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Innocent Terrorists Strike Again
November 16, 2005:A former detainee at Guantanamo Bay, Rasul Kudayev, was recently detained by Russian security forces for his part in planning attacks on police in the Kabardino-Balkariya region in the Northern Caucasus (the most famous hotbed of Islamist violence is in Chechnya), which killed 45 people (not counting the 94 attackers). This detainee was captured in Afghanistan in October, 2001, and was released in 2004.

This is not the first time releasing an al-Qaeda member has come back to haunt the world. In 2001, an Iraqi member of al-Qaeda by the name of Ahmed Hikmat Shakir was captured in Qatar. A search turned up contact information for the safehouses used in the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center and information on Project Bojinka, an al-Qaeda plot to blow up a dozen airliners in 1995. Shakir had also attended the January 2000 al-Qaeda summit where the attacks of September 11, 2001 were planned (he was working as a greeter at the Kuala Lampur airport – a job acquired through the Iraqi embassy), was released shortly afterwards, and was recaptured in Jordan and interrogated. After pressure from Amnesty International, he was released, and fled to Baghdad.

This is something often ignored in the media, which has pushed the “prisoner abuse” issue at Guantanamo Bay and in Iraq (most notably the Abu Ghraib scandal). Human rights groups will probably not discuss the 45 deaths that a former detainee is responsible for, nor will they even admit that there is another side to the issue of detainees. Kudayev is not the first detainee who has resumed fighting for al-Qaeda after being released. The Department of Defense is aware of at least a dozen others who have been re-captured, having re-joined al-Qaeda in its fight against coalition forces in the war on terror.

This places the people running Guantanamo Bay in a conundrum. On one hand, they get flak from human rights groups and the media over the rights of detainees captured while engaged in hostilities against coalition forces in the war on terror. On the other hand, when detainees resume fighting for al-Qaeda, there is a chance coalition troops will be killed, and that will often lead to criticism for letting the detainee go – sometimes from the same people who criticized the existence of the camps at Guantanamo Bay in the first place. The case of Rasul Kudayev will not be the last time that a detainee will re-join al-Qaeda. The only question is when the next situation will occur.
Posted by: Steve 2005-11-16
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=135170