Life after Guantanamo Bay: A tale of two Afghan friends
Journey encapsulates prison camp’s failed legacy in the fight to expunge radicalism
Two Afghan friends were incarcerated together at Guantanamo Bay, but they chose starkly divergent paths after release — one became Daesh militant, the other joined the USled government fight to crush the group.
Haji Ghalib and Abdul Rahim Muslim Dost, whose friendship coalesced around a shared love for poetry, were scooped up in the post-9/11 American dragnet and shipped off to the prison camp in Cuba.
Their journey encapsulates Guantanamo’s failed legacy in the fight to expunge radicalism, as President Donald Trump appears set to reverse previous US efforts to scale it back.
“Guantanamo is the worst place on Earth,” said Ghalib, who estimates he is 49, deep creases lining his gaunt face.
“Every day I ask myself the same questions: ‘Why was I taken? Why did they ruin five years of my life? Why is there no justice, no compensation?’”
After burnishing his reputation as a fearsome commander against the Soviets and the Taliban, Ghalib was serving in the Afghan police in 2003 when he was unexpectedly accused of insurgent links.
Authorities ignominiously stripped him of his post, tore his uniform off publicly, and sent him to Guantanamo until the American military concluded in 2007 that he was “not assessed as being a member of Al Qaida or the Taliban”.
When freed, Ghalib channelled his resentment to fight not the Americans but those he calls the “real enemies of Afghanistan” — the Taliban and, recently, Daesh militants, who are making inroads into the country.
That includes his former friend Muslim Dost, who Western and Afghan officials describe as a top Daesh commander in eastern Nangarhar province, and who was released from Guantanamo two years before Ghalib.
A gifted demagogue, Muslim Dost spent his time inside Guantanamo praying and preaching to other inmates about becoming militants alongside 9/11 accused Khalid Shaikh Mohammad.
“When he preached the inmates wept,” Ghalib recalled. “They were left shaken by his loud, mesmerising voice.”
Ghalib, seen as a loyal US ally, is the district chief of Bati Kot in Nangarhar.
His loyalty is undergirded partly by personal tragedy. In 2013, the Taliban killed his brother guarding a highway project in Nangarhar.
Just weeks later, the Taliban dug explosives at the grave site where Ghalib’s extended family had gathered to mourn, killing 18 people including his two wives and grandchildren.