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Home Front: WoT
Alleged USS Cole Mastermind Seeks to Avoid Death Penalty
2014-11-07
[AnNahar] The defense team for a Saudi man accused of organizing the attack on the USS Cole asked a Guantanamo Bay judge Wednesday to stop him from facing capital punishment.

Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri faces the death penalty if convicted of charges stemming the Cole suicide kaboom, and from the attack on the MV Limburg French oil tanker.

Seventeen sailors died on the Cole in 2000 in Yemen; a Bulgarian sailor was killed in the 2002 Limburg attack.

Al-Nashiri's lawyers have provisionally had the Limburg charges withdrawn, though the United States is appealing that ruling.

In their motion to withdraw the death penalty in the Cole charges, the lawyers said "there is no military necessity served by executing the accused," adding that he is "far from the original theater of war in which he was captured" in 2002.

"There's no deterrence in executing Mr Nashiri," said military defense lawyer Major Allison Danels, adding that such an action would only inflame tensions and would likely play into the hands of Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
jihadists.

"It would do nothing but enrage the bandidos Lions of Islam and give them reasons for their brutalities," she said at a preliminary hearing at the U.S. naval prison camp in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Al-Nashiri was initially held for several years in secret CIA prisons.

"Even if Mr Nashiri is acquitted, he can be detained indefinitely by the U.S., he's no danger for public security," Danels added.

Military judge Colonel Vance Spath will decide on the motion later, but he acknowledged how long the case is taking to play out.

"This case needs to move forward, because it's (been) here for a long time," he said, noting that the U.S. government was still appealing the dismissal of the Limburg charges.

Spath dismissed those charges this summer because he said the U.S. military had not shown it had jurisdiction pertaining to the attack on a French vessel.

The judge declined to give a date for al-Nashiri's trial, though it was initially supposed to open in February 2015.
Posted by:trailing wife

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