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The US military detains another of its Guantanamo Bay soldiers
By Mike Head
26 September 2003
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Just three days after the Bush administration reported the
detention of Captain Youseff Yee, a Muslim chaplain at the Guantanamo
Bay concentration camp in Cuba, Pentagon officials on Tuesday
revealed that another soldier from the camp, air force translator
Senior Airman Ahmad al-Halabi, was secretly arrested and jailed
more than two months ago.
Information about al-Halabis July 23 detention only emerged
after his military-appointed lawyers released details of the extensive
charges laid against him. Al-Halabi, a 24-year-old native of Syria
who moved to the Detroit suburb of Dearborn, Michigan as a teenager,
is being held at a prison on Vandenberg Air Force Base in southern
California. Authorities have imposed restrictions on him including
banning al-Halabi from speaking Arabic. That means he has to speak
through a translator when his father visits.
The young man has been charged with eight counts related to
espionage, three counts of aiding the enemy, eleven
counts of disobeying a lawful order, nine counts of making a false
official statement and one count of bank fraud. The 30 charges
range from alleged attempts to pass information to Syria, to conducting
unauthorised communications with prisoners by
furnishing and delivering unauthorised food, to wit: baklava pastries.
From the facts stated in the charges filed against al-Halabi,
it seems that the only specific evidence against him may be that
by supplying food he displayed sympathy and humanity toward the
prisoners, many of whom have been detained and interrogated, without
charge, for more than 18 months. But if convicted by a military
court-martial on the charges of espionage, al-Halabi faces execution.
The vague charges against al-Halabi include that he attempted
to pass on information that he had reason to believe could
be used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage
of Syria, a foreign nation. He is also accused of failing
to report contact with the Embassy of Syria.
Members of his family said investigators were misinterpreting
his innocent contacts with the Syrian Embassy, which occurred
recently as he arranged visits to Syria in order to marry his
Syrian-born fiancée and bring her to the US. When arrested
at a naval air station in Florida, en route to his home base in
Sacramento, California, he had a ticket to fly to Syria several
days later, where he was to marry.
Al-Halabi worked as an Arab-language translator at Guantanamo
Bay for nine months, between November 15, 2002 and July 23, 2003.
The government alleges that he wrote emails to an unauthorised
person or persons whom he knew to be the enemy, took
photographs of the camp and tried to deliver two handwritten notes
and a laptop computer with more than 180 electronic versions of
letters from prisoners.
The documents do not specify who the enemy is,
and prosecutors have refused to identify the alleged intended
recipients. His military attorney, Air Force Major James E. Key,
denied the charges. Airman al-Halabi is not a spy and he
is not a terrorist, Key said. We asked who the enemy
is, and we havent been able to get an answer.
Military prosecutors fought to keep al-Halabis Article
32 preliminary hearing secret and closed to the public.
Brigadier General Bradley S. Baker, the presiding officer, ordered
the entire hearing closed, but al-Halabis lawyers objected.
Bakers order was overturned by the Air Force Court of Appeals,
but much of the three-day hearing, which began on September 15,
was closed after prosecutors argued that national security would
be compromised. Baker has the power to order a full court-martial.
Al-Halabi appears to be an unlikely spy. He went straight into
the Air Force after graduating from Fordson High School in Dearborn
in 1999, and worked as a supply clerk before being pressed into
service as a translator, his attorney told the Associated Press.
Al-Halabi did well. He was named Airman of the Year one year and
promoted fairly quickly to senior airman, before serving in Kuwait
prior to the Iraq war.
High-level involvement
The facts and circumstances surrounding the arrests of Yee
and al-Halabi remain shrouded in military secrecy. But what is
known so far raises the distinct possibility of a witchhunt, orchestrated
at the highest levels in Washington, to prevent military personnel
who have served in Guantanamo Bay from making public any details
of the brutal treatment being meted out to the more than 660 prisoners
being held there in violation of international law and the US
Constitution.
Pentagon officials have alleged that al-Halabi and Yee knew
each other at Guantanamo Bay, while refusing to say whether they
are accused of acting in concert. Marine Corps General Peter Pace,
vice chairman of the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters
US intelligence was digging into the background of the two men.
We will chase these rabbits as far as we need to, to find
out where they lead, Pace stated. We dont presume
that the two we know about is all there is to it.
Paces comments confirm that the Pentagons most
senior officers are closely involved in pursuing the affair.
Judging by comments from an unnamed military official, the
case against Yee, who has yet to be charged, is flimsy. The official
told Fox News he was having a difficult time assessing the meaning
of the articles said to be in the chaplains possession when
he was arrested.
Yee was detained in part because he carried classified
information without having something called a courier
card in his possession. Such mistakes are not uncommon,
the official said. Yee also possessed a laptop equipped with a
modem, which is strictly forbidden at Guantanamo Bay. The official
pointed out that nearly every laptop now sold is equipped with
a dial-up modem.
Military officials referred to an ongoing investigation and
said additional arrests of other members of the US military were
possible shortly. An unnamed member of the navy was among those
being questioned.
As the WSWS has already pointed out with regard to Yees
arrest, it is implausible to suggest that any enemy
could have benefitted from documents in his possession.
In what way could he have helped these men and youth
who have been held behind razor wire without charges, lawyers,
visits from their families or indeed any contact with the outside
world for nearly two years? It hardly seems likely that he was
plotting a jail break or was preparing to hand over secret information
to Al Qaeda or the Taliban. [Why
has the US government imprisoned Captain Yee?]
The more likely threat is that Yee and al-Halabi displayed
some sympathy for the detainees, were intimately familiar with
their appalling treatment and were not trusted to keep quiet about
it.
It is not difficult to see why ordinary US servicemen, especially
those from an Arabic or Islamic background, would be morally outraged
by the illegal and barbaric conditions at Guantanamo Bay, and
would want to make them public.
Both Yee, as a chaplain, and al-Halabi, as a translator, would
have witnessed first-hand how detainees, including children, have
been stripped of their most basic democratic rights. They are
confined to tiny cells, interrogated by psychological stress methods
defined as torture under international law, and denied all contact
with the outside world, except for occasional, heavily-censored
letters. A rapidly rising suicide rate has given rise to fears
that prisoners are being physically tortured or even killed.
Syria targetted
The charges against al-Halabi indicate that the alleged espionage
affair may also be aimed at ratcheting up the Bush administrations
rhetoric against Syria. Syria remains on the State Departments
list of countries sponsoring terrorism and the right-wing Murdoch-owned
Fox News network in the US has already pointed the finger at Damascus.
The arrests raise new questions about Syrias motives
and actions in the US campaign against Islamic fundamentalist
terrorism, it reported.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other administration
officials have previously accused Syria of possessing chemical
weapons and of helping Saddam Husseins regime before and
during the recent Iraq war. Rumsfeld has also said Syrian nationals
make up the largest number of foreign fighters captured in Iraq
since the end of major combat. Syria has denied all the accusations,
as well as the latest bid to link it to alleged spies in Guantanamo
Bay.
Syrian Information Minister Ahmad al-Hassan described the charges
connecting al-Halabi to Syria as baseless and illogical.
How could Syria have spies in Guantanamo? Is the CIA incapable
of finding a trustworthy translator? he said.
Another revealing aspect of the affair is the involvement of
a senior US Democrat, Senator Charles Schumer of New York. He
took credit for the arrest of Yee and demanded that the investigations
be stepped up. He told CNN that six months ago, at his urging,
the Justice and Defense departments opened a probe into the two
organisations that train and certify Muslim military chaplains
such as Yee.
Schumer claimed that the inspectors general had dragged
their feet and Yees arrest underscored the need to
pick up the pace. A government official confirmed to CNN that
both the American Muslim Armed Forces and Veterans Affairs Council
and the Graduate School for Islamic Studies are under investigation
for allegations of supporting terrorism.
Schumers role highlights the bipartisan character of
what appears to be a witchhunt against those of Muslim backgrounds
in the US armed forces as well as a determined effort to defend
the Bush administrations flagrant abuse of fundamental democratic
rights at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere.
See Also:
Why has the US government imprisoned Captain
Yee?
[23 September 2003]
Families of Guantanamo Bay prisoners
launch US Supreme Court appeal
[19 September 2003]
Release David Hicks and all
Guantanamo Bay detainees
[15 July 2003]
Guantanamo detainees face
military tribunals
Bush picks six for drumhead trials, possible execution
[10 July 2003]
New revelations about Guantanamo
Bay prisoners
[3 January 2003]
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