Monday, April 4, 2011

 
9/11 mastermind to face trial by Guantánamo military commission

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to be tried at the US military base in Cuba rather than in a civilian court on American soil
= RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATOR
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged 9/11 mastermind, has been in detention at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba since his capture in Pakistan in 2003. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Ed Pilkington in New York
guardian.co.uk,

Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, will be tried by a military commission in Guantánamo. It is the latest retreat by the Obama administration from its much-vaunted plans to overhaul the legal processing of terror suspects.

Mohammed and four other terror suspects will be put on trial through a military system that President Obama had vowed to abolish when he began in office in January 2009. The White House had declared its intent in 2009 to push them through the civilian justice system with a landmark trial at the federal court in Manhattan, a stone's throw away from Ground Zero.

But the proposal invoked a groundswell of opposition, most powerfully from New York residents and the mayor of the city, Michael Bloomberg.

The US attorney general, Eric Holder, was expected to announce the administration's U-turn at a press conference in Guantánamo.

The about-face is hugely symbolic as Mohammed was al-Qaida's main architect of 9/11, according to the commission of inquiry into the terrorist outrages convened in New York. How he is treated arguably sets the tone for America's legal handling of terror suspects.

Obama had wanted to bring that legal process back into the norms of civilian justice. But he was thwarted by a wall of opposition from Republicans in Congress, backed by some Democrats.

Republicans inserted a provision into the latest defence budget effectively banning the use of Pentagon funds to transfer Guantánamo detainees to the mainland, thus blocking any civilian trials. Obama initially promised to repeal the restriction, but last month he backtracked by allowing the resumption of military commission trials at the US base in Cuba.

Bloomberg also did a volte face. Initially, he approved the idea of a civilian trial for Mohammed in downtown Manhattan, but then turned against it, arguing that it would cost the city more than $400m (£248m) in security alone.

Other opponents claimed that it would again make New York the target of terrorists' wrath.

Never Forget, a group of family members of victims of the attacks, as well as emergency workers and former military personnel, welcomed the announcement. "We are relieved that President Obama has abandoned his plan to try the 9/11 conspirators in a civilian court on US soil. Prosecuting war criminals, whose only connection to this country is the location of their victims, in military commissions is the right thing to do."

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[Webmaster - Trying the defendents in a military tribunal instead of a civilian court will have the following effects. It will:
  1. Give our criminal federal government much greater control of the procedure and presentation of the evidence
  2. Allow them to hide the rigged procedure/show from public scrutiny
  3. Enable them to manipulate the outcome with much greater ease to their benefit
The criminal federal government, led by Kenyan-born (his wife says so at 2:15 in this video! so is she a liar?) usurper, Barry Soetoro cannot afford to have an open fair trial examining the evidence from the events surrounding 9/11/2001. The public would know right away that the attacks were set up by Neocon Republicans (Bush, Cheney, the PNAC group, etc.), segments of U.S. intelligence and law enforcement, and Israel's Mossad. And now they are telling us that Al Qaeda is our "ally" in Libya? Wake up and quit being sheep! Look at the evidence... Quit being dupes of the criminal federal government and the Zionist-controlled corporate media!]

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Saturday, May 29, 2010

 
Most Guantanamo Detainees Low-Level Fighters, Task Force Report Says

About 10 percent of the 240 detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, when President Obama took office were "leaders, operatives and facilitators involved in plots against the United States," but the majority were low-level fighters, according to a previously undisclosed government report. About 5 percent of the detainees could not be categorized at all.

The final report by the Guantanamo Review Task Force recommends that 126 of the detainees be transferred either to their homes or to a third country; that 36 be prosecuted in either federal court or a military commission; and that 48 be held indefinitely under the laws of war. A group of 30 Yemenis was approved for release if security conditions in their home country improve...

[Full Article]

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Thursday, May 13, 2010

 
Military Expands 'Obama's Gitmo' In Afghanistan

The U.S. military is getting set to expand its controversial detention camp at Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan — just as new reports of a “black jail” inside the facility are surfacing.

In a solicitation issued today, the U.S. military put out a request for a contractor to build three new detention housing units next to the existing facility, known formally as the Afghan National Detention Facility at Parwan (Bagram is in the southwest corner of Parwan Province). As of last September, 645 prisoners were held there.

The cost of the project — which will include construction of one special housing unit and two detention housing units — is projected to run between $10 million and $25 million. The contractor will have approximately nine months to complete the entire project.

Presumably, these new buildings are in addition to Bagram’s separate and previously clandestine detention facility, revealed by the International Committee of the Red Cross yesterday. Nine former prisoners say they were abused there, according to the BBC...

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

 
20 Percent of Released Detainees Returning to Terrorism

Washington (CNN)
-- The number of former detainees once held by the U.S. in Cuba but now returning to terrorism activity has risen from 14 percent to 20 percent, according to a senior Defense official.

A classified report by the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) says that one in five former detainees returned or are suspected to have returned to terrorist activity after leaving the U.S. prison facility. That is an increase from 14 percent from a similar report by the DIA released in April, according to the official familiar with the new report...

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