Nicholas Kristof's Sunday column on Guantanamo prisoners, "A Prison of Shame, and It's Ours," makes the case, in typically arch prose, that his New York Times colleague Barry Bearak got off easy. The Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe imprisoned Bearak in disgusting conditions for four days, but Kristof thought it could have been worse: It could have been Guantanamo Bay.
My Times colleague Barry Bearak was imprisoned by the brutal regime in Zimbabwe last month. Barry was not beaten, but he was infected with scabies while in a bug-infested jail. He was finally brought before a court after four nights in jail and then released.
Alas, we don't treat our own inmates in Guantánamo with even that much respect for law. On Thursday, America released Sami al-Hajj, a cameraman for Al Jazeera who had been held without charges for more than six years. Mr. Hajj has credibly alleged that he was beaten, and that he was punished for a hunger strike by having feeding tubes forcibly inserted in his nose and throat without lubricant, so as to rub tissue raw.
....
"Granted, it can be hard to figure out what version to believe. When I started writing about Guantánamo several years ago, I thought the inmates might be lying and the Pentagon telling the truth. No doubt some inmates lie, and some surely are terrorists. But over time -- and it's painful to write this -- I've found the inmates to be more credible than American officials."
On his nytimes.com blog, Kristof was even more reductive. Calling Guantanamo Bay a "national disgrace," he wrote:
One reason is simply the injustice of keeping innocent people in abusive conditions....I think many Americans are troubled by Guantanamo but are willing to overlook some of the abuses because of the belief that the inmates are, in Don Rumsfeld's words, "the worst of the worst." In reality, it seems increasingly clear that they are just the unluckiest of the unluckies.
The Times' Alissa Rubin reported Thursday on one of those "innocent...unlucky" people held in Guantanamo Bay: An inmate released from Guantanamo in 2005 was one of the bombers tied to recent suicide attacks in the Iraqi city of Mosul.
A former Kuwaiti detainee at the United States prison camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, was one of the bombers in a string of deadly suicide attacks in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul last month, the American military said Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the Iraqi foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, urged American and Iranian officials to return to talks about Iraqi security, but said he understood that it was a difficult moment for reconciliation between the countries.
Cmdr. Scott Rye, a spokesman for the American military, identified one of the Mosul bombers as Abdullah Salim Ali al-Ajmi, a Kuwaiti man who was originally detained in Afghanistan and spent three years at Guantánamo Bay before being released in 2005. "Al-Ajmi had returned to Kuwait after his release from Guantánamo Bay and traveled to Iraq via Syria," Commander Rye said, adding that the man's family had confirmed his death.
Mr. Ajmi is one of several former Guantánamo detainees believed to have returned to combatant status, said another American military spokesman, Cmdr. Jeffrey D. Gordon. "Some have subsequently been killed in combat and participated in suicide bomber attacks," he said.
—Clay Waters is the director of Times Watch, an MRC project tracking the New York Times.
















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Guantánamo
May 8, 2008 - 17:39 ET by DontFeedTheTrollsGuantánamo is kind of a mistake of the Bush administration. At least 30 of those released from same have gone back to killing Americans or our allies. Summary field executions would be more effective, but our boys aren't murderers, so how about an immediate life sentence in the California jail of your choice?
D
Keep the ILLEGALS out, join NumbersUSA to send free faxes to your reps.
I have a dream.... A
May 9, 2008 - 09:58 ET by BDI have a dream....
A batch of Guantanamo detainees who the ACLU are representing and the NYT praising are put on a C-17 and flown to New York City.
Upon arrival at JFK they are hooded, taken to the head office of the ACLU and the NYT and de-hooded and de-handcuffed. As their eyes adjust to the light, they notice in in front of them are a batch of machetes and suicide vests. The guards then depart and wish them well, allowing the now freed detainees to properly greet and reward their supporters.
Naturally the buildings are surrounded by well armed members of the 101st Airborne conducting training for their next rotation to Iraq.
The left will lie about it.
May 8, 2008 - 17:39 ET by zhombreThe left will lie about it. They will simply say these men were radicalized and motivated to act by having been innocent and sent to Gitmo where they were deprived of their rights and brutalized. Etc. There is no fact however plain that a dedicated anti-American can not subvert.
Just more tired leftist
May 8, 2008 - 17:43 ET by Free ThinkerJust more tired leftist propaganda. Nobody just ends up at Gitmo by accident and once there it would be easy to argue they are treated far better than they deserve to be. I think I hear the worlds smallest violin starting to play.
That is why my contempt for
May 8, 2008 - 17:50 ET by usinkoreaThat is why my contempt for the intellectual left has grown so much over the years: they love to stroke themselves for being oh so progressive in extending the benefit of the doubt to the likes of Castro and Chavez and any self-proclaimed freedom fighter who is anti-US, but when it comes to their own government (or police for that matter), their "healthy" skepticism --- also manages to pat themselves on the back....
I don't read Kristof any more since he proved himself to be an idiot concerning North Korea but one who still felt the need to pontificate on something so horrible and important.
Does this nitwit get paid,
May 8, 2008 - 18:14 ET by general companyDoes this nitwit get paid, or does the Times just print his nonsense because it is free?
"Television is a freak show" Bernie Goldberg
We created him
May 8, 2008 - 18:11 ET by totalkaosdaveTotalKaosDave
I'm sure it was his stay at Gitmo that turned this incredibly gentle person into a(n) horrific suicide bomber. No doubt the torture sessions of listening to Madonna, Randi Rhodes, and Rosie O'Donnell, between his studying religion and writing prose created a hate-filled terrorist, or worse yet, perhaps it was the lack of Oprah on cable that brought out the beast in him. Either way, we created him and should take full blame for his actions. It was our chickens coming home to roost.
I think George Bush, Karl Rove, and Halliburton owe someone, somewhere an apology...
Mental facility
May 8, 2008 - 19:21 ET by ScrapironIs the NYSlimes building connected by tunnel to NYC's largest mental facility so the inmates can work at the NYSlimes, or do the city judges take a short cut and sentence the mental patients to live in the building and write for the NYSlimes.
Old, Retired and glad of it.
A friend told me that this would happen
May 8, 2008 - 19:30 ET by OldSailor88The Navy sends people to Gitmo for Individual Augmentation to man up the camp. A good friend of mine spent 9 months there. He told me that after you gain the respect of the prisoners, they will open up and talk to you. He said that the greatest percentage of them could not wait to be released so that they could continue to kill infidels. They virtually live for the Jihad.
Noli habere bovis, vir!
Wheew, that's a relief!
May 9, 2008 - 07:47 ET by theduck6For a minute I thought you were going to tell us these guys posed and still pose a threat to the whole world...Oh wait, ...Heeeeey!
Isn't "living" for the jihad a lot like saying "I'd give my right arm to be ambidexterous"?
This makes me all the more sure...
May 9, 2008 - 08:12 ET by c5thenI doubt we've gotten any significant intelligence from the low-level terorists that mostly make up the "gitmo" prison. They should be interrogated on or close to the battlefield where they are captured and then shot as non-uniformed combatants as the Geneva Conventions specifically allow.
The day that "politician" became a career choice is the day we started losing the Republic. Let's get it back! Alan Keyes '08.