths character sketch,
explaining at length his various exploits in
Europe, and telling the board that he only ended
up in Afghanistan because he had begun attending
mosques in Belgium, where the country had been
portrayed as a clean, uncorrupted country where
he could study Sharia and further his religious
education, but that what he found instead was
that I didnt care for the country. It was very
hot, dusty and [the] women were ugly. The
atmosphere and environment didnt agree with me.
Another first-time testimony is that of Ravil
Mingazov, the last of eight Russians in
Guantánamo, who, it turns out, was actually born
in Tajikistan. A former soldier in the Russian
army, Mingazov explained that, although he had
been honored for excellent service early in his
career, he subsequently converted to Islam and
fell out of favor with the KGB to such an extent
that he deserted the army, left his wife and
family, and fled to Afghanistan with the help of
members of the Taliban-affiliated Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan. Refuting allegations that
he trained at al-Farouq, he said that he had made
up these stories while imprisoned at the US
airbase in Bagram, and added that he had in fact
fled from the IMU, traveling to Pakistan, where
he stayed at a center run by the missionary
organization Jamaat-al-Tablighi in Lahore. He
explained that he was captured, with 16 other
Guantánamo detainees, after moving to a guest
house used by university students in Faisalabad,
which was, unfortunately, owned or otherwise
connected to the high-value al-Qaeda suspect Abu Zubaydah.
Sadly given its undiluted focus on
anti-American militancy the only other
first-time story, that of the Saudi Abdul Rahman
al-Zahri, was the only one of the previously
unheard voices picked up by the AP, which
reported that he proudly proclaimed himself a
holy warrior and an enemy of the United
States. As the AP described it, al-Zahri
praised the Sept. 11 attacks and other terrorist
strikes and said they were retaliation for your
criminal acts and your military invasion [of] the
Islamic countries. While this was a fair précis
of his story although it did not mention that
he was not a member of al-Qaeda, stating instead
that he would have been honored to have been
chosen as a member it was, as I have indicated
above, unrepresentative of the majority of the
stories reported in the transcripts.
On the sixth anniversary of 9/11, al-Zahris
confession will no doubt assure some Americans
that the Bush administrations unprecedentedly
lawless and brutal conduct over the last six
years is justified, but I believe that what the
majority of the documents reveal both through
some of the examples cited above, and through the
many stories of wronged men betrayed by rivals or
through false intelligence that are scattered
throughout the transcripts is exactly the
opposite. From my particular perspective, as
someone who has studied the stories of the
detainees in depth for the last 18 months, the
most heart-rending aspect of the transcripts is
the confusion and despair shown by detainees who,
year after year in their review boards, and often
more frequently in their interrogations, have
painstakingly repeated their stories ad nauseam,
refuting wild and unsubstantiated allegations,
and at a loss to understand why they, in
particular, have been singled out for inclusion
in a never-ending cycle of total isolation and
evidence-free crimes. To give just one example,
the Afghan Mohammed Zahir, a 54-year old teacher
who had fled to Iran during the time of the
Taliban, has been telling his captors, since he
was seized in 2003, that he had returned to
Afghanistan to serve the new government of Hamid
Karzai by teaching in a secular school, but
received threatening night letters from the
Taliban, who betrayed him to the Americans. You
captured me because I am an Afghan or a Muslim,
he told his review board, but I havent done
anything. I was teaching the children under the tree.
In conclusion, then, the release of these
documents which was perhaps contrived by the
Pentagon to coincide with 9/11, in the hope that
they would be conveniently brushed under the
carpet does not vindicate the governments
post-9/11 policy, when, as CIA director Cofer
Black so memorably described it, the gloves came
off, but hints rather at the true legacy of
9/11: torture, disappearances and a regime of
secret prisons that should be anathema to those
living in a country the United States that
was founded on the rule of law, and that should
only be able to regard itself unflinchingly as a
beacon of civilized values if it returns to these
foundations, insisting that those in charge of
the country return to the rule of law that they
have flouted so outrageously, with such damaging
consequences for Americas reputation abroad, and
a concomitant disregard for the rights of
Americans themselves (as the hidden history of
torture in the case of Jose Padilla recently showed).
In the reflected world in which America admires
itself, the prisoners revealed in these
transcripts should be charged with crimes and
prosecuted in a recognized court of law, rather
than being consigned to an extra-legal black
hole, where mens futures are dealt with in a
paranoid and gullible atmosphere in which
allegations obtained through torture, coercion or
bribery are regarded as the truth, abuse is rife,
and the presumption of innocence has been done
away with completely. 9/11 was a crime a
monstrous crime but it should not have provided
an opportunity for the nations supposed
defenders to embark on a counter-campaign that
has ended up mocking the very values that it purported to defend.
Andy Worthington is a British historian, and the
author of
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0745326641/counterpunchmaga>The
Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774
Detainees in Americas Illegal Prison (to be
published by Pluto Press in October 2007).His
website is: www.andyworthington.co.uk He can be
reached at: <mailto:andy at andyworthington.co.uk>andy at andyworthington.co.uk
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415 863-9977
www.Freedomarchives.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://freedomarchives.org/pipermail/ppnews_freedomarchives.org/attachments/20070913/015277e8/attachment.htm>
More information about the PPnews
mailing list