Obama Releases Terrorist From Guantanamo Known To Have Uranium and Stinger Missiles


“Detainee was arrested on suspicion of possessing weapons including Stinger missiles and uranium, which detainee’s recovered documents indicate was intended for use in a nuclear device,” read Zahir’s official Guantanamo file, which was leaked by the Wikileaks hacker group.

It seems to defy logic that a man with such a reputation would would have all of the terrorism accusations discarded “considered a low-level operative at best”. 

But, as we all know, Obama has a propensity for releasing terrorists that afterwards vow to continue attacking us, such as when he released 30 jihadists right back into the arms of ISIS, or when he broke the law when he exchanged five Guantanamo Bay detainees for Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl earlier this year.

Zahir and the other three men, two of them members of militias linked to the Taliban, were released after their threat level was dramatically reduced.

According to a Pentagon statement released on Saturday, they were flown overnight to Kabul and handed over to the Afghan authorities, but it did not give a reason. However, the Associated Press news agency quoted a “senior official” saying that “most, if not all, of the terrorism accusations against the men had been discarded and each is considered a low-level operative at best”.

President Barack Obama promised to close the Guantanamo Bay internment facility within a year of becoming president, but had to backtrack amid uncertainty over what to do with its hundreds of inmates.

After a series of releases, some to third countries, 132 now remain. Six other prisoners were sent to Uruguay earlier this month. This is the first group to be returned to Afghanistan since 2009.

Some former inmates, especially a celebrated group of Saudi jihadis known as “Batch 10” who were repatriated in 2007, have rejoined al-Qaeda. However, subsequent releases have been deemed low risk.

Zahir was said when recommended for continued detention seven years ago to be a “veteran high-level member of the Taliban Intelligence Directorate” as well as having links to narcotics smuggling.

Of the other three, Abdul Ghani was a member of an assassination squad who admitted to having been involved in at least one rocket attack on US forces; Khi Ali Gul was said to have ties to the Haqqani terrorist network and to have planned and executed attacks against US and Coalition forces; and Shawali Khan, who was said to be the nephew of a leader of the Taliban-linked Hezb-E-Islami Gulbuddin with possible ties to al-Qaeda and Iranian extremist elements.

The release followed a request by Afghanistan’s new president, Ashraf Ghani, and were said to be a sign of the US’s greater confidence in the Afghan authorities since he replaced Hamid Karzai, the former president originally backed by Washington but with whom relations had soured.

“The United States is grateful to the government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan for its willingness to support ongoing U.S. efforts to close theGuantanamo Bay detention facility,” the Pentagon statement said.

“The United States coordinated with the government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan to ensure these transfers took place consistent with appropriate security and humane treatment measures.”

The Afghans gave “security guarantees” over the four but there is no requirement that they be held and they are said to be likely to be returned to their families.

Source: telegraph.co.uk


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