Former Guantanamo inmate,
Abdullah Ghulam Rasoul once released from Gitmo quickly
became the Taliban operations chief in southern Afghanistan. This is the area where
lots of the American reinforcements are deployed to fight the Taliban. Rasoul, once
safely behind American bars, is now free to plot to kill them.
Are you proud XO?Of course a part of me would like to see the Gitmo IslamoNazis sent to some of our roughest prisons.
At Club Gitmo the IslmoaNazis have much better lives than most of the people they claim to be fighting
for. The IslamoNazis at Gitmo have plenty of shelter, nutritious food, freedom to pray and worship,
free medical care, free clean clothes and sanitation. If we moved these whackjobs to a nasty US Prison,
they would no longer be surrounded by like-minded Muslims, they would suddenly be in a tiny minority. Hell
put them among the criminal gangs, I bet the isolation would quickly make life much harder for them being
they would only get one hour daily to exercise outside their cells and never have contact with other prisoners
as they currently enjoy.
Abdullah Saleh Ali al-Ajmi, who was repatriated to Kuwait in 2005. In April 2008, he was confirmed to have
conducted a suicide bombing in the city of Mosul, Iraq, killing several Iraqi citizens.
ARE YA PROUD XO? Ibraham bin Shakaran and Mohammed Bin Ahmad Mizouz, were repatriated to Morrocco in July 2004. In September 2007,
they were convicted for their post-release involvement in a terrorist network recruiting Moroccans to fight for al Qaida in Iraq.
ARE YA PROUD XO? Ibrahim Shafir Sen was repatriated to Turkey in November 2003. In January 2008, he was confirmed to have been
arrested in Van, Turkey and later indicted for his role as a leader of the al Qaida cells in Van. Sen also recruited and trained
new members, provided illegal weapons to the group and facilitated the movement of jihadists.
ARE YA PROUD XO? Ravil Shafeyavich Gumarov and
Timur Ravilich Ishmurat were repatriated to Russia in March 2004.
Russian authorities arrested them in January 2005 for involvement in a gas-line bombing. A Russian court convicted
both in May 2006, sentencing them to 13 years and 11 years respectively.
ARE YA PROUD XO?Shah Mohammed, who was repatriated to Pakistan in May 2003, and was later killed
fighting U.S. forces
in Afghanistan.
ARE YA PROUD XO?
Abdullah Majid al-Naimi, who was repatriated to Bahrian in November 2005, was arrest in October 2008.
He had been involved in facilitating terrorism and was known for his association with al Qaeda.
ARE YA PROUD XO?
Pentagon: Ex-Gitmo detainees resume terror acts January 14, 2009|From Mike Mount CNN
Pentagon officials say 61 former Gitmo detainees have committed or are suspected of returning to
terrorism. Dozens of suspected terrorists released by the United States from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
are believed to have returned to terrorism activities, according to the Pentagon.
Since 2002, 61 former detainees have committed or are suspected to have committed attacks after being
released from the detention camp, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said at a briefing Tuesday.
The number is up since the Pentagon's last report in March 2008 when officials said 37 former detainees
had been suspected of
returning to the battlefield since 2002.
http://articles.cnn.com/2009-01-14/us/gitmo.detainees_1_detainees-guantanamo-bay-naval-base-pentagon?_s=PM:US
From The Times February 24, 2009
One in ten freed Gitmo detainees goes back to terrorism, says Pentagon Tom Baldwin in Washington and Michael
Evans More than one in ten of the Gitmo detainees sent back to their countries of origin have subsequently become
involved in terrorist activities, according to the Pentagon.
Geoff Morrell, the Pentagon spokesman, said that an estimated 62 former inmates had been linked to terrorism again.
"That's an 11 per cent recidivist rate," he told The Times.
Said Ali al-Shihri, released to Saudi Arabia in 2007, was put through the kingdom's special rehabilitation programme for
Jihadists but subsequently emerged as al-Qaeda's deputy leader in Yemen, Mr Morrell claimed. "The detainees released
in the early phases were considered to be the easy ones, in other words they could be released with minimal risk, and
yet 11 per cent have returned to terrorism," he said.
"With the remaining detainees, it's increasingly difficult to come to an arrangement because they are considered to
pose a greater danger, although not necessarily too dangerous to release to their home countries in the right circumstances."
Of the 243 detainees left in Gitmo, 100 are Yemenis. The United States is still trying to negotiate a deal with the
Yemeni Government about suitable monitoring and rehabilitation before they can be released.
The US says that it is not insisting on their detention in a Yemeni jail but it is seeking a firm assurance that they will be
under some form of control and not be "subject to torture or abuse".
Yemen recently released 170 al-Qaeda suspects after receiving promises from the individuals that they would renounce
terrorism.
With the closure of Gitmo less than 12 months away, on the orders of President Obama, the US authorities are
trying to find ways of dealing with the remaining detainees.
Dick Cheney, the former US Vice-President, said recently: "If you release the hard-core al-Qaeda terrorists that are
held at Gitmo, I think
they go back into the business of trying to kill more Americans and mount further
mass-casualty attacks".
"If you turn them loose and they go kill more Americans, who's responsible for that?" http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article5793046.ece