|
Gitmo
detainee was with OBL: FBI
Foreign Desk Report
GUANTANAMO BAY—A Yemeni admitted he was a driver for Osama bin Laden and
knew of the al-Qaida leader’s role in the Sept. 11 attack, an FBI agent
testified Thursday, countering defense assertions that the detainee was
a minor employee with no role in terrorism.
Salim Ahmed Hamdan told FBI agents that he had chauffeured bin Laden
around Afghanistan in an al-Qaida convoy after Sept. 11 and overheard
the leader say he had expected only up to 1,500 people to be killed in
the attack, Special Agent George Crouch said.
“When Osama bin Laden learned it was much larger than that he was very
pleased,” Crouch recalled Hamdan telling him and two other FBI agents
during one of a dozen interrogation sessions at Guantanamo in the summer
of 2002.
The testimony, which revealed more about the allegations against Hamdan
than previously known, came in a pretrial hearing to determine whether
the detainee can be prosecuted before the first U.S. military tribunals
since the World War II era. Hamdan, who has been held at Guantanamo Bay
for nearly six years, is charged with conspiracy and supporting
terrorism.
The two-day hearing ended late Thursday with the judge saying he would
issue a written ruling later after he returns to his office in
Washington. Prosecutors called witnesses to bolster their case that
Hamdan is an unlawful enemy combatant eligible to face the special
court. The defense maintains he was only one of several drivers for bin
Laden and had no knowledge or role in any terrorist attacks.
Defense lawyers want him declared a prisoner of war, which would entitle
him to greater legal protections than those now afforded to prisoners at
Guantanamo who are designated as “unlawful enemy combatants.”
Crouch said Hamdan left his native Yemen in 1996 to become an Islamic
fighter in the former Soviet state of Tajikistan. After failing to get
in, Hamdan ended up in Afghanistan, where he was hired as driver by bin
Laden and later became a member of the leader’s security detachment, the
agent said. Just before the 1998 al-Qaida bombings of the U.S. embassies
in the East African nations of Tanzania and Kenya, Hamdan helped
evacuate bin Laden’s compound in Afghanistan, at the orders of superiors
who feared retaliation, Crouch testified.
“This was going to be the first time Osama bin Laden was going to go
toe-to-toe or face-to-face with the United States and he was unsure what
the reaction would be,” the agent said.
Hamdan also knew of bin Laden’s involvement in the attack on the USS
Cole in 2000 and drove the al-Qaida leader to a news conference at which
he warned of an impending attack, Crouch said.
Earlier, a U.S. Army officer described Hamdan’s capture, saying he
wasn’t wearing a uniform when he was captured in November 2001 in
Afghanistan while driving a car with two surface-to-air missiles inside.
The testimony was intended to underscore the U.S. contention that Hamdan
was not a traditional soldier deserving POW status. Defense lawyers used
cross examination of the officer to point out that many Afghan fighters
under U.S. command did not wear what might be considered typical
military garb and that no other weapons were found in Hamdan’s car —
even though he had a permit from the Taliban to carry a sidearm. They
also noted Hamdan did not resist capture.
|