In the dying days of the
Bush administration, yet another presidential claim in the “war on
terror” has been proved false by the withdrawal of the main charge
against six Algerians held without trial for nearly seven years at
Guantanamo prison camp.
George Bush’s assertion in his 2002 State of the
Union address – the same speech in which he wrongly claimed that
Saddam Hussein had tried to import aluminium tubes from Niger – was
that “our soldiers, working with the Bosnian government, seized
terrorists who were plotting to bomb our embassy [in Sarajevo].” Not
only has the US government withdrawn that charge against the six
Algerians, all of whom had taken citizenship or residence in Bosnia,
but lawyers defending the Arabs – who had already been acquitted of
such a plot in a Sarajevo court – have found that the US threatened
to pull its troops out of the Nato peacekeeping force in Bosnia if
the men were not handed over. According to testimony presented by
the Bosnian Prime Minister, Alija Behman, the deputy US ambassador
to Bosnia in 2001, Christopher Hoh, told him that if he did not hand
the men to the Americans, “then let God protect Bosnia and
Herzegovina”.
That such a threat should be made – and the
international High Representative to Bosnia at the time, Wolfgang
Petritsch, has also told lawyers it was – shows for the first time
just how ruthless and unprincipled US foreign policy had become in
Mr Bush’s “war on terror”. By withdrawing their military and
diplomatic support for the Bosnian peace process, the Americans
would have backed out of the Dayton accord which they themselves had
negotiated. Then the Bosnian government would have lost its
legitimacy and the country might have collapsed back into a civil
war which claimed the lives of tens of thousands of civilians and
involved mass rape as well as massacre. The people of Bosnia might
then have endured “terror” on a scale far greater than the attacks
of al-Qa’ida against the United States.
When the Bosnian court was preparing to release
their six prisoners, Prime Minister Behman was informed that Mr
Bush, Vice-President Richard Cheney and the Defence Secretary,
Donald Rumsfeld, had been personally briefed and the White House had
decided that, if they were freed, US troops in the Nato
Stabilisation Force in Bosnia would seize them, using “whatever
force is necessary”. So, despite a three-month investigation by the
Bosnian police, their clearance and a specific demand by the
Dayton-established Bosnian Human Rights Chamber that they should not
be forced to leave Bosnia, US forces seized all six, shackled and
blindfolded them and put them on a plane to Guantanamo.
Mustafa Idir, Mohamed Nechla, Hadj Boudella,
Lakhdar Boumedienne, Belkacem Bensayah and Saber Lahmar have
remained there since, the only European citizens still in Guantanamo.
Five of their wives are still waiting for them in Bosnia along with
20 of their children, two of whom their fathers have never seen.
Their case will be put to a habeas corpus district court hearing in
Washington next week – the six will appear in a live transmission
from Guantanamo – where their lawyers will point out that another
critical charge has also been withdrawn by the US government.
The administration has withdrawn evidence given by
a federal prisoner, Enaam Arnaout, against Boudella – that he
trained at an al-Qa’ida camp in Afghanistan – when lawyers were
about to discover that the US Justice Department had said five years
earlier that an FBI interview with the man was “not reliable”.
Even stranger is that the six prisoners are
claimed by the US to be “enemy combatants” when – with the dropping
of the embassy bomb-plot charge – there is no evidence they have
ever fought US troops or planned to attack US interests anywhere in
the world. Part of the case against Bensayah involved the alleged
discovery of a piece of paper at his home, bearing a telephone
number for an al-Qa’ida operative, Abu Zubayder. “The Bosnian police
couldn’t get this number to work in Afghanistan or Pakistan,” one of
the prisoners’ lawyers, Stephen Oleskey, says. “Now we believe an
announcement that the paper had been discovered was made before it
was ‘found’.”
Mr Oleskey says Clint Williamson, the US war
crimes ambassador, met Bosnia’s Prime Minister, Nicola Spiric, this
week. “There’s only one reason he makes these visits,” he said. “To
negotiate the return of people in Guantanamo.” The White House may
intend to save itself further embarrassment by ending the torment of
six more apparently innocent young men.