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Biden admin transfers a Guantanamo detainee to Belize

VCheng

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A sobering read for those who claim that Pakistanis had nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks:


NATIONAL SECURITY
Biden admin transfers a Guantanamo detainee to Belize
Majid Khan, a Pakistani citizen and Guantanamo’s only known legal U.S. resident, arrived in Belize on Thursday. Two more detainees could leave the facility in Cuba soon.

By Courtney Kube and Carol E. Lee

The Biden administration transferred a detainee from the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, on Thursday and is preparing to transfer at least two more in the coming weeks, according to two senior U.S. officials and a former senior administration official.

Majid Khan left Guantanamo early Thursday and arrived in Belize several hours later, the officials said. He is the first detainee to be resettled by the Biden administration and one of the few to be sent to a location in the Western Hemisphere.

A Pakistani citizen and Guantanamo’s only known legal U.S. resident, Khan was granted asylum while attending high school near Baltimore in 1998. He returned to Pakistan in 2002 and, according to a Defense Department detainee assessment, joined Al Qaeda and became a direct subordinate to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, often known as KSM, Al Qaeda’s senior operational planner and the principal architect of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

KSM, according to the U.S. documents, tasked Khan with delivering money and transporting another senior Al Qaeda figure to carry out a deadly attack on the Marriott Hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia, in August 2003. KSM intended to use Khan to attack U.S. gas stations and water reservoirs, the U.S. alleges.

Khan was arrested in Karachi in March 2003 and taken to a CIA black site where, according to a Senate Intelligence Committee report on the CIA’s detention and interrogation program, he was subjected to sleep deprivation, an ice water bath, and forced rectal feeding and rehydration.
In the report, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., called the treatment torture.

In September 2006, then-President George W. Bush announced that Khan was one of 14 so-called “high value detainees” being transferred from CIA detention facilities to Guantanamo Bay to face the military tribunal system. One of the other high-value detainees was KSM, who had also been captured in Pakistan in March 2003 and held at black sites.

In 2012, Khan pled guilty to terrorism-related charges and was sentenced to 10 years detention. That sentence ended March 1, 2022. Khan still has family in the U.S., but federal law does not allow Guantanamo detainees to be resettled in the U.S.


The Biden administration reached out to about a dozen countries to find a place to resettle Khan, now 42. In the end, Secretary of State Antony Blinken was personally involved in negotiating the deal with Belize, according to two U.S. officials. A senior State Department official said the issue was one of the items on the agenda during a meeting with the Belizean prime minister in September, but said the U.S. and Belize had been discussing the issue for months before that.

The senior State Department official said the U.S. looked at a lot of countries where Khan might be transferred, factoring in locations that have a good relationship with the U.S., have the capability to support the individual, including any medical or security requirements, and have the political willingness.

“This is a political ask,” the official said. “Belize was a great choice because, ultimately, we have a lot of things to do with them.” The official said Belize was willing to take Khan in part as a humanitarian gesture.

The official praised Belizean officials, saying, “They asked all the right questions when this process started,” and did a “terrific job of trying to evaluate” if this was the right decision to take in Khan.

“We are very satisfied the things we asked of them they can do and will do,” the official said.

The two senior U.S. officials and senior State Department official declined to provide specific details about any security or humanitarian assurances Belize provided or any aspects of the resettlement deal.

Khan’s attorney, J. Wells Dixon of the Center for Constitutional Rights, declined to comment on specifics of the case and referred to the public record in his military commission case and his habeas corpus case.

Asked about the possible movements, Defense Department spokesperson Lt. Col. César Santiago said, “We are aware of these reports and have nothing to announce at this time.”

Two brothers from Pakistan named Abdul Rahim Ghulam Rabbani and Mohammed Ahmed Ghulam Rabbani are also nearing transfer, according to two senior U.S. officials. The Rabbani brothers are both cleared to leave the detention facility and could be transferred in the coming weeks, but the details are still being worked out.

Abdul, believed to be the older brother and among the oldest detainees currently at Guantanamo, was born in 1967 and is alleged to have worked directly for KSM from 1999 until his arrest in September 2002. In 1998, Abdul’s younger brother Ahmed recruited him to travel to Afghanistan to attend the Khaldan camp near Khowst for basic weapons training,
according to a U.S. government detainee profile.

Abdul was kicked out of the camp for smoking. He returned to Karachi and, according to a U.S. government detainee review, he began to run Al Qaeda safe houses there, playing a key role in moving its fighters from Afghanistan to Pakistan, as well as transporting money, documents and equipment. Despite his close association with KSM, the U.S. believes that he did not have specific insight into Al Qaeda operational planning, according to his detainee assessment.

On May 13, 2021, a Guantanamo Bay Periodic Review Board determined “continued law of war detention is no longer necessary to protect against a continuing significant threat to the security of the United States,” and Abdul was cleared for release.

Both Abdul and Ahmed were arrested in Karachi in September 2002 and held at a CIA black site for months
, and according to the Senate Intelligence Committee report, Ahmed was one of 17 detainees subjected to torture at CIA black sites without the approval of CIA headquarters. The brothers were transferred to Guantanamo in September 2004.

The U.S. government maintains that Ahmed, also known as Abu Badr, also ran safe houses in Karachi. He has maintained he was merely a taxi driver and the victim of mistaken identity. He was cleared for release from Guantanamo in October 2021.

U.S. officials say that one of the brothers is very sick and they have been working to return him to Pakistan for health reasons.
Both brothers have engaged in extended hunger strikes.

In 2018, Ahmed wrote in The Los Angeles Times about the torture he endured at the CIA site. He said the pain he faced while being hanged with his hands bound above his head was so severe that he tried to amputate his own hand.

“Torture makes you go mad. Sometimes I catch myself going mad again now. Every time I am force-fed, every time I meet with my lawyer, every time I see a doctor, they use some kind of metal detector device to do a cavity search. They have never found anything in all these years. What I am meant to be hiding, I have no idea. It is pointless. But I have to wonder if the radiation it emits isn’t my own private Hiroshima or Nagasaki — four, six, eight times a day. Maybe I am paranoid, but I feel that something bad is happening to me, deep inside,” he wrote.

“There is no morning and no evening. There is only despair.”

There are now 34 detainees remaining at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility, which at its peak held about 660 detainees.
 
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The U.S. might be thinking he'll return right back to where he was before.
You mean he will become a terrorist again or come back to U.S.? What sort of 'protection' does Belize offer against these risks?Belize is a tiny speck of land in Central America with a population smaller than Portland, Oregon. He can join the southern caravan and stream through Mexico if he really wants.
 
The Biden administration reached out to about a dozen countries to find a place to resettle Khan, now 42. In the end, Secretary of State Antony Blinken was personally involved in negotiating the deal with Belize,

Can't we just send him here
Gilligans_Island_title_card.jpg


The French have hundreds/thousands of islands in the South Pacific.
I'm sure they can lend us one.
 
If they would only accept the likes of him. His own country did not want him at all, ever.

We can maroon people very very very easily..and I bet many have been intentionally already. There's lots of room. They'd never be found.


Home to 30,000 islands that are scattered across the world’s largest ocean, the South Pacific remains incomprehensible, if not mystifying, even to the most budding explorer. These dispersed pockets of land do have one characteristic in common, however. Each, in its own way, resembles a natural form of paradise.
 
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They all should get the real paradise they sought, the sooner the better, IMO.

Let them feel the paradise of a beautiful island (with no trees) in the middle of nowhere with a heavy ball and chain around their ankle and where they can try and play a game of "raft" from the trash that floats by.
 
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Let them feel the paradise of a beautiful island (with no trees) in the middle of nowhere where they can try and build a raft from the garbage that floats by.

I'd let them go to their heaven where 72 Virginians take turns with them for eternity. :D
 
More 72 like demons penetrating him in the vilest ways possible in hell.

Yes, but Virginians can be pretty rough too. That might be more poetic for them to be violated by those that they attacked. In their paradise. For eternity. :D
 
to me looks more like a fattened hog than a gitmo detainee/survivor
230202-Majid-Khan-ew-1153a-0389cb.jpg
 

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