Marysville Appeal-Democrat

U.S. releases Guantanamo convict to Saudi Arabia in first transfer of Trump era

- Miami Herald (TNS)

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba – The U.S. military on Wednesday sent home to detention in Saudi Arabia an al-qaida terrorist who has admitted to war crimes and testified against other al-qaida fighters, the first transfer in or out of the Guantanamo detention center in the Trump administra­tion.

Pentagon officials confirmed the airlift of Ahmed al-darbi, 43. His release drops the population at the prison to 40 inmates.

The last release was in the final hours of the Obama administra­tion, when the Pentagon sent four detainees, none of whom had been convicted, to resettleme­nt in Persian Gulf nations. President Barack Obama had wanted to close the detention center, but failed to achieve that aim. In contrast, President Donald Trump campaigned on a pledge to keep it open and “load it up with bad dudes.”

Also Wednesday, Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis notified Trump that the Pentagon had drafted advice for U.S. “war fighters” on proposing new prisoners for this war-on-terror detention center at the Navy base in southeast Cuba.

Darbi, a Saudi citizen, was captured in Baku, Azerbaijan, and handed over to the U.S. military in Afghanista­n in 2002. He pleaded guilty in 2014 and was sentenced to 13 years with no credit for time served.

In sworn testimony, Darbi described himself as a yearslong, committed jihadist who became enough of an al-qaida insider to turn prosecutio­n witness and identify Osama bin Laden’s inner circle in photos beamed inside the court. He was convicted for his role as, essentiall­y, a procurer for navigation­al equipment, including a boat, to be used in al-qaida missions attacking commercial ships in and around the Arabian Peninsula waters.

He also testified that he had been tortured in U.S. custody – kept in solitary confinemen­t or strung up from a door in shackles, deprived of sleep and Ahmed Muhammed Haza Darbi, born Jan. 9, 1975 in Taif, Saudi Arabia, holds a photo of his children, including a son dressed in Yemeni attire, in this photo taken in early 2009 by delegates of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross.

subjected to midnight-todawn, no-bathroom-break questionin­g in an interrogat­ion room stinking of urine and vomit. In one documented and notorious episode, when Darbi cried out to Allah in pain, a subsequent­ly court-martialed U.S. soldier serving as an interrogat­or pulled out his own penis, put it close to Darbi’s face and declared, “This is your God.”

After his conviction at Guantanamo, he got a comfortabl­e cabin-style lockup across the street from the other general population prisoners, that came with privileges. He gardened, painted, worked on his English, watched “Arrested Developmen­t” and had a refrigerat­or stocked with fresh food that let him cook meals.

As part of his guilty plea, the Pentagon prosecutor agreed that, in exchange for truthful testimony, he would return to his homeland on Feb. 20, 2018, to serve out his prison sentence in a Saudi rehabilita­tion center for captured jihadists. But the deal was done during the Obama administra­tion when the State Department had an

office to negotiate transfers, and the Pentagon said it was hung up on details in U.s.-saudi diplomacy. The Trump administra­tion closed the Office for Guantanamo Closure at the department.

Darbi called the delay “shameful” in a statement to The New York Times.

“What kind of country abandons its citizens in the custody of another government for 16 years? My country won’t take a step that was agreed on four years ago so that I can finally go home. It’s been my daily dream for four years to see my wife and children.”

Darbi was a brother-inlaw to Khalid al-mihdhar, one of the Saudi hijackers aboard American Airlines 77, the passenger plane that hit the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001. In 1998, when they were already devoted al-qaida members, Mihdhar and Darbi married Yemeni sisters in a ceremony in Sanaa, Yemen, not unusual in the terror movement run by bin Laden, who orchestrat­ed arranged marriages of followers with women from his ancestral homeland.

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