July 30, 2007:
In the
past week, a former detainee at Guantanamo Bay blew himself up rather than be
captured by Pakistani security police. This was the latest released detainee to
have returned to combat on the side of al Qaeda, and been caught in the act. In
essence, this incident is just the latest example of why these detainees should
not have access to normal courts, and it also should refute claims from many
human rights groups about the detainees.
In the past, over a dozen
other released detainees have returned to fight for al Qaeda. One of the most
notable was Rasul Kudayev, detained by Russian security forces for his part in
planning attacks on police in the Kabardino-Balkariya region in the Northern
Caucasus, which killed 45 people (not counting the 94 attackers). The U.S.
Department of Defense is aware of at least a dozen other terror suspects who
have been re-captured, having re-joined al Qaeda in its fight against coalition
forces in the war on terror.
This is something often
ignored in the media, which has pushed the "prisoner abuse" issue at
Guantanamo Bay and in Iraq (most notably the Abu Ghraib scandal). Human rights
groups will probably not discuss the 45 deaths that a former detainee is
responsible for, nor will they even admit that there is another side to the
issue of detainees. In fact, they will continue to work to get these terrorists
access to courts, which now forces the U.S. to make a decision. Do they
withhold evidence, and risk the terrorists going free - possibly to carry out
more attacks, or do they put them on trial, and risk aiding al-Qaeda's
counterintelligence efforts?
Another detainee of note
was an Iraqi who was captured in Pakistan in 2002. This was an al Qaeda
operative, who, according to an evidence summary released after a Freedom of
Information Act request in 2005, was supposed to work with an Iraqi
intelligence officer in carrying out a chemical mortar attack on the U.S. and
British embassies in Pakistan in August 1998.
Guards at Guantanamo Bay
have also been attacked over 400 times - often with bodily fluids. Many abuse
reports have been generally discredited (in the isolated cases where
mistreatment did occur, corrective action was taken). For instance, a detainee
was responsible for the Koran-flushing incident that led to riots in 2005. The
media and human rights groups also failed to mention that in some of the cases
where abuse was alleged, there was provocation (in one instance, a detainee
spat on a female interrogator).
The media campaign
against Guantanamo Bay waged by human rights groups is one that has been
remarkably resilient in the face of facts, and seems to take the word of
terrorists at face value - despite the fact that al-Qaeda manuals instruct
captured members to falsely claim torture. Given that detainees have returned
to the fight, the results of Amnesty International's campaign for the rights of
terrorists could have a profoundly negative effect on the human rights of
innocent people. - Harold C. Hutchison ([email protected])