WIKILEAKS: 7 SHOCKING GITMO REVELATIONS
source: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/04/24/wikileaks-7-shocking-gitmo-revelations/?utm_source=fee...
Here are seven shocking revelations about Guantanamo Bay and the practices there.
One hundred twenty-seven "high risk" prisoners remain at Guantanamo Bay, but almost as many "high risk" prisoners have been released to other countries or freed, despite being described as "likely to pose a threat." Of the 600 detainees known to have been transferred out of the prison since 2002, 160 fell under the "high risk" categorization, according to NPR. At least two dozen transferred "high risk" prisoners have been linked to terrorist activity since their Gitmo exit, including two Saudis who became leaders of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
"There's a group there that we all agree never gets let out, and then there's the rest," Rep. Mike Conaway (R-TX) said of Guantanamo detainees at a recent congressional hearing. "As you close on that number of folks who should not ever be let go, then you run the risk of letting somebody go who shouldn't be."
Officials aren't sure what they're doing. In 704 leaked documents assessing detainees, the word "possibly" appears 387 times, “unknown” 188 times and “deceptive” 85 times. Two conflicting committees from the Department of Defense worked at the facility and clashed frequently over how to classify prisoners' threat levels and the quality of information they shared.
While some "high risk" prisoners have returned to terrorism, still others have become U.S. allies. A former Gitmo detainee whose files identify him as "a probable member of al-Qaeda," Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda bin Qumu, is now a key figure on the rebel side of the Libyan revolution, a leader of a rebel brigade in the northern part of the country. When Qumu was captured in Pakistan shortly after 9/11, he was considered an enemy of the United States. Now, he and the U.S. have a goal in common: unseat Gaddafi.
Instead of getting closer to catching Osama bin Laden, the documents show that the focus has broadened from catching key al-Qaeda operatives, noting information about other foreign operations. One captive was sent to Gitmo so officials could glean any information he had on the Bahraini court, and another was interrogated about any knowledge he had of Uzbekistan's secret service.
Officials took note of every possible piece of evidence, in hopes of building mosaics of information — even evidence as trivial as origami art. McClatchy reports:
Guards plucked off ships at sea to walk the cellblocks note who has hoarded food as contraband, who makes noise during the Star Spangled Banner, who sings creepy songs like "La, La, La, La Taliban" and who is re-enacting the 9/11 attacks with origami art.
Officials noted that information from some unstable prisoners may be faulty or untrue, but used it anyway. Yasim Mohammed Basardah, a detainee who gave information about 60 other prisoners, was noted as being unreliable, and his file stressed that information he shared should be independently verified. However, he was also given a "high" intelligence value, and his threat level was lowered from high to medium in exchange for his cooperation. He was resettled in Europe in 2010. According to the documents, eight prisoners have revealed information about 235 others.
Suspects were nabbed and shipped to Gitmo because they wore cheap watches. A specific model of watch — a Casio style released in the 1980s — was suspected to be used as a timer by al-Qaeda operatives. People in Afghanistan were seized and sent to the detention facility because they were wearing the watches, but most have been quietly released because of a lack of evidence.
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- tags:
- Wikileaks, Guantanamo Bay, Gitmo
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KSirys
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I read this today... pretty sad and pathetic they (the government) still have people that haven't done anything.
- 1 year ago
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KSirys
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freecrack
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KSirys:
sad and pathetic on the part of our government, or us?
if we love our democracy, wich keeps our government employed by our will, not us being subject to it's, then we just havent worked them hard enough in this regard.
- 1 year ago
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freecrack
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KSirys
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freecrack:
Everyone... I think everyone is at fault, including myself. Only because I know we can do something but choose not to because we don't have the numbers. It's easy to say, i got work to do and i can't worry about people, instead of saying, let me round up some people and make a change.
Also, as soon as you're arrested for protesting and trying to make a change, your credibility goes down.... so, it's a no win situation. The government has the power to discredit you and make you look like a loser, unless you have money to fight back.
It's sad to live in a country where anyone that chooses freedom and equality for people, who want the same for the poor and uneducated, can be easily discredited by the media and government in a matter of minutes.
Everyone that has protested on this site against our government, is in some watch list. I can guarantee you that! When is the day when we can all get together and fight back and be heard? Right now the Tea Party is doing something about it... when are we going to do something about it? Its easy to come here to yell and scream... I do it all the time...
Well, I know i tried but i'm not giving up... I just need the right people...
- 1 year ago
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KSirys
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freecrack
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KSirys:
i feel being arrested works in the opposite manor.
lol we probably are on a watch list.i know my ass is, cuz i bought a copy of the quran and one day will probably pick up mien kampf.
maybe true progressive pacifism is what we do here?
maybe it is just a matter of never losing passion for what is right and outlasting the force against us? - 1 year ago
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freecrack
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KSirys
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freecrack:
I don't know... i know i'll be in this world for one life and i'll try to do my part to fight... unless Satan hears me out and grants me 3 wishes!! LOL...
But i got involved when i watched the documentary about Che Guevara and his travels through South America... it made me sad and realize that people today are still being used and abused like slaves. The cycle never ends and unless we find a way to stop it, people like Che, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and many others, will only be used as an example of what can happen if you choose to fight back against the government.
- 1 year ago
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KSirys
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artemis6
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Wikileaks IS great ! Also - let them go already !
- 1 year ago
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artemis6
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BenjaminDover
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It sounds like the interrogators are suffering the same mental illness as fox "news" watchers, severe paranoid delusions caused by sensory overload.
- 1 year ago
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BenjaminDover
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KB723
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Ahhh Cool, Been wonderig where this Fella went, must read entirely at lunch today... Thanks for posting this Article treewolf39... =)
- 1 year ago
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KB723
