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Gitmo Recidivists

by Daniel Pipes
Thu, 30 Sep 2004

updated Thu, 14 Oct 2004

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There's been a hue and cry about the United States authorities having to release the prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, so this is now taking place. But two recent developments concerning former inmates should prompt the U.S. government to rethink this incautious policy:

  • Abdul Ghaffar, an Afghan, returned to Afghanistan and rejoined the Taliban as a commander. He was killed in a raid by Afghan security forces on Sept. 25 in Uruzgan.
  • Slimane Hadj Abderahmane, a Dane, 31, announced on Danish television on Sept. 29 that he plans to hide from the Danish authorities until he can get to Chechnya where he will fight the Russians in the jihad there. As for the agreement he signed with the U.S. authorities promising not to engage in terrorist activity, he said, "This document is toilet paper for the Americans if they want it."

The Wall Street Journal reports (for a free posting of the editorial, try this) that a total of 202 prisoners have been released from Guantánamo - 146 released and 56 transferred to the control of their home governments. It then goes on to argue:

The Taliban and others swept up during the Afghan War were gradually transformed in much of the media coverage into misunderstood innocents being held by a U.S. government bent on ignoring the Constitution. Never mind that there's a war on, and that most of these men are determined and deceptive killers.

This political campaign culminated in this year's Supreme Court decision that gave the Guantánamo prisoners the right to challenge their detentions in federal court. About 70 prisoners have done so already. Sandra Day O'Connor notwithstanding, we still find it hard to imagine that a federal judge can do a better job than the executive branch of deciding whether or not a prisoner remains dangerous.

Thanks in part to the Supreme Court, another prisoner who will soon be free is Yaser Esam Hamdi, a U.S.-born enemy combatant who is to be shipped home to Saudi Arabia but will not be put under detention there. Hamdi was captured on a battlefield in Afghanistan in 2001 with an AK-47 in his hands. Let's hope the next time we hear about him it won't be because he too is once again trying to kill Americans.

Comment: This replicates a pattern that the Israelis have discovered, to their regret, of released Hezbollah and other terrorists. (September 30, 2004)

Oct. 13, 2004 update: Add a third Gitmo recidivist to the list:

  • Abdullah Mehsud, 28, returned to Pakistan after two years in Guantánamo Bay and now leads a terrorist group that has kidnapped two Chinese engineers near the Pakistani border with Afghanistan and threatens to kill the hostages. According to The News, an Islamabad newspaper, "Mehsud has become a hero to anti-US fighters active in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. He keeps long hair and has a daredevil nature. All this has made him a colorful and interesting character."

To make matters worse, the Pentagon indicates that it knows of five recidivists in all who have "returned to the battlefield." Of the other four, one killed an Afghan judge, another was captured a second time as he fired on U.S. forces, and the two final ones were killed fighting U.S. forces in Afghanistan. In addition, the military has uncorroborated information that seven other recidivists "have participated in attacks or provided support to anti-coalition forces in Afghanistan." The Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Commander Alvin Plexico, noted rightly that these developments provide "further evidence that these individuals are dedicated to their cause and have been trained to be deceptive."

Oct. 22, 2004 update: The Washington Post reports, based on Pentagon sources, that "At least 10 detainees released from the Guantánamo Bay prison after U.S. officials concluded they posed little threat have been recaptured or killed fighting U.S. or coalition forces in Pakistan and Afghanistan," then provides details.

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