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Inside Gitmo
Chapter 5: Meet the "Foreign Fighters"

Content Summary

  • Who are the detainees at Guantanamo? Where they originate, how they are trained to resist interrogation, and issues involved in working with them.

  • An introduction to the legal screening process at Guantanamo that has resulted in more than 2/3 of the original detainees being released outright or turned over to often compliant governments.

  • An alarming recidivism rate. Some case studies of detainees who when released returned to the battlefield often responsible for deadly attacks (including against UN reconstruction personnel in Afghanistan) and heightened propaganda.

  • Case studies of individual foreign fighters ranging from the Australian, David Hicks, to al Qosi - the "Money Man," to "Terror Master" Khalid Sheik Muhammad, and many others.

  • Discussion includes several fighters who were close to bin Laden in capacity as driver, bodyguard, or personal assistant. Learn what issues of personal loyatly and fealty were necessary for a fighter to attain these special access levels.

Reprinted end notes from chapter five of the book, with links to source
documents and other supporting materials


1. Matthew Waxman, “Beyond Guantánamo,” Washington Post, August 20, 2005.
2. Ibid.
3. Author interview with Brigadier General Vincent Brooks, December 2005.

4. See the Manchester Manual, The Al Qaeda Training Manual, previously cited, for details on how terrorists are trained to react when captured. [Inside Gitmo website administrative note: the updated URL is http://www.usdoj.gov/ag/manualpart1_1.pdf. pdf file graphicA searchable HTML version of the manual is also available at http://www.disastercenter.com/terror/ ]

5. Author interview with Paul Rester, January 2006.

6. The 2005 USG Periodic Report to the UN Committee on the Convention Against Torture, Department of Defense, Office of Detainee Affairs, 2005. [Inside Gitmo website administrative note: the search is on to find a copy of this report in the public domain, check back soon!]

7. Jeff Babbin, “The Gitmo Varsity,” American Spectator, July 18, 2005.

8. “Danish Detainee ‘to Join Rebels,’ ” BBC News, September 30, 2004.

9. Walter Pincus, “Ex- Guantanamo Prisoner ID’d as Iraq Bomber,” CBS News, May 7, 2008; Walter Pincus, “With Other Nations Refusing Detainees’ Return, ‘We Are Stuck’ with Guantanamo, Gates Says,” Washington Post, May 26, 2008.

10. Michael Melia, “U.S. Says 6 Ex- Guantanamo Prisoners ‘Rejoined Fight’ in Afghanistan,” Associated Press, May 15, 2007.

11. David Morgan, “US Divulges New Details on Released Gitmo Inmates,” Reuters, May 14, 2007.

12. “Fact Sheet: Former GTMO Detainee Terrorism Trends,” Defense Intelligence Agency, June 13, 2008.pdf file graphic

13. Ibid. Also see Nabi Abdullaev, “From Russia to Guantánamo, via Afghanistan,” St. Petersburg Times (Russia), December 24, 2002.

14. Elisabeth Bumiller, “Cheney Calls Guantánamo Prison Essential,” New York Times, June 14, 2005; John Mintz, “Released Detainees Rejoining The Fight,” Washington Post, October 22, 2004.

15. “Taliban Commander ‘Kills Himself,’ ” aljazeera.net, July 25, 2007.

16. John Mintz, “Released Detainees Rejoining the Fight,” Washington Post, October 22, 2004.

17. Laura King and Josh Meyer, “Baitullah Mahsud Is Blamed for Bhutto’s Assassination, but His Power May Be Greatly Exaggerated,” Los Angeles Times, February 12, 2008.

18. “Taliban Commander: Abdullah Mahsud Killed in Pakistan,” Pakistan Times, July 25, 2007.

19. Mark Simkin, “Democrats Demand ‘Torture Tapes’ Probe,” ABC News (Australia), December 8, 2007.

20. Cog Coglin, “Begg ‘Told FBI He Trained with al Qaeda,’ ” UK Telegraph, March 9, 2006.

21. Tim Golden, “Jihadist or Victim: Ex- detainee Makes A Case,” New York Times, June 15, 2006.
22. Coglin, “Begg ‘Told FBI.’

23. “Why Did Moazzam Begg Travel to Afghanistan?” UK Telegraph, March 2, 2006.

24. For more information, see the website Cageprisoners mission statement
at http://www.cageprisoners.com/page.php?id=2 .

25. Coglin, “Begg ‘Told FBI.’ ”

26. Golden, “Jihadist or Victim?”

27. Author interview with Paul Rester, June 2006.

28. “Guantánamo Britons may stand in election,” Vikram Dodd, The Guardian, January 22, 2005.

29. Mark Bowden, Black Hawk Down. New York: Grove/Atlantic, 1999.

 

30. Charge sheet, The United States of America v. Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi, available on the Internet at news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/dod/alqosi22404chrg.pdf. pdf file graphicAlthough undated, the file name indicates February 24, 2004. Further note that charges were reinstated against Qosi in 2008 in a document that did not include all of the information found in this initial charge sheet.

31. Ibid., Item 19(b).

32. Ibid., Items 19(c) and (d).

33. “Summary of Evidence for Combatant Status Review Tribunal— Al Qosi, Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud,” United States Department of Defense, Office for the Administrative Review of the Detention of Enemy Combatants, September 14, 2004, Item 3(a)(1). The Qosi summary can be found on pages 65 and 66 of the 98- page file located on the Internet
at http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/detainees/csrt_arb/000001-000100.pdf#65.pdf file graphic

34. Ibid., Item 3(a)(2).
35. Ibid., Item 3(a)(3).

36. Charge sheet, The United States of America v. Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi, Item 19(e), located at
news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/dod/alqosi22404chrg.pdf pdf file graphic(see endnote above).

37. Ibid., emphasis added by author.

38. See Alan Parrot’s excellent work on his website www.savethefalcons.org for more details of the mysterious money camps.

39. Charge sheet, The United States of America v. Ibrahim Ahmed Mahmoud al Qosi, Item 19(f). pdf file graphic

40. Ibid., Item 19(k).

41. Anne Gearan, “US Orders Trial of Two Prisoners at Guantánamo,” Associated Press, February 25, 2004.

42. William Glaberson, “US Detainee Says He’ll Boycott His Trial,” New York Times, April 11, 2008.

43. “Alleged al- Qaida Accountant Praises bin Laden, Refuses Lawyer at Guantánamo,” Associated Press, April 11, 2008.

44. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, available on the Internet at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/d20070301hicks.pdf . pdf file graphic[Inside Gitmo website administrative note: the charge sheet at the URL shown here is dated February 2, 2007. While the reason for the date differences are not known, the contents are identical to those referenced herein]

45. Steve Larkin, “The Journey of David Hicks,” Gold Coast Bulletin, goldcoast .com, December 28, 2007.

46. Emma Alberici, “Hicks’ Kids Eager to Reunite with Dad,” ABC World News, Australia, May 28, 2007.

47. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 5.pdf file graphic

48. Larkin,“The Journey of David Hicks.”

49. Julia Gorin, “Remember Srebrenica,” Jewish World Review, July 11, 2005.

50. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks. pdf file graphic

51. Charge sheet, United States of America vs. David Matthew Hicks, Item 6. pdf file graphicAlso note that Lashkar- e-Tayyiba has also been translated as “Army of the Righteous” or “Laskar- e-Toiba,” Global Security.

52. “Hafiz Muhammad Saeed: Pakistan’s heart of terror,” Kashmir Herald, July 2002.

53. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 6(b).

54. “Profile: Lashkar- e-Tobia,” BBC report, March 17, 2006. [Inside Gitmo administrative note: the original March 17, 2006 version was found on December 20, 2008 in Google's cache here, while the copy on the BBC website referenced above now bears the date December 4, 2008.]

55. Steve Larkin, “David Hicks Must Renounce Terrorism, Says Human Rights Lawyer,” AAP, December 30, 2007.

56. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, items 7 and 8. pdf file graphic

57. Item 19(a), United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, 2004. pdf file graphicThis initial charge sheet, which contains additional information not provided in the charges filed in 2007, is available on the Internet at http://www.globalsecurity.org/security/library/news/2004/06/d20040610cs.pdf .

58. Eric Schmidt with Erik Eckholm, “US Takes Custody of a Qaeda Trainer Seized by Pakistan,” New York Times, January 6, 2002.

59. Dana Priest, “Al Qaeda- Iraq Link Recanted,” Washington Post, August 1, 2004. Also see Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball, “Al-Libi’s Tall Tales,” Newsweek web exclusive, November 10, 2005.

60. United States of America v. Zacarias Moussaoui, available on the Internet at http://www.usdoj.gov/ag/moussaouiindictment.htm.

61. CNN Producer Phil Hirschkorn,“Training camp links millennium, embassy bombers,” July 5, 2001.

62. “Pakistan Hands Over Senior Al- Qaeda Leader,” Associated Press, April 1, 2002.

63. Dana Priest, “Al Qaeda- Iraq Link Recanted,” Washington Post, August 1, 2004.

64. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 9.pdf file graphic
65. Ibid., Item 20(a).
66. Ibid., Item 24(b).

67. Suzanne Goldenberg, “Seven Year Sentence Likely to Mean Hicks Can Go Home,” UK Guardian, March 31, 2007. Also see Sergeant Sara Wood, “Judge Accepts Australian Detainee’s Guilty Plea,” American Forces Press Ser vice, March 30, 2007.

68. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24(c).pdf file graphic
69. Ibid., Item 24(d).
70. Ibid., Item 24(e).
71. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, 2004, Item 20(d).pdf file graphic

72. Sergeant Sara Wood, “Judge Accepts Australian Detainee’s Guilty Plea,” American Forces Press Ser vice, March 30, 2007.

73. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24(f). pdf file graphic

74. Ibid., Item 24(g).

75. “David Hicks Must Renounce Terrorism, Says Human Rights Lawyer,” Steve Larkin, AAP, December 30, 2007.

76. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24(h). pdf file graphic

77. Ibid., Item 24(i).

78. Wood, “Judge Accepts Australian Detainee’s Guilty Plea.” Also see Goldenberg, “Seven Year Sentence.”

79. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24( j) .

80. Wood, “Judge Accepts Australian Detainee’s Guilty Plea.”

81. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24(k (e.g., “The special demands of guarding a facility like Guantánamo call for a concerted effort among several branches of the military . . .”).pdf file graphic

82. Ibid., Item 24(l).
83. Ibid., Item 24(m).
84. Ibid., Item 24(m).
85. Ibid., Item 24(n).
86. Ibid., Item 24(o).
87. Ibid., Item 24(p).
88. Ibid., Item 24(q).
89. Ibid., Item 24( r ).
90. Ibid., Item 24(s).

91. Wood, “Judge Accepts Australian Detainee’s Guilty Plea.”

92. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24(t).pdf file graphic
93. Ibid., Item 24(v).
94. Ibid., Item 24(w).

95. Wood, “Judge Accepts Australian Detainee’s Guilty Plea.”

96. Charge sheet, United States of America v. David Matthew Hicks, May 1, 2007, Item 24(x).pdf file graphic

97. Various books and articles have identified John Walker Lindh as ISN 001 or Detainee 001, for example, “Prisoner of political fortune set free,” Sydney Morning Herald, December 29, 2007, and Philippe Sands, “The Green Light,” Vanity Fair, May 2008. The author was also told by interrogators at Guantánamo Bay that ISN 001 was indeed Walker Lindh.

98. Based on a series of author interviews with a U.S. Army Special Forces officer present at the Battle of Qala- i-Jangi who requests anonymity for security purposes, 2004– 2005.

99. The complete “Transcript of Debbie Whitmont’s investigation ‘The Case of David Hicks,’ ” dated October 31, 2005, is available on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s website at http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/content/2005/s1494795.htm .

100. Ibid.

101. Author interview with interrogator (protected identity) who worked with Hicks, December 2006. Also see Mark Dunn, “Hicks Drops Islamic Faith,” Herald Sun, February 28, 2007, which further elaborates, “A former Guantánamo inmate has claimed Hicks was denounced by Muslim prisoners for his change of faith.”

102. Author interview with Guantánamo interrogator (protected identity) who worked with Hicks, December 2006.

103. “Australian Gitmo Detainee Gets 9 Months,” Boston Globe, March 30, 2007.

104. Khalid Sheikh Muhammad confession transcript, Department of Defense, http://www.defenselink.mil . pdf file graphic

105. Timothy J. Burger and Adam Zagorin, “Fingering Danny Pearl’s Killer," Time, October 12, 2006.

106. “Key 9/11 figure ‘beheaded Pearl,’ ” BBC News, March 15, 2007.

107. “Al- Qaida No. 3 says he planned 9/11, other plots,” MSNBC, March 15, 2007.

108. “US judge orders CIA to turn over ‘torture’ memo— ACLU,” Reuters, May 8, 2008.

109. “Khalid Sheikh Muhammad’s own words provide glimpse into the mind of a terrorist,” Associated Press, March 15, 2007.

110. “Khalid Sheikh Muhammad’s own words provide glimpse into the mind of a terrorist,” International Herald Tribune, March 15, 2007.

111. James Gordon Meek, “Alleged 9/11 mastermind, Khalid Sheikh Muhammad, asks judge for death,” New York Daily News, June 5, 2008.

112. Dan Slater, “Khalid Sheik Muhammad on Same- Sex Marriage, Value of Counsel,” Wall Street Journal, June 6, 2008.

113. Ibid.

114. Bob Simon, “The Mastermind,” CBS News, March 5, 2003.

115. “Al- Jazeera reporter speaks on terrorist plans,” LATELINE, Australian Broadcasting Company, September 30, 2002.

116. Charge sheet, United States of America v. Binyam Ahmed Muhammad. pdf file graphic

117. “Al Qaeda Reportedly Appoints Commanders for Afghanistan,” PakTribune, November 11, 2005.

118. Yoram Schweitzer, “The Arrest of Abu Zubaydah: An Important Achievement with More to Come,” ICT Researcher, April 9, 2002. [Inside Gitmo website administrative note: this article is no longer available on the internet and cannot be provided through this website due to copyright laws.]

119. Gordon Cucullu, "Electronic Jihad," TechCentralStation, March 8, 2006.

120. Plutonium is the world’s most poisonous known substance. Webelements.com.

121. Fact Sheet on Dirty Bombs, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, March 2003.pdf file graphic

122. Charge sheet, United States of America v. Binyam Ahmed Muhammad. pdf file graphic

123. Sergeant Sarah Wood, “U.S. Military Commissions to Resume This Week at Guantánamo,” American Forces Press Service, April 3, 2006.

124. Moore, The Hunt for Bin Laden, p. 298.

 

125. “Khadr Was the ‘Grenade Man’ US Soldier Maintains,” CBC News, February 6, 2008.

126. Glenn Kessler, “File the Bin Laden Phone Leak under ‘Urban Myths,’ ” Washington Post, December 22, 2005.

127. Charge sheet, United States of America versus Salim Ahmed Hamdan. pdf file graphic

128. Exact identity of the bomb specialists currently held in Guantánamo remains classified. In order not to disclose useful information to the enemy, we use pseudonyms when referring to them.

129. Charge sheet, United States of America v. Muhammad al Khazan. [Inside Gitmo website administrative note: since al Khazan's name is a pseudonym as noted above, this charge sheet does not exist under the Khazan name.]

130. Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, “Europe’s Last Chance, FrontPageMag, February 16, 2006. [Inside Gitmo website administrative note: this article was written by Dr. Ehrenfeld and Alyssa A. Lappen.]

131. Ivian C. Smith, “Inside: A Top G-Man Exposes Spies, Lies, and Bureaucratic Bungling Inside the FBI,” Nelson Current, 2004, p. 6.

 

132. Ben Fox, “Casio Watch Is Terror ‘Evidence’ at Guantánamo,” Associated Press, Seattle Post- Intelligencer, March 10, 2006.

133. Christopher Wren, “US Jury Convicts 3 in a Conspiracy to Bomb Airlines,” New York Times, September 6, 1996.

134. Fox, “Casio Watch Is Terror ‘Evidence’ at Guantánamo.”

135. Author interview with Guantánamo JDG operations officer who requested anonymity, May 27, 2006.

136. Captured Iraqi documents of Saddam Hussein’s internal meetings, translated by Bill Tierney, 2006. [Inside Gitmo website administrative note: while these materials are apparently not available in their entirety on the internet, see the February 15, 2006 article "Saddam's Secret Tapes" from ABC News quoting Tierney and further describing the materials.]

137. JTF GTMO Information on Detainees, JTF GTMO, March 4, 2005. pdf file graphic

138. Charge sheet, United States of America v.Ghassan Abdullah al Sharbi. pdf file graphic

139. Charge sheet, United States of America v. Ali Hamza Ahmad Sulayman al Bahlul. pdf file graphic

140. Ibid.

 

 

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Chapter Summaries & Source Documents

The chapter summaries and source document libraries as based on the end notes within Inside Gitmo are currently under construction. They will be completed by the book's January 27th release date.

Preface and Introduction
Guantanamo, the Myth and Reality

Chapter 1
Why Guantanamo?


Chapter 2
Muhammad al Qahtani:
A Terrorist Case Study


Chapter 3 
In the Beginning: Camp X-Ray

Chapter 4 
Camp Delta's Mission:
A Work in Progress


Chapter 5
Meet the "Foreign Fighters"

Chapter 6
Maximum Security: Camps I, II, and III

Chapter 7 
Compliance Rewarded:
Inside the Camp IV Wire


Chapter 8
Segregation and Supervision:
Camps V and VI


Chapter 9
Camps Echo, Iguana, and
a "Secret" CIA Installation


Chapter 10
Daily Life at Gitmo

Chapter 11
Meet the American Military

Chapter 12
Hunger Strikes: Asymmetrical
Warfare in Action


Chapter 13
The Value of Intelligence

Chapter 14
The Future of Guantanamo:
Critiques and Recommendations

 

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What Others Are Saying

Monica Crowley photo"I've also been 'inside GITMO,' and Cucullu's riveting account shows why we've been safer with it and why we may soon regret being without it."— Monica Crowley, host of the Monica Crowley Show and author of Nixon in Winter 

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Oliver North photo"An explosive expos of what's really been happening - 'inside the wire' at Guantanamo. Gordon Cucullu - with his Special Forces background, thorough research and extensive visits to Gitmo - knows more about the now-infamous detention facility than any 'outsider.' This book is a must-read for all who care about how we protect ourselves from those who are dying to kill us." — Oliver North, LtCol USMC (Ret.), host of War Stories on FOX News Channel & NYT bestselling author of American Heroes in the Fight Against Radical Islam

Frank Gaffney photo"Inside Gitmo is a book of incalculable importance. It lays bare the myths and the stakes involved in the campaign to shut down a facility that any objective reader must conclude is vital to our national security. Every policy-maker in Washington and every citizen across America should study this books brilliant first-hand reporting and its alarming findings." Frank Gaffney, Jr, President, Center for Security Policy and author of War Footing

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The "Living Book" Concept

The "Living Book" Concept

This companion web site to Inside Gitmo was conceived and executed by Avery Johnson in collaboration with Chuck Martin. As a highly skilled, experienced researcher, Avery imposes strict demands on her work and that of author's with whom she works. Every stated fact must be backed by hard documentation. Hence readers find 524 citations in Inside Gitmo from a multiplicity of sources. Avery took that as "a good start."

Her concept - that you can interact with on these pages - is that with an issue as dynamic and multi-faceted as Guantanamo is too large to be captured only in a work of print. In order to complement and supplement the final work so that readers may continue to be apprised of developments on this critical subject and dig deeper into subjects that interest them, it is necessary and valuable to take advantage of technology.

Illustrative of this concept is that this site functions as a repository for all original documents used in the book as well as providing additional sources for continued research into the subject. For readers seeking context for specific passages referenced in the book, the site provides access to the original report, news article, book, or other source quoted. By so doing we are able to circumvent necessary space limitations in print by augmenting the book with electronic back-up.

Additionally, the site goes where print cannot: it provides an email based discussion group, videos, updated news articles, a blog, podcasts, and other resources. It highlights new developments, steers readers to newly published works, and offers visitors the opportunity to purchase relevant works from the site.

I think that this concept - a continually updated, vibrant companion website for a published book with complete references included - ought to be the new gold standard in publishing and strongly urge new and proven writers and authors to advantage themselves of these services.

Avery Johnson and her team can be contacted at avery.j@comcast.net.

About the Author

I'm a retired Green Beret lieutenant colonel, Vietnam War veteran and career officer, and now a writer. After serving more than thirteen years in East Asia I was sent on assignments in El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, and eventually worked Korea and East Asian affairs at both the Pentagon and Department of State.

My many adventures since then have included raising llamas and alpacas in upstate New York, serving as the Executive Director of the Korea Society in Manhattan, working as an international marketing VP for General Electric in Asia, and traveling within corners of the world that few have had the privilege of experiencing.

In April-May 2008 I spent a month embedded with Military Police units in Iraq. Stories from my trip are posted at supportamericansoldiers.com — a book about what I saw and learned is also in the making.

My first book Separated at Birth: How North Korea became the Evil Twin was published in September 2004.


Author's Notes

Many of the articles and works referenced in the book Inside Gitmo contain highly controversial, often inflamatory, and frequently inaccurate information. I cited these works for very specific reasons - to extract quotes, show contravailing points of view, and, in cases where factual information is contained in the piece, to use sources that may be intellectually opposed to Guantanamo for balance.

Use of these varied references does not imply that I agree with most, all, or any of the content. They are used for the reasons noted above, and ought to be read in context with the entire book for complete understanding.


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