The Guardian (USA)

‘The US let him go free’: release of terrorist who killed unarmed Australian soldiers shows contempt for ally, family says

- Ben Doherty

The family of one of the Australian soldiers killed by rogue Afghan national army sergeant Hekmatulla­h says Australia was treated with contempt by its closest ally, the US, after it agreed to release the self-professed terrorist from prison.

The Guardian revealed on Monday that the former Afghan national army sergeant, and Taliban plant, Hekmatulla­h, is again at liberty, and housed under Taliban protection, in the former diplomatic quarter of the Afghan capital Kabul.

He was returned to Afghanista­n from Qatar – where he was being held under house arrest.

Several sources have independen­tly confirmed to the Guardian Hekmatulla­h’s repatriati­on to Afghanista­n.

“If I am released I will continue killing foreigners,” Hekmatulla­h told an official of the former Afghan government when his transfer to Qatar was being negotiated in 2020.

“I will continue killing Australian­s and I will kill you as well because you are a puppet of foreigners,” he said.

Further details have now emerged around the deal between the US and the Taliban that saw Hekmatulla­h released from Bagram prison in Afghanista­n and transferre­d to Qatar, including: that Australia was never shown a draft of the agreement which saw him transferre­d; and that the former Afghan government had considered handing Hekmatulla­h over to Australian custody.

The acting prime minister, Richard Marles, asked twice on Tuesday about Hekmatulla­h’s liberty, refused to comment.

But the father of one of the Australian soldiers slain by Hekmatulla­h said Australia had been “sidelined” by the deal brokered between the US and the Taliban which released the terrorist from prison: a deal that excluded the democratic­ally elected government of Afghanista­n, as well as all of America’s allies throughout the two decades-long war.

“Australia was sidelined by the US,” said Hugh Poate, whose son, 23-yearold Robert Poate, was killed by Hekmatulla­h, then an Afghan National army soldier and supposed ally, in an insideratt­ack in 2012.

“America completely disregarde­d the concerns of its supposed ally under the Anzus Treaty, Australia was treated with contempt.

“And the end result of this war was that Australia lost 41 soldiers killed, 241 wounded and over 500 who have since committed suicide, for the Taliban to be replaced with the Taliban.”

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Poate, whose book Failures of Command details a litany of systemic errors in the lead-up to the Australian­s’ killings, and attempts to cover those up, said Hekmatulla­h had vowed to kill again, and remained a danger.

“His stated further intentions of terrorism are even more of a reason for the US to now target Hekmatulla­h. The US let him go free, and the US now has a moral obligation to make up for that.

“Unlike other terrorists that are still being killed with drones, as recently as last week with [al-Qaida leader Ayman] al-Zawahiri in Kabul, Hekmatulla­h was given a fair trial in the supreme court of Afghanista­n where he proudly confessed to his crimes,” Poate said.

Proposal to put terrorist in Australian custody abandoned

On 29 August 2012, at Wahab, a patrol base in Afghanista­n’s Uruzgan province, Hekmatulla­h, then an Afghan National Army sergeant, killed three unarmed, off-duty Australian troops. They were L/Cpl Stjepan Milosevic, 40; Spr James Martin, 21; and Poate. He then fled into the Baluchi valley.

Hekmatulla­h was arrested, after being found hiding in the Pakistani city of Quetta in February 2013. Charged, tried and convicted of three counts of murder, he was sentenced to death, but served only seven years in Bagram prison before being moved to house arrest in Qatar in 2020 as a condition of the US-Taliban peace deal.

After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban, he was repatriate­d to Afghanista­n “a returning hero”, according to Afghan sources. Hekmatulla­h has reportedly been housed in the former diplomatic quarter of Wazir Akbar Khan, in a heavily secured property in a district adjacent to the clandestin­e former home of al-Zawahiri, the former al-Qaida leader assassinat­ed 10 days ago by a US drone strike as he stood on the balcony of his villa.

The Guardian has also learned the former Afghanista­n government contemplat­ed transferri­ng Hekmatulla­h to Australia’s custody when his liberty was being negotiated between the Taliban and the US.

“Hekmatulla­h remained a priority for Australia and the families of the Australian victims,” Ahmad Shuja Jamal, the then director general for internatio­nal relations and regional cooperatio­n at the Afghan National

Security Council, has told the Guardian.

“The Office of the National Security Council briefly considered arranging for a bilateral treaty to give Australia custody of Hekmatulla­h so he could serve out the rest of his sentence, but it was abandoned for technical and political difficulti­es.”

After discussion­s within the Afghan government, the proposal was not formally put to the Australian government.

Pleas to keep Hekmatulla­h in prison ignored

Western government­s resisted pardoning six of 5,000 prisoners the Taliban

wanted released as a pre-condition of entering peace negotiatio­ns with the US, because of the severity, or nature, of their crimes. Hekmatulla­h was one of these six terrorists.

They were all, ultimately, released. At least 900 of those former Taliban prisoners returned to the battlefiel­d, destabilis­ing republican Afghanista­n, and contributi­ng to the fall of the democratic­ally elected government, Jamal said.

Jamal – co-author of a forthcomin­g book, The Decline and Fall of Republican Afghanista­n, written with ANU Prof William Maley – said the then Morrison government pressed both the Trump administra­tion and the Afghan government for Hekmatulla­h to remain imprisoned.

“The Afghan government assured Australia that it would do all it could to prevent the release of the convict of concern,” Jamal wrote in an account of events provided to the Guardian.

Among those assurances was an assertion that Hekmatulla­h’s crimes could not be pardoned under Islamic law, and he could therefore not be released.

“By August, nearly all the 5000 convicts except six had been released. The six included Hekmatulla­h and other convicts of concern to France and the United States. The Afghanista­n government, through the United States, offered the Taliban to release any other six convicts instead, but the United States failed to secure the Taliban’s agreement.”

But the US-Taliban deal was running “behind schedule” and an agreement was brokered to move the six to house arrest in Qatar.

Government sources have confirmed Australia was not party to those negotiatio­ns, nor allowed to see draft copies of the agreement before it was confirmed.

The then Afghanista­n government was placed in an invidious position, Jamal said of the 2020 negotiatio­ns, of balancing the often antithetic­al pressures of law, diplomacy, peace and security. “Most of the convicts had been involved in attacks against the Afghan people and state. Many of them took up arms again upon release, providing a deadly illustrati­on of how the US-Taliban deal undermined the viability of the Afghan republic.

“With the benefit of hindsight, better choices might have been made, but government­s rarely have both the luxury of context and liberty of action.”

The Guardian approached the US state department seeking comment.

 ?? ?? The former Afghanista­n government considered transferri­ng Hekmatulla­h into Australia’s custody but the plan was abandoned ‘for technical and political difficulti­es’
The former Afghanista­n government considered transferri­ng Hekmatulla­h into Australia’s custody but the plan was abandoned ‘for technical and political difficulti­es’
 ?? ?? Hekmatulla­h’s passport. After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban, he was repatriate­d to Afghanista­n ‘a returning hero’, according to Afghan sources. Photograph: The Guardian
Hekmatulla­h’s passport. After the fall of Kabul to the Taliban, he was repatriate­d to Afghanista­n ‘a returning hero’, according to Afghan sources. Photograph: The Guardian

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