Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Guantanamo al-Qaida detainee sentenced to 26 years

- BEN FOX

FORT MEADE, Md. — A military jury Friday imposed a sentence of 26 years on a former Maryland man who admitted joining al-Qaida and has been held at the Guantanamo Bay detention center. But under a plea deal, he could be released as soon as next year because of his cooperatio­n with U.S. authoritie­s.

The sentencing of Majid Khan is the culminatio­n of the first trial by military commission for one of the 14 so-called high-value detainees who were sent to the U.S. naval base in Cuba in 2006 after being held in a clandestin­e network of overseas CIA detention facilities and subjected to the harsh interrogat­ion program developed in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Khan, a 41-year-old citizen of Pakistan who came to the U.S. in the 1990s and graduated from high school near Baltimore, earlier pleaded guilty to war crimes charges that included conspiracy and murder for his involvemen­t in al-Qaida plots such as the bombing of the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta, Indonesia, in August 2003.

He apologized for his actions, which included planning al-Qaida attacks in the U.S. after 9/11 and a failed plot to kill former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. During a two-hour statement to jurors Thursday, he said: “I did it all, no excuse. And I am very sorry to everyone I have hurt.”

The jury of eight military officers was required to reach a sentence of 25 to 40 years. Jurors heard of Khan’s extensive cooperatio­n with U.S. authoritie­s after his guilty plea and heard a two-hour statement from the prisoner describing his brutal CIA interrogat­ion and captivity in the three years before he was brought to Guantanamo.

In addition to the sentence, the jury foreman said seven of the eight jurors had drafted a letter to Pentagon legal authoritie­s recommendi­ng clemency to the defendant, which is an option under the military commission legal system.

A pretrial agreement means he could be released as early as February, at which point he would be resettled in a yetto-be-determined country. He cannot return to Pakistan.

Jurors were not told about the pretrial agreement, which requires a Pentagon legal official known as a convening authority to cut his sentence to no more than 11 years because of his cooperatio­n. He would also be given credit for some of the time he has already spent in custody.

Despite that agreement, the prosecutio­n urged the jury to recommend a sentence at the higher end of the range as the defense urged jurors to consider Khan’s cooperatio­n, contrition and the brutal conditions of his captivity.

“Since the commission of these crimes, Majid is a different person,” said Army Maj. Michael Lyness, a defense attorney. “Majid Khan is reformed and deserving of your mercy.”

Army Col. Walter Foster, the lead prosecutor, sought to cast doubt on Khan’s story of being led astray by radical Islam as a young man. He conceded the prisoner had also experience­d “extremely rough treatment” at the hands of the CIA, but pivoted to remind the court of the 11 people killed in the Marriott bombing.

“He is still alive and with us today, a luxury that the dead and victims of the J.W. Marriott bombing do not have,” Foster said.

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