Originally published Thursday, May 8, 2008 at 12:00 AM
U.S.: Iraq bomber was at Gitmo
A Kuwaiti man who complained about maltreatment during a three-year stay in the U.S. detention facility in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, was...
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — A Kuwaiti man who complained about maltreatment during a three-year stay in the U.S. detention facility in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, was involved in a deadly suicide bombing in northern Iraq last month, the U.S. military confirmed Wednesday.
Abdallah Salih al-Ajmi, 29, whom the U.S. military accused of fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan and wanting to kill Americans, was involved in one of three suicide bombings that killed seven Iraqi security forces in Mosul on April 26, Defense Department officials said.
They said that after his release in Kuwait, Ajmi traveled to Iraq via Syria — a common way for foreign fighters to enter Iraq through porous borders. Military officials said Ajmi's motives were unclear, but in a lengthy martyrdom audio recording before his death, Ajmi implores people to take part in suicide bombings to attack Americans.
In portions of the recording translated by the Bethesda, Md.-based SITE Intelligence Group, Ajmi decries the conditions at Guantánamo as "deplorable" and urges others to fight.
"Whoever can join them and execute a suicide operation, let him do so. By God, it will be a mortal blow," Ajmi says. "The Americans complain much about it. By God, in Guantánamo, all their talk was about explosives and whether you make explosives. It is as if explosives were hell to them."
The suicide bombing is the first such attack in Iraq linked to a former Guantánamo detainee, though the Defense Intelligence Agency has estimated that as many as three dozen former Guantánamo detainees are confirmed or suspected of having returned to terrorist activities.
International human-rights groups and lawyers for Guantánamo detainees have disputed that estimate, saying only a handful of former detainees have left U.S. custody and gone on to fight U.S. forces.
"Our reports indicate that a number of former Guantánamo detainees have taken part in anti-coalition militant activities after leaving U.S. detention," said Navy Cmdr. J.D. Gordon, a Pentagon spokesman. "As these facts illustrate, there is an implied future risk to U.S. and allied interests with every detainee who is released or transferred from Guantánamo."
About 500 detainees have been released from Guantánamo or transferred to other governments since the facility opened in January 2002. Of the 270 who remain, about 65 more detainees have been cleared for release or transfer.
Ajmi was held in Cuba until late 2005, when he was transferred to the custody of the Kuwaiti government as part of a diplomatic arrangement. At hearings in Guantánamo, Ajmi maintained his innocence and said he never fought with the Taliban.
In the audio clip, accompanied by a propaganda video with an image of Ajmi and a young child, Ajmi said detainees were "like guinea pigs for experiments."
Referring to one detainee at Guantánamo — Yasser al-Zahrani, a Saudi national — Ajmi said that the detainee used to stand up for other detainees "every time a soldier or an officer hurt us" and that he "took revenge for us." The Defense Department reported that Zahrani died in June 2006, when he allegedly took part in a coordinated suicide with two other detainees.
![]()
Ajmi disagreed, saying: "The Americans killed him and said he hanged himself."
In 2006, Ajmi was tried in a Kuwaiti court, along with a group of other alleged terrorists, but acquitted and released. Defense officials said he apparently had been living a "productive life" in Kuwait. But Thomas Wilner, a Washington lawyer who represented Ajmi during his stay at Guantánamo, said Wednesday that Ajmi told him he had been badly abused after his capture in Afghanistan and later in Guantánamo, at one point coming to a meeting with a broken arm Ajmi said he sustained in a scuffle with guards.
Wilner said that over the course of the visits, Ajmi became "more and more distraught ... about the way he was treated and the fact that he couldn't do anything about it." Wilner called the suicide bombing a "horrible tragedy" and a result of the absence of appropriate legal processes at Guantánamo.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Iraq's oil bids fall short of expectations
Revelry in streets as U.S. withdraws from Iraqi cities
Countdown to U.S. withdrawal from Iraq
U.S. troops pulling out, but won't be far away

2009 fireworks time lapse
With strict parking rules enforced at this year's July 4th celebration on Wallingford Ave North, less cars and more spectators filled the streets.
Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
Tax tips for new independent professionals
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new car? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
nwhomes

Find a new home or condo that fits your lifestyle.
Search New Developments
Builder Directory
- Landmark Smith Tower mostly vacant
- Property taxes: Appeals shoot up in King, Snohomish Counties
- Shooting unveils very different sides of McNair
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling' and blasts media in Facebook posting
- Former NFL MVP McNair killed
- Hard times for tourist towns means good deals for travelers
- Tukwila residents rally against light-rail noise
- Confessions of an Idol Addict | "American Idols" on tour: Live coverage from opening date
- Quincy Jones remembers "the biggest entertainer on the planet": Michael Jackson
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- Seattle Mariners at Boston Red Sox: 07/05 game thread
247 - Palin links resignation to 'higher calling' and blasts media in Facebook posting
179 - Hatred for the NBA runs deep, but don't take it out on the players
137 - Tukwila residents rally against light-rail noise
128 - Former NFL MVP McNair killed
113 - Property taxes: Appeals shoot up is King, Snohomish Counties
104 - Tent City on campus: UW stalls decision
101 - Anti-tax rally in Olympia attracts about 1,500
69 - Mariners did their part, now they need help
46 - Megachurch pastor Rick Warren addresses US Muslims
36
- Property taxes: Appeals shoot up in King, Snohomish Counties
- Hard times for tourist towns means good deals for travelers
- Landmark Smith Tower mostly vacant
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- The People's Pharmacy | Estrogen mimicker found in sunscreen
- Tent City on campus: UW stalls decision
- Toyota's Toyoda scolds execs for emulating U.S. car companies' mistakes
- Tukwila residents rally against light-rail noise
- Outdoor-theater season kicks off at Volunteer Park
- Seattle safety project: A snake shelter on Beacon Hill





