Cuba, are considered “high risk” detainees who if released would pose
grave threats to the U.S. and its allies, as did a third of those set
free earlier, according to thousands of pages of classified documents
being made public by WikiLeaks.
Release of the more than 700 separate documents dealing with the
prison, opened under the George W. Bush administration to house
detainees in the war on terror, drew a sharp rebuke Sunday evening from
the
The materials were obtained and released by
WikiLeaks as part of its ongoing series of making public classified
documents dealing with the wars in
Army Pfc.
The new posting, in which the documents were passed
to various news organizations, is the first time WikiLeaks has released
a trove of material on the prison operation at
Organizations with copies of the documents included
took pains to say that it had received the documents from some other
source. Some documents were posted on media websites, where the
Although much has been reported in the last decade about the
The documents also show that dozens of detainees turned out to be innocent, but were held for lengthy periods in
Hundreds more apparently underwent aggressive interrogation techniques
before it could be ascertained that they were low-level fighters of
little consequence.
But one former detainee who was set free, identified
as Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda bin Qumu, is apparently training
with rebel forces in
Qumu allegedly has a history of training at two
Another detainee,
is a senior explosives expert who came up with the design for the
failed shoe-bombing attempt in late 2001 on a plane headed from
At the same time, the documents state, at least two
other men were known to be innocent and their prison files carried that
notation. But they were not returned to their home countries for months.
There are 172 detainees remaining at
and the vast majority are considered of grave risk to the U.S. and its
allies if ever released — or freed without sufficient rehabilitation.
Of 600 others who have already been released over the years, about 200
— a third — were also at one time given the same high-risk designation
and sent home anyway.
Many have rejoined the fight.
The documents also provide new details about some of the most high-profile detainees.
For instance,
Mohammed wanted him to wear a suicide bomb vest and
approach Musharraf at a mosque. But the task turned out to be just a
test to measure his “willingness to die for the cause.”
Much of what Mohammed has said came after intense
interrogation techniques, including repeated water-boarding — simulated
drowning.
The documents also include new details about
The documents state that Nashiri, who last week became the first detainee to be charged at
to discuss who would carry out the ship bombing. Nashiri also ordered
the bombers to attack the first U.S. ship that stopped in the port of
Aden, which turned out to be the Cole two weeks later.
But much of what Nashiri told his U.S. captors came
after he was forced to undergo harsh interrogation techniques,
including two instances of waterboarding.
There also is new information about
Yet despite the harsh treatment, the files say, much
of what Qahtani said appears “to be true” and was “corroborated from
other sources.”
The
documents’ release said the Obama administration has transferred 67
detainees out of the prison, and the Bush White House transferred 537.
“Both administrations have made the protection of American citizens the top priority,” the
The statement added that the Obama administration will “work toward the ultimate closure of the
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(c) 2011, Tribune Co.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.