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US may seek
death penalty for Khalid Sheikh
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—The Pentagon is planning to charge six detainees at
Guantanamo Bay for the Sept. 11 terror attacks on America and seek the
death penalty. Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said an
announcement of the charges could come Monday.
Military prosecutors also will ask for the death penalty for the attacks
that killed nearly 3,000 Americans, according to a second official who
spoke on condition of anonymity because the charges had not been
announced.
Among those held at Guantanamo is Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the suspected
mastermind of the attack six years ago in which hijacked planes were
flown into buildings in New York and Washington. Five others are
expected to be named in sworn charges.
“The department has been working diligently to prepare cases and bring
charges against a number of individuals who have been involved in some
of the most grievous acts of violence and terror against the United
States and our allies,” Whitman said.
Prosecutors have been working for years to assemble the case against
suspects in the attacks that prompted the Bush administration to launch
its global war on terror. “The prosecution team is close to moving
forward on referring charges on a number of individuals,” Whitman said,
declining to name the defendants.
The New York Times reported in Monday’s editions that the others are
Mohammed al-Qahtani, the man officials have labeled the 20th hijacker;
Ramzi bin al-Shibh, said to have been the main intermediary between the
hijackers and leaders of Al Qaeda; Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, known as Ammar
al-Baluchi, a nephew of Khalid Sheik Mohammed, who has been identified
as Mohammed’s lieutenant for the 2001 operation; al-Baluchi’s assistant,
Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi; and Walid bin Attash, a detainee known as
Khallad, who investigators say selected and trained some of the
hijackers.
The men would be tried in the military tribunal system that was set up
by the administration shortly after the start of the counterterror war
and has been widely criticized for it rules on legal representation for
suspects, hearings behind closed doors and past allegations of inmate
abuse at Guantanamo. Original rules allowed the military to exclude the
defendant from his own trial, permitted statements made under torture,
and forbade appeal to an independent court; but the U.S. Supreme Court
struck down the system in 2006 and a revised plan has included some
additional rights.
Defense lawyers still criticize the system for it’s secrecy. The
decision to seek the death penalty also is likely to draw criticism from
within the international community. A number of countries, including
U.S. allies, have said they would object to the use of capital
punishment for their nationals held at Guantanamo.
Officials plan to hold the trial in a specially constructed court at
Guantanamo that will allow lawyers, journalists and some others to be
present, but leave relatives of Sept. 11 victims and others to watch the
trial through closed-circuit broadcasts.
Khalid Sheik Mohammed was among 15 so-called “high-value detainees” who
were held at length by the CIA in secret overseas prisons — some subject
to what critics call torture — before being handed over to the military
in 2006.
In Guantanamo Bay hearings that have been criticized as unfair, he
confessed to the 9/11 attack and a chilling string of other terror plots
last March. “I was responsible for the 9/11 operation from A to Z,”
Mohammed said in a statement read during the session, according to
hearing transcripts later released by the Pentagon.
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