From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Detainees upon arrival at Camp X-Ray, January 2002
In 2004, the US government claimed that newly released captives
from Guantanamo Bay detainment camp "returned to the
battlefield".[1]
Guantanamo Bay detainment camp is a joint military prison
and interrogation camp under the leadership of Joint Task Force Guantanamo
(JTF-GTMO) which has occupied a portion of the United States
Navy's base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba since 2002.[2]
The prison holds people suspected by the executive
branch of the U.S. government
of being al-Qaeda and Taliban operatives, as well as
those no longer considered suspects who are being held pending
relocation elsewhere.
History
American spokesmen have been asserting, as early as 2004, that
newly released captives "returned to the battlefield". The
story, as told by American spokesmen as senior as Vice President Dick Cheney, is that
these captives tricked their interrogators about their real
identity, and made them think they were harmless villagers, and
thus were able to "return to the battlefield."[1]
Initially these government spokesmen claimed relatively small
numbers of former Guantanamo captives had returned to the
battlefield. On April 2, 2007, JTF-GTMO commander Harry
Harris asserted that thirty former captives "resumed
terrorist activities".[3]
In a press briefing on March 6, 2007 a "Senior Defense official"
commented[4]:
- "I can tell you that we have confirmed 12 individuals have
returned to the fight, and we have strong evidence that about
another dozen have returned to the fight."
Commentators questioned the credibility of the spokesmen's
assertions. H. Candace Gorman, looked into the
only three names had been offered of captives who had been returned
to the battlefield: Abdullah Mehsud"; "Mullah Shahzada"; and Maulvi Abdul Ghaffar.[5]
She wrote, on March 18, 2007, that she found that the name Abdullah
Mehsud wasn't listed on the official list of Guantanamo captives
released on May 15, 2006.[6]
She found that there were captives with names close to those of the
two other men. but that the records showed these men were still in
custody when according to the spokesmen's assertions they had not
only been released, but had been killed in combat.
On Monday, May 14, 2007, Pentagon officials Joseph Benkert
and Jeffrey Gordon repeated the assertion that
thirty former captives had returned to the battlefield in testimony
before the United States Congress.[7]
They identified six of the thirty by name.[8]
They offered the names of the three men previously identified:
"Mullah Shahzada"; "Maulavi Abdul Ghaffar"; and Abdullah Mahsud.
They tied "Mullah Shahzada" to Mohamed Yusif
Yaqub, a Guantanamo captive who was listed on the official
list.[6]
The other three names they offered were: Mohammed Ismail; Abdul Rahman Noor; and Mohammed Nayim Farouq.[8]
On July 12, 2007 the Department of Defense placed an additional
page on their site, entitled: "Former Guantanamo Detainees who
have returned to the fight".[9
] This list contained one additional name,
not on the list released on May 14, 2007, for a total of seven
names. The new name was Ruslan Odizhev, a Russian who Russian
police reported died while resisting arrest on June 27, 2007.[10]
On 13 January 2009, the Pentagon said that 18 former detainees
are confirmed to have participated in attacks, and 43 are suspected
to have been involved in attacks.[11]
A Spokesman said evidence of someone being "confirmed" could
include fingerprints, a conclusive photograph or "well-corroborated
intelligence reporting." He said the Pentagon would not discuss how
the statistics were derived because of security concerns. National
security expert and CNN analyst Peter Bergen, states
that some of those "suspected" to have returned to terrorism are so
categorized because they publicly made anti-American statements,
"something that's not surprising if you've been locked up in a U.S.
prison camp for several years." If all on the "confirmed" list have
indeed returned to the battlefield, that would amount to 4 percent
of the detainees who have been released.[12]
Lists
of alleged returnees
2006 list
2007 list
2008 list
Names of Guantanamo captives who are alleged to
have "returned to the battlefield"
| ID |
Name |
Notes |
| 363 |
Maulvi
Abdul Ghaffar
AKA Shai Jahn Ghafoor |
- Had been a senior Taliban military leader prior to
capture.
- Allegedly captured in Afghanistan in December 2001, was one of
the twenty-three prisoners released from Camp Delta in late January
2004. After his release, he joined the remnants of the Taliban and
was killed in a gunfight on September 26, 2004.[1][1][15][16][17][18]
- The official list of Guantanamo captives included two men with
the same name, who remained in custody years after Maulvi Abdul
Ghaffar had been reported to have been released, and killed in
combat.[6]
|
| 92 |
Abdullah
Mehsud |
- Reportedly captured in Afghanistan in December 2001 after
surrendering to Abdul Rashid Dostum.
- That he was ever been captured, and sent to Guantanamo has been
challenged.[5]
- Allegedly masterminded the kidnapping of two Chinese engineers
in Pakistan's South Waziristan region.
- Allegedly returning to his position as an Al-Qaeda field
commander.[16]
One of the Chinese engineers died during a rescue mission, the
other was rescued.[2]
- Mehsud also claimed responsibility for the bombing at
Islamabad's Marriott Hotel in October 2004. The blast injured seven
people, including a U.S. diplomat, two Italians and the Pakistani
prime minister's chief security officer. Mehsud was subsequently
reported to have been killed in combat.
|
| 203 |
Ravil Shafeyavich
Gumarov |
- Reported to have had military training in Chechnya.[19]
- Convicted of bombing a natural gas pipeline on May 9, 2006.[20
]
- Sentenced to 13 years.[21]
|
| 211 |
Ruslan
Anatolivich Odishev |
- Repatriated to Russian custody, cleared, then released.[22]
|
| 294 |
Mohammed Bin Ahmad
Mizouz |
- One of the first 200 captives to be repatriated.[23][24]
- Reported seeing guards urinate on the Koran.[24]
- Reported being tortured while in US custody, reported that all
the techniques used in Abu Ghraib were first used on captives like
him in Bagram.[24]
- Convicted in September 2007 of recruiting fighters to send to
Iraq.[21]
|
| 297 |
Ibrahim Shafir Sen |
|
| 367 |
Mohammed Yusif Yaqub
aka
Mullah Shahzada |
- Reports of the release, return to the battlefield, and
subsequent death in combat of Mullah Shahzada, while reported in
the press, is always attributed to unnamed insiders.[26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][28][32]
- The official list of Guantanamo captives included a man the
same name, Haji Shahzada who remained in custody years
after the stories that Mullah Shahzada had been reported to have
been released, and killed in combat. Haji Shahzada was one of the
38 captives whose Combatant Status Review
Tribunal determined they had not been an enemy combatant in the
first place.
- On Monday, May 14, 2007, Pentagon officials, for the first
time, tied the reports that "Mullah Shahzada" had returned to the
battlefield to the name of one of the captives on the official list
of Guantanamo captives, Mohammed Yusif Yaqub.[8]
According to Reuters summary of their testimony:
-
| "Released May 8, 2003, he assumed control of Taliban operations
in Southern Afghanistan and died fighting U.S. forces on May 7,
2004." |
|
| 587 |
Ibrahim Bin Shakaran |
The Defense Intelligence Agency
asserted Ibrahim Bin Shakaran had "returned to terrorism". The DIA
reported:
|
| 930 |
Mohammed
Ismail |
- First identified as a former captive who had returned to the
battlefield in Testimony before Congress on Monday May 14,
2007.[8]
According to Reuters summary of their testimony:
-
| "Released from Guantanamo in early 2004, he was recaptured four
months later in May while participating in an attack on U.S. forces
near Kandahar. When captured, Ismail carried a letter confirming
his status as a Taliban member in good standing." |
|
| 582 |
Abdul Rahman Noor |
- First identified as a former captive who had returned to the
battlefield in Testimony before Congress on Monday May 14,
2007.[8]
According to Reuters summary of their testimony:
-
| "Released in July 2003, he has since participated in fighting
against U.S. forces near Kandahar. After his release, he was
identified as the man described in an October 7, 2001, interview
with Al Jazeera television as the "deputy defense minister of the
Taliban." |
|
| 633 |
Mohammed Nayim Farouq |
- First identified as a former captive who had returned to the
battlefield in Testimony before Congress on Monday, May 14,
2007.[8]
According to Reuters summary of their testimony:
-
| Released from U.S. custody in July 2003, he quickly renewed his
association with Taliban and al Qaeda members and has since become
"reinvolved in anti-coalition militant activity." |
|
| 930 |
Mohammed Ismail Agha |
- Reports have circulated that one of the three children who was
held for a year and a half, in Camp Iguana, and
released on January 28, 2004, was subsequently captured, or
subsequently killed in combat — accounts vary.[28]
- As with "Mullah Shahzada" this information is attributed to
unnamed insiders.
- Accounts of when he was captured, or killed, vary.
- Oliver North
claimed that the released child was "Mullah
Shahzada".[32]
North claimed that "Mullah Shahzada" was killed in combat weeks
after his release. Mullah is
an honorary title, meaning "educated man". However the only
schooling the three children held in Camp Iguana ever received was
the lessons they received at the camp.[34
][35][36]
North's account that a released child from Camp Iguana was killed
in combat, weeks after his release, is at odds with the accounts of
the journalists who interviewed the children during the months
following their release.
|
2009
reports
Department of Defense spokesmen claimed in January 2009 that at
least 61 former captives had returned to the fight. But they did
not publish any of the men's names.
Saudi
list
On February 3, 2009, the government of Saudi Arabia published a list of 85 most wanted suspected terrorists
that included two former Guantanamo captives who had appeared in an
alarming video, and nine other former captives.
BBC
report
On February 18, 2009, the BBC News reported that UK officials had
told them that an Afghan former captive repatriated in the Spring
of 2008 had risen to a high-ranking position in the Taliban, in
Pakistan, following his return. The BBC reports they had been told
his name was Mullah Abdul Kayum
Sakir. The USA did not list any captives with names close to
Abdul Kayum Sakir. The five captives repatriated on April 30, 2008,
are: Nasrullah, Esmatulla, Rahmatullah Sangaryar, Sahib
Rohullah Wakil, and Abdullah Mohammad Khan.
Department
of Defense
In March 2009, U.S. officials revealed that Abdullah Ghulam Rasoul (detainee #8) is now
leading the Taliban's operations in southern Afghanistan.[37
][38
]
The May 2009 "one in
seven" claims
On May 21, 2009, Elizabeth
Bumiller, writing in the New York Times,
reported that they had secured access to an unreleased Pentagon report that
asserted "one in seven" former captives are "are engaged in
terrorism or militant activity."[39]
[40][41]
According to the New York Times Pentagon officials had
asserted 74 former captives had returned to terrorism, and had
named 29 individuals. But, by May 21, 2009, the New York
Times chose to publish only 15 of those 29 names because they
couldn't correlate the names on the recent Pentagon lists with the
earlier official lists of captives' names.
On June 6, 2009 Clark
Hoyt, whose byline lists him as the New York Times "public editor"
wrote an apology to the New York Times readers for
Bumiller's article.[42][43][44][45]
DoD
list of May 27, 2009
On May 27, 2009 the Defense Intelligence Agency
published a fact sheet entitled "Former Guantanamo Detainee
Terrorism Trends" that contained a "Partial Listing of
Former GTMO Detainees Who have Reengaged in Terrorism".[74]
Although it was published on May 27, it bear the date April 7,
2009.
Appendix A: Partial Listing of Former GTMO
Detainees Who have Reengaged in Terrorism[74]
| Name |
Nationality |
Repatriated |
Activity |
Status |
|
|
Afghanistan |
March 2003 |
Died fighting Afghan forces |
Suspected |
| Shah Mohammed |
Pakistan |
May 2003 |
Killed fighting U.S. forces in Afghanistan |
Confirmed |
|
|
Afghanistan |
May 2003 |
Taliban commander in Afghanistan; Organized jailbreak in
Kandahar; killed on 7 May 2004 fighting U.S. forces |
Confirmed |
| Mohammed Nayim Farouq |
Afghanistan |
July 2003 |
Association with Taliban and al-Qaida; involved in
anti-coalition activity |
Suspected |
| Ibrahim Shafir Sen |
Turkey |
November 2003 |
Leader of al-Qaida cells in Van; recruited and trained members,
provided illegal weapons and facilitation |
Confirmed |
| Mohammed
Ismail |
Afghanistan |
January 2004 |
Participated in an attack against U.S. forces Taliban
member |
Confirmed |
| Abdullah D. Kafkas |
Russia |
March 2004 |
Suspected involvement in an attack against a traffice police
checkpoint in Nalchik in October 2005 |
Suspected |
| Almasm Rabilavich
Sharipov |
Russia |
March 2004 |
Association with terrorist group Hezb-e-Tahrir |
Suspected |
| Timur Ravilich Ishmurat |
Russia |
March 2004 |
Involved in a gas line bombing |
Confirmed |
| Ruslan
Anatolivich Odijev |
Russia |
March 2004 |
Participated in several terrorism acts including an October
2005 attack in the Caucasus region that killed and injured several
police officers |
Suspected |
|
|
Afghanistan |
March 2004 |
Kidnapped two Chinese engineers; Claimed responsibility for an
Islamabad hotel bombing; directed a suicide attack in April 2007
killing 31 people |
Confirmed |
| Ravil Gumarov |
Russia |
March 2004 |
Involved in a gas line bombing |
Confirmed |
| Abdullah
Ghofoor |
Afghanistan |
March 2004 |
Taliban commander; planning attacks on U.S. and Afghan forces;
killed in a raid by Afghan security forces |
Suspected |
| Mohammed Bin Ahmad
Mizouz |
Morocco |
July 2004 |
Recruiter for al-Qaida in Iraq |
Confirmed |
| Ibrahim Bin Shakaran |
Morocco |
July 2004 |
Recruiter for al-Qaida in Iraq |
Confirmed |
| Isa Khan |
Pakistan |
September 2004 |
Association with Tehrik-i-Taliban |
Suspected |
| Muhibullah |
Afghanistan |
July 2005 |
Association with the Taliban |
Suspected |
| Abdallah
Saleh Ali al-Ajmi |
Kuwait |
November 2005 |
Conducted a suicide attack in Iraq |
Confirmed |
| Abdullah Majid
Al-Naimi |
Bahrain |
November 2005 |
Arrested in October 2008; involved in terrorist facilitation;
has known associations with al-Qaida |
Confirmed |
| Saad
Madhi Saad Hawash al Azmi |
Kuwait |
November 2005 |
Association with al-Qaida |
Suspected |
| Majid
Abdullah Lahiq al Joudi |
Saudi Arabia |
February 2007 |
Terrorist facilitation |
Confirmed |
|
|
Saudi Arabia |
July 2007 |
Leadership figure in al-Qaida in Arabian Peninsula |
Confirmed |
| Abd al Razzaq Abdallah Ibrahim
al-Sharikh |
Saudi Arabia |
September 2007 |
Arrested in September 2008 for supporting terrorism |
Suspected |
| Abd al Hadi Abdallah Ibrahim al
Sharikh |
Saudi Arabia |
September 2007 |
Arrested in September 2008 for association with terrorist
members; supporting terrorism |
Suspected |
| Zahir Shah |
Afghanistan |
November 2007 |
Participation in terrorist training |
Confirmed |
| Abu Sufyan
al Azdi al-Shihri |
Saudi Arabia |
November 2007 |
Leadership figure in al-Qaida in Arabian Peninsula |
Confirmed |
| Abdullah Gulam Rasoul |
Afghanistan |
December 2007 |
Taliban military commander for Afghanistan; Organizaed an
assault on U.S. military aircraft in Afghanistan |
Suspected |
| Haji Sahib
Rohullah Wakil |
Afghanistan |
April 2008 |
Association with terrorist groups |
Suspected |
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| Controversies surrounding persons captured
during the 'War on Terror' |
|
| Guantanamo Bay detention
camp |
|
|
| Afghan prison abuse |
|
|
| Abu Ghraib
prison |
|
|
| CIA Black sites |
|
|
| Prison uprisings and
escapes |
|
|
| Deaths in custody in Iraq |
|
|
| Deaths in custody in
Afghanistan |
|
|
| Forced disappearances who were
never found |
Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, Abdul Aziz, Abdul Rahim al-Sharqawi, Muhammed
al-Darbi, Mohammed Omar Abdel-Rahman,
Yassir al-Jazeeri, Adil
al-Jazeeri, Tariq Mahmood, Hassan Ghul, Musaad Aruchi, Hiwa Abdul Rahman Rashul, Abdul Quddoos
Khan
|
|
| Following legislation and
investigations |
|
|
| Resulting media |
|
|
External
links