Afghanistan |
Alex Quade Exclusive: Spec Ops capture & release of Taliban for Bergdahl |
2014-08-22 |
[Alex Quade] The story behind the Special Operations Forces capture of one of the Taliban-5. Quade persuaded the elite Operators to go on the record, assess the high risk detainees exchange for POW, Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, and whether the released Taliban leader will attack U.S. interests again. One highly decorated Green Beret who originally helped capture him, is now a counterterrorism head, who worked behind the scenes on the exchange. His former Special Operations Forces Horse Soldiers teammates share details with Alex, youve never heard. In Quades exclusive, youll discover the Taliban leaders connection to: convicted American Taliban Johnny Walker Lindh, and CIA Agent, Mike Spann the first American killed in action in the war in Afghanistan. Youll also learn of the released Taliban leaders ties to notorious former warlord, Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum currently a vice presidential candidate in Afghanistan. Some very interesting dots connected. |
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DOD identifies 3 GTMO suicides, AP wrings hands | |||||
2006-06-12 | |||||
![]() The Department of Defense identified the three as Saudi Arabians Mani Shaman Turki al-Habardi Al-Utaybi and Yassar Talal Al-Zahrani and Yemeni Ali Abdullah Ahmed. The two Saudis were also identified earlier by Saudi officials. Al-Utaybi had been recommended for transfer to the custody of another country before his suicide, the Defense Department said in a statement released to The Associated Press. It did not name the country but said he would have been under detention there as well. The U.S. military accused al-Utaybi, 30, of being a member of a militant missionary group, Jama'at Al Tablighi. He was born in Al-Qarara, Saudi Arabia, according to a Department of Defense list of Guantanamo detainees. Navy Cmdr. Robert Durand, a spokesman for the Guantanamo detention center, said he did not know whether al-Utaybi had been informed about the transfer recommendation before he killed himself.
Al-Zahrani, 21, was accused by the U.S. of being a front line fighter for the Taliban who facilitated weapons purchases for offensives against U.S. and coalition forces. He was allegedly involved in the November 2001 prison uprising in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan that resulted in ![]()
"A stench of despair hangs over Guantanamo," said Mark Denbeaux, a defense lawyer who visited a client at Guantanamo on June 2. "Everyone is shutting down and quitting," said the law professor at Seton Hall University in New Jersey who along with his son, Joshua, represents two Tunisians at Guantanamo. He said he was alarmed by the depression he saw in his client, Mohammed Abdul Rahman, who was "trying to kill himself" by hunger strike. "He is normally a gentle, quiet, shy person," Denbeaux said late Saturday. "He sat there in a subdued state that was almost inert. He was colossally depressed." Denbeaux said he had intended to cheer Rahman up by showing him a newspaper article quoting President Bush as saying he wanted to close the jail. But the lawyer said guards confiscated the article because detainees are barred from seeing news of current events. "We wanted to say, 'We have some hope for you,'" Denbeaux said. "They wouldn't let us give him some hope."
Danish Prime Minister Fogh Rasmussen, who supported Bush in the Iraq war, said the detention center's procedures violate "the very principle of the rule of law" and weaken the fight against terrorism. Swedish Foreign Minister Jan Eliasson said the deaths underlined the need to close the camp and bring detainees to trial or free them. Eliasson said the 25-nation European Union believes the facility should be closed.
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Supreme Court asked to transfer Padilla | |
2005-12-29 | |
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government on Wednesday asked the Supreme Court to transfer American "enemy combatant" Jose Padilla from U.S. military custody to federal authorities in Florida -- one week after an appeals court refused a similar request. In a filing to the high court, Solicitor General Paul Clement asked for Padilla's release so he can stand trial on charges of being part of a support cell providing money and recruits for militants overseas. Padilla was indicted last month in Florida for conspiracy to murder and aiding terrorists abroad but the charges make no reference to accusations made by U.S. officials after his arrest in May 2002 that he plotted with al Qaeda to set off a radioactive "dirty bomb" in the United States. Last week, in a rebuke to the Bush administration, a U.S. appeals court in Richmond, Virginia, denied the Justice Department's request to approve his transfer from military to civilian custody. The appeals court said the government's decision to bring criminal charges against Padilla after he had been held by the U.S. military for more than three years gave the impression the government was trying to avoid high court review of the case. Clement told the Supreme Court that the appeals court had overstepped its authority and said the decision "defies both law and logic." "As a result of the court's order, Padilla remains in military custody even though the president has ordered that he be released from such custody ... and even though Padilla has consented to his release from military custody and transfer to civilian custody," he wrote. The appeals court also rejected the government's request to set aside a September 9 ruling that allowed Padilla to be held as an "enemy combatant" without being charged. Wiping out that ruling would have made it virtually impossible for the Supreme Court to review the case. The Supreme Court already is deciding whether it will review that ruling, which had been viewed as a key victory in the government's controversial policy of holding "enemy combatants" in prison for long periods of time without charging them with any crimes. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has said the "enemy combatant" issue before the Supreme Court should be moot since Padilla has now been charged in civilian court.
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