http://www.alternet.org/story/150737/7_shocking_gitmo_revelations_from_wikil
eaks?akid=6885.30206.P3sHYq
<http://www.alternet.org/story/150737/7_shocking_gitmo_revelations_from_wiki
leaks?akid=6885.30206.P3sHYq&rd=1&t=12> &rd=1&t=12

 

    

 <http://rawstory.com/> Raw Story / By
<http://www.alternet.org/authors/12510/> Kase Wickman 

comments_image
<http://www.alternet.org/story/150737/7_shocking_gitmo_revelations_from_wiki
leaks?akid=6885.30206.P3sHYq&rd=1&t=12#disqus_thread> 5 COMMENTS 

7 Shocking Gitmo Revelations from WikiLeaks

The incoherence behind Gitmo is finally coming to light. 

April 25, 2011  |   

 

 

A massive leak of more than 700 military documents, attributed to infamous
transparency group WikiLeaks, was released Sunday night. Much of the new
information deals with detainees held in Guantanamo Bay, records that begin
immediately after the September 11 terrorist attacks and range to 2009,
including documents relating to 172 prisoners still held at the
controversial detention facility.

Here are seven shocking revelations about Guantanamo Bay and the practices
there.

One hundred twenty-seven "high risk" prisoners remain at Guantanamo Bay, but
almost as many "high risk" prisoners have been released to other countries
or freed, despite being described as "likely to pose a threat." Of the 600
detainees known to have been transferred out of the prison since 2002, 160
fell under the "high risk" categorization,
<http://www.npr.org/2011/04/24/135690396/detainees-transferred-or-freed-desp
ite-high-risk?ft=1&f=1014&sc=tw> according to NPR. At least two dozen
transferred "high risk" prisoners have been linked to terrorist activity
since their Gitmo exit, including two Saudis who became leaders of al-Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula.

"There's a group there that we all agree never gets let out, and then
there's the rest," Rep. Mike Conaway (R-TX) said of Guantanamo detainees at
a recent congressional hearing. "As you close on that number of folks who
should not ever be let go, then you run the risk of letting somebody go who
shouldn't be."

Officials aren't sure what they're doing. In 704 leaked documents assessing
detainees, the word "possibly"
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-flawed-evidence-fo
r-assessing-risk.html?hp> appears 387 times, "unknown" 188 times and
"deceptive" 85 times. Two conflicting committees from the Department of
Defense worked at the facility and clashed frequently over how to classify
prisoners' threat levels and the quality of information they shared.

While some "high risk" prisoners have returned to terrorism, still others
have become U.S. allies. A former Gitmo detainee whose files identify him as
"a probable member of al-Qaeda," Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda bin Qumu,
is now a key figure on the rebel side of the Libyan revolution, a leader of
a rebel brigade in the northern part of the country. When Qumu was
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/25/world/guantanamo-files-libyan-detainee-no
w-us-ally-of-sorts.html> captured in Pakistan shortly after 9/11, he was
considered an enemy of the United States. Now, he and the U.S. have a goal
in common: unseat Gaddafi.

Instead of getting closer to catching Osama bin Laden, the documents show
that the
<http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/04/24/112729/wikileaks-us-intelligence-summ
aries.html> focus has broadened from catching key al-Qaeda operatives,
noting information about other foreign operations. One captive was sent to
Gitmo so officials could glean any information he had on the Bahraini court,
and another was interrogated about any knowledge he had of Uzbekistan's
secret service.

Officials took note of every possible piece of evidence, in hopes of
building mosaics of information - even evidence as trivial as origami art.
<http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/04/24/112729/wikileaks-us-intelligence-summ
aries.html> McClatchy reports:

Guards plucked off ships at sea to walk the cellblocks note who has hoarded
food as contraband, who makes noise during the Star Spangled Banner, who
sings creepy songs like "La, La, La, La Taliban" and who is re-enacting the
9/11 attacks with origami art.

Officials noted that information from some unstable prisoners may be faulty
or untrue, but used it anyway. Yasim Mohammed Basardah, a detainee who gave
information about 60 other prisoners, was
<http://www.npr.org/2011/04/24/135690396/detainees-transferred-or-freed-desp
ite-high-risk?ft=1&f=1014&sc=tw> noted as being unreliable, and his file
stressed that information he shared should be independently verified.
However, he was also given a "high" intelligence value, and his threat level
was lowered from high to medium in exchange for his cooperation. He was
resettled in Europe in 2010. According to the documents,
<http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/04/24/112729/wikileaks-us-intelligence-summ
aries.html> eight prisoners have revealed information about 235 others.

Suspects were nabbed and shipped to Gitmo because they wore cheap watches. A
specific model of watch - a Casio style released in the 1980s - was
suspected to be used as a timer by al-Qaeda operatives. People in
Afghanistan were seized and sent to the detention facility
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/wikileaks/8471907/WikiLeaks-Guant
anamo-Bay-terrorist-secrets-revealed.html> because they were wearing the
watches, but most have been quietly released because of a lack of evidence.

 



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