Introduction and Afterword by Mike Griffith, Staff Writer
In recent weeks we’ve seen scattered articles in the press and online that claim that "almost all" the detainees at Guantanamo are "innocent." The article below thorouoghly refutes this fantasy.
It’s hard to fathom how anyone who has seriously studied this issue could ever get on a public forum and claim that "almost all" the Guantanamo detainees are innocent. Consider just a few of the known, established facts about those detainees:
* At least 30 of the detainees who have been released from Guantanamo have rejoined Jihadist forces to fight against America and her allies. Incredibly, some liberals claim that these detainees were harmless before they were sent to Guantanamo and only became terrorists because of their "unjust detention." Recently Keith Olbermann made this claim about none other than Abu Al-Shahri–the same Abu Al-Shahri who appeared in a recent Al Qaeda video and proclaimed that his time at Guantanamo "only increased" his zeal for Jihad:
"By Allah, imprisonment only increased our persistence in our principles for which we went out, did jihad for, and were imprisoned for." (Two Ex-Guantanamo Inmates Appear in Al Qaeda Video)
* Many of the Guantanamo detainees were either (1) captured on the field of battle or trying to flee the field of battle, (2) captured while attending Jihadist meetings, (3) captured during raids on Jihadist safe houses, or (4) captured based on information from terrorist documents or computers.
* About one-fourth of the Guantanamo detainees can’t be returned to their native countries because their native countries consider them terrorists and either don’t want them or would execute and/or torture them as soon as they gained custody of them.
* Nearly all the Guantanamo detainees have praised the 9/11 attacks as "blessed" and "great" at every opportunity they’ve had to talk about them with journalists and others. As just one example, look at the recent defense filing submitted by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM). Speaking for himself and for his Jihadist brethren who have also been indicted, KSM said the following:
"Our religion is a religion of fear and terror to the enemies of God: The Jews, Christians and pagans. With God’s willing, we are terrorists to the bone"
"Your end is very near and your fall will be just as the fall of the towers on the blessed 9/11 day."
"We ask from God to accept our contributions to the great attack, the great attack on America, and to place our nineteen martyred brethren among the highest peak in paradise." (Gitmo Prisoners Defend "Blessed" 9/11 Attack)
And now, to the article:
Detention Retention: Are Guantanamo Detainees All Innocent?
They might choose a different word as well to describe Muktar Al Warafi, who openly acknowledged traveling to Afghanistan in response to fatwas, affiliating with the Taliban, training at a camp, and then going to the front lines "just to visit."
They might have thought another detainee, Abdul Latif Elbanna, was admitting something substantial, rather than professing innocence, when he described helping bring an Al Qaeda figure hiding in London his wife and son. Perhaps another detainee, Musab Omar Ali Al Mudwani, was professing innocence when he acknowledged going to Afghanistan, training at an Al Qaeda camp and seeing Osama Bin Laden twice–since he claimed to have been tricked into doing so. Numerous others of the 37 acknowledge staying in Taliban or Al Qaeda guest houses, training, or taking other forms of assistance from the Taliban.
Waxman conceded, immediately after stating that all of the detainees before the court deny all wrongdoing, that the facts of their cases differ a lot from one another. "[I]t may well be," he said, that habeas corpus review of the type he advocates "would reveal perhaps that some of these [detainees] are lawfully detained." Indeed, it may. In many cases, the court would need look no further than the detainees’ own words–one of many reasons the Bush administration’s allergy to judicial review of detentions has been so self-defeating.
But the broader debate over Guantanamo has suffered greatly from overbroad claims of erroneous detentions there. The New York Times referred in an editorial to "hundreds of innocent men … jailed at Guantanamo Bay without charges or rudimentary rights"–a statement it cannot possibly support. We hear endless stories about relief workers, instructors in the Koran, and victims of mistaken identity swept up and sold for bounty by the Northern Alliance to gullible Americans led by a malicious administration. There’s an element of truth here, of course. A few certain cases of egregious error have surfaced. And others present wrenching conflicts between fairness, justice, and security interests. For example, Waxman’s own clients are a group of six Algerian-born men who were living in Bosnia and arrested on suspicion of plotting to blow up the American embassy in Sarajevo. After the Bosnian Supreme Court ordered them released, however, the authorities turned them over to the U.S. military, which whisked them off to Guantanamo. All claim to be innocent of everything. And the military’s allegations against them have never faced any real test.
But there is also an element of romantic fantasy in the belief that large numbers of Guantanamo detainees are there by mistake. For the past six months, I have been studying declassified materials from Defense Department reviews of Guantanamo cases: transcripts and records of the much derided panels known as the Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRT) and Administrative Review Boards (ARB). While my data are not yet fully complete, the general picture of the people who went through these reviews, many of whom have been released, is clear: About a third of detainees admit facts that offer significant–though not always adequate–support to the government’s contention that they are "enemy combatants." About a third deny everything. And about a third make no statements at all. (While some military interrogations have been coercive and the CIA has probably crossed over into outright torture, nobody has alleged that these particular statements, which took place in hearings before panels of officers, were involuntary.) This approximate ratio has remained relatively consistent even as the population at Guantanamo has shrunk.
The admissions vary a great deal. Some detainees proudly declare their Al Qaeda membership and terrorist activity. Many more admit fighting for the Taliban. Some Afghans claim plausibly to have been forced into Taliban service. And a fairly large group denies membership or belligerence but admits to some lesser degree of affiliation–staying in Taliban or Al Qaeda housing or taking training, for example–that is at least suggestive.
The denials vary a great deal as well. In some cases, they have the ring of truth. In other cases, they are so patently absurd as to warrant quick dismissal; in one case, a detainee claimed to have been buying rare collectibles-mummies, to be precise. In the vast majority of cases, they are not easily assessed one way or another in the declassified material. A great many detainees tell more or less the same small number of stories: That they came to Afghanistan to do relief or charity work, to study, to look for jobs, or to check out the supposedly "pure" Islamic Taliban regime. My guess is that the overwhelming majority of these detainees are lying–for the simple reason that it beggars belief that the roundup of foreigners in Afghanistan and Pakistan could have nailed such a concentration of relief workers and students. But the stories are probably true in a percentage of cases, and the government’s evidence of their falsehood may in quite a few instances be weak–particularly if one considers only the evidence that would be admissible in court.
The more I studied the CSRT and ARB records, in fact, the more convinced I became that the government is another victim of the inadequate process that it set up for reviewing the detainees–which has lost in the public arena no matter what those reviews found. The CSRTs found 38 out of nearly 600 detainees to be "no longer enemy combatants," a bizarre euphemism for erroneously held. The ARBs quickly freed another 14 of those the CSRTs found to be enemy combatants. Yet where the review processes have freed people, they never received any credit for separating the wheat from the chaff. When detainees openly admitted their affiliations, validating the government’s claims, the secrecy associated with the hearings and records meant that the public never learned about it. And when the reviews resolved contested issues of fact in the government’s favor, their ad hoc status, stacked rules, and lack of congressional authorization denied their judgments credibility in the public eye. Almost no matter what they did, people saw them as unjust.
This country desperately needs a new adjudicatory framework for these detainees–one that includes an expanded judicial review, fairer rules, and clearer, less permissive standards for detainability. On this point, my only disagreement with Waxman is on the question of which branch of government should set it up. He urges the courts to do it through the habeas process; I want to see Congress design and enact a statutory scheme. That said, I don’t believe that the result of such a process would be freedom for a lot of innocent people. The more likely outcome would be continued detention with the judiciary’s stamp of approval for the majority of detainees, and freedom for two groups: A small group of true innocents and a larger group consisting of dangerous folks against whom the government has only weak evidence.
The scary question we need to address as a society is how large we are willing to let that second group grow in order to make sure the first group becomes as small as possible.
AFTERWORD
As the article notes, some of the Guantanamo detainees were unjustifiably detained and were released by Guantanamo review boards after being found innocent. But to say that "almost all" the detainees are innocent is erroneous.
Sources for Further Study:
Guantanamo Revelation
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122575933265095405.html
Yemen Forgery Trial Includes Released Saudi Gitmo Detainee
http://armiesofliberation.com/archives/2007/02/20/forgery-trial/
New Taliban Chief was Once at Gitmo
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29622714/
Gitmo Prisoners Defend "Blessed" 9/11 Attack
http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/03/10/gitmo.terror.prisoners/index.html
Pentagon: Ex-Gitmo Detainees Resume Terror Acts
http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/01/14/gitmo.detainees/index.html
Ex-Gitmo Detainees Missing, Re-emerging as Terrorists
http://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/cb_guantanamo_al_qaida/2009/01/27/175427.html
Released Guantanamo Detainees Still Returning to Terrorism
http://blog.heritage.org/2009/01/14/released-guantanamo-detainees-still-returning-to-terrorism/
Dispelling Misconceptions
http://www.heritage.org/research/nationalsecurity/wm1556.cfm
A Tour of Guantanamo Prison
http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4856
Two Ex-Guantanamo Inmates Appear in Al Qaeda Video
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hZfIcWnHqBz4kQR90lC_pXaHeW4Q
Former Gitmo Detainee Leads Taliban Fight Against U.S.
http://www.americanconservativedaily.com/2009/03/former-gitmo-detainee-leads-taliban-fight-against-us/
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