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Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Self-Proclaimed 9/11 Mastermind, Returns To Guantanamo Tribunal With 4 Others

By BEN FOX 05/04/12 06:51 PM ET AP

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
An image reviewed by the US military shows a 'Camp Justice' sign near the high-tech, high-security courtroom at 'Camp Justice' in Guantanamo Bay December 07, 2008. (MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — The man who once bragged about planning Sept. 11 "from A to Z" may mount a defense after all to charges that he orchestrated the worst terror attack in U.S. history, with families of the dead watching intently from the U.S. on closed-circuit TV.

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, charged with four others with planning and helping to carry out the 2001 terror attack that sent hijacked jetliners into the World Trade Center and Pentagon, will be arraigned Saturday at the U.S. military base in Cuba.

Mohammed had previously mocked the military tribunal and said he would welcome the death penalty. His co-defendant, Ramzi Binalshibh, also told the court he was proud of the attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Shanksville, Pa.

But "I don't think anyone is going to plead guilty," said Jim Harrington, Binalshibh's civilian lawyer, who added the defendants are expected to fight the charges against them, which include murder and terrorism and carry a potential death penalty.

Harrington declined to say what would be the basis of his defense and lawyers for Mohammed did not respond to messages seeking comment.

The men, held in a secret prison in Guantanamo that is under such tight security even its exact location on the base is classified, have not been seen in public since a pretrial hearing the day after Obama's Jan. 21, 2009, inauguration.

Their arraignment comes more than three years after the Obama administration's failed effort to try the suspects in a federal civilian court and close the prison at the U.S. base in Cuba. Attorney General Eric Holder announced in 2009 that Mohammed and his codefendants would be tried blocks from the site of the destroyed trade center in downtown Manhattan, but the plan was shelved after New York officials cited huge costs to secure the neighborhood and family opposition to trying the suspects in the U.S.

Six family members who won a lottery to attend the proceedings will face Mohammed and the other men in court; others were watching on closed-circuit video at military bases in New York City and the eastern U.S.

Cliff and Christina Russell traveled from their Rockaway Beach neighborhood in New York to honor the memory of Cliff's younger brother, Stephen, a firefighter killed responding to the attacks. Cliff Russell said he hopes the tribunal will end with the death penalty for Mohammed and his co-defendants.

"I'm not looking forward to ending someone else's life and taking satisfaction in it, but it's the most disgusting, hateful, awful thing I ever could think of if you think about what was perpetrated," he said.

The men never entered formal pleas in previous hearings, but Mohammed had told the court that he would confess to planning the attacks and hoped to be a "martyr." He dismissed the military justice system, saying, "After torturing, they transferred us to inquisition land in Guantanamo."

The arraignment is expected to be followed by a hearing on defense motions that challenge the charges and extreme secrecy rules imposed to prevent the release of information about U.S. counterterrorism methods and strategy.

New rules adopted by Congress and Obama forbid the use of testimony obtained through cruel treatment or torture. The defendants were held at secret CIA prisons overseas where they were subjected to what the government called "enhanced interrogation techniques." Mohammed was waterboarded 183 times, officials have said.

The American Civil Liberties Union filed a motion Friday asking the judge to prohibit the government's use of a 40-second delay and a white noise machine to prevent any spectators from hearing classified information, including details about the harsh treatment in the secret CIA detention sites overseas.

"If the defendants are unable to express themselves directly to the American public then how are we to know whether justice is being served," said ACLU director Anthony Romero.

Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch and a former federal prosecutor, say coerced testimony from witnesses is still admissible, even if it isn't from defendants, and the case would be better off in civilian court instead of being heard by a judge and jury panel picked by the Pentagon.

"There still are major problems in terms of whether the trial will be fair and, more important, will they be perceived as fair," Roth said.

The government has pledged to make the proceedings more transparent by broadcasting the hearing to families at U.S. military bases. News cameras, however, are still not permitted inside the courtroom, where the media and other observers are kept behind double-paned, soundproof glass.

Lawyers for the defendants had opposed the government's plan to show the hearings just to the families.

"We believe that the world needs to see what's happening," said Cheryl Bormann, a civilian attorney appointed to represent defendant Walid bin `Attash.

Prisoners now have access, at government expense, to civilian defense attorneys who specialize in complex death penalty cases. But human rights groups and defense lawyers still condemn the proceedings as flawed and fundamentally unfair.

Lawyers appointed to represent the men say they face hurdles they would never encounter in a civilian court, including strict limits on what they can say about their clients, whose every utterance is treated as presumptively classified.

"All I can do is try and protect my client's rights to every extent I can and try and hold the government to their burden to provide a fair and transparent justice system and to actually mean it," Bormann said.

Mohammed and his co-defendants were first arraigned on the U.S. base in Cuba in June 2008. The case quickly bogged down in pretrial motions and was put on hold as Obama sought to move the case to the federal court in New York.

But members of Congress balked and blocked the administration from transferring prisoners from the base to the mainland. That prevented the closure of the prison, where the U.S. still holds 169 prisoners.

"There is a consensus now ... that military commissions have a narrow but critical role in our counterterrorism and justice system," said Brig. Gen. Mark Martins, a Harvard Law School classmate of Obama's who was appointed chief prosecutor last year.

Mohammed, a Pakistani citizen who grew up in Kuwait and attended college in Greensboro, N.C., confessed to military authorities that he planned or carried out about 30 plots around the world. He admitted personally killing Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and said he conceived the plot to blow up a trans-Atlantic flight by would-be shoe-bomber Richard Reid in 2001. Mohammed was captured in 2003 in Pakistan.

His four co-defendants include Binalshibh, a Yemeni, was allegedly chosen to be a hijacker but couldn't get a U.S. visa and ended up providing assistance such as finding flight schools; Waleed bin Attash, also from Yemen, allegedly ran an al-Qaida training camp in Afghanistan and researched flight simulators and timetables; Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi, a Saudi accused of helping the hijackers with money, Western clothing, traveler's checks and credit cards; Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, a Pakistani national and nephew of KSM, allegedly provided money to the hijackers.

All five face charges that include 2,976 counts of murder, one for each person killed in the Sept. 11 plot that brought down the trade center and four hijacked jetliners.

The official 9/11 death toll grew to 2,977 last year, when New York City added the name of a man who died of lung disease attributed to exposure to toxic trade center dust. The Guantanamo charges will remain unchanged.

Roth, who will be part of a human rights contingent observing Saturday's arraignment at Guantanamo, said the prosecution can work around the ban on coerced testimony, perhaps even unwittingly, by introducing classified summaries of intelligence to support their case.

Even with the changes, the defense lawyers say the commissions are anything but fair. They complain that their mail is improperly reviewed by the military, interfering with attorney-client privilege, that they aren't given enough resources to investigate cases the government spent years building, that too many hearings are still held in secret and that they are barred from disclosing anything their clients tell them.

"You can take a $5 mule and put a $10,000 saddle on it and call it reformed," said Navy Cmdr. Walter Ruiz, a military lawyer for Saudi defendant al-Hawsawi. "You still have a $5 mule; it just has a fancy saddle."

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GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — The man who once bragged about planning Sept. 11 "from A to Z" may mount a defense after all to charges that he orchestrated the worst terror attack in U.S. his...
GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba — The man who once bragged about planning Sept. 11 "from A to Z" may mount a defense after all to charges that he orchestrated the worst terror attack in U.S. his...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daniel Alman
RIP Neil Armstrong
10:36 AM on 05/06/2012
They dont deserve the death sentence. These losers deserve to rott in a cage for the next 40 years...
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mlfertig
The grass isn't always greener
09:09 AM on 05/06/2012
Why are we trying to do anything remotely politcally correct with these mass murderers?
THey should have been assasinated 10 years ago. Burned slowly in a great painful death If anybody thinks this is wrong..tell me , but only if you also lost a family member and a freind on 9/11?
08:50 AM on 05/06/2012
obama pulling out all the stops, i got osama , now i am getting Khalid
see people that dont call me rambamma for nothin
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08:23 AM on 05/06/2012
Ah, the wheels justice get rustier & rustier.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
derealest
08:17 AM on 05/06/2012
Dang.......we should have negotiated with them first................................That would've worked.
Well let's not lose sight of the past, OK now let's negotiate with Iran..................................Stupid is as stupid does.
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07:19 AM on 05/06/2012
Who said the yanks don't have a sense of humor. Calling a military prison, on foreign soil, where prisoners have been kept for years without charge - CAMP JUSTICE
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
martintillier
human
04:18 AM on 05/06/2012
That the main defendant has already claimed to be the planner and instigator of the attacks both prior to and subsequent to his arrest means that a presumption of either guilt or innocence is rendered a mere technicality . The trial is to establish, beyond reasonable doubt , that his claim to guilt is a valid one , one assumes that there will be little difficulty in that for the prosecutors. What makes the trial look bad is the fact that the defendant has been tortured (water-boarded) I am reminded of the instance where Christopher Hitchens volunteered to be water-boarded to see if , in his own opinion, it amounted to torture , he concluded that it did and does. If only the defendant had not been tortured at all , but been tried on the basis of his boasted ''masterminding'' of the plot , and the mechanics of its implementation , it would have been something which no reasonable person could have had any moral or ethical objection to. I am opposed to the death penalty in all circumstances , and hold the view that he should, if found guilty , spend the rest of his life in jail. Capital punishment is vengeance , revenge , not justice. Having said all that , I will not be losing any sleep over the case.
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Vapula
Failure is not an option
12:26 AM on 05/06/2012
A Kangaroo court, a show trial. How does this differ from what the Russians and China do with people they have already decided are guilty? Why the charade when everyone knows the outcome? Dishonesty? A puerile attempt to show a respect for human rights when the prisoner has already been tortured on numerous occasions? The US military might like to stop this nonsense or risk being ridiculed.
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chainsawd1
I always seem to be where I am
11:15 PM on 05/05/2012
Khalid bragged that he was the mastermind from A-Z of this tragedy. He said he welcomes the death penalty.

If he and his group will not speak, will not even listen to the Arabic interpreters declare the charges against them, then go through the trial and convict these terrorists and give them what he wanted, death.

Our country hasn't been the same since 9/11 and it may never recover fully from the terror these men gave us.

Having worked in NYC in close proximity to the towers I still ache when I see the skyline without those buildings as many, many others must also. Just watch the 9/11 video every now and then to remind yourself just what these terrorists did to us.
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Vapula
Failure is not an option
12:30 AM on 05/06/2012
I remember the IRA slaughtering civilians in the streets of London and Manchester and Americans were funding them. Now you can call the IRA freedom fighters but the same is said about the people who blew up the world trade center. That is not to condone what happened. But if you live by the sword you may well die by the sword.
05:56 PM on 05/05/2012
How do i know this article is not worthless propaganda? No one has ever explained why WTC building 7 came down. until there is a logical explanation for why building 7 fell to the ground all these leads about 911 masterminds is complete nonsense. The government has not been completely truthful about 911 how do we know this guy isn't being forced to stick with his story? a fire does not bring down an entire building. and isn't it convenient that no one was inside WTC 7 when it collapsed? i still find it hard to believe that incompetent hijackers were able to outsmart the U.S. government, obviously the u.s. needed scapegoats and an excuse to start a war in the middle east.
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GilGamish
Exposing the charlatans
06:48 PM on 05/05/2012
people were evacuated from building 7, hours before it collapsed as were the people in all the building anywhere close to the WTC . as for an explanation as for why 7 collapsed see
this: http://www.structuremag.org/Archives/2007-11/SF-WTC7-Gilsanz-Nov07.pdf

please explain what was needed to carryout the attacks besides a flight schedule, and few box cutters and a middling ability to steer a jet.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ogledude
10:58 PM on 05/05/2012
because it was cheap construction and they crashed planes into it
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11:36 PM on 05/05/2012
7 was not hit.....anyone who has studied this event, likely
a false flag, knows that.....

Actually it was extremely well built, which is why NYC emergency
office for the mayor was there.....as well as papers about
corruption, etc. that of course disappeared....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fco1922
04:44 PM on 05/05/2012
This is a national tragedy for the USA as these tribunals reflect a fatal compromise with the supposedly inalienable principles underpinning the US republic.The ultimate victim of these proceedings will be US national honor and public confidence in the institutions of American government.
02:24 PM on 05/05/2012
Its a shame that A-llah for all his omnipotence, does not know any good psychiatrists to help route out the insularity and ignorence fostered by so many followers.
02:19 PM on 05/05/2012
If the correct information has been obtained via other means then what's the problem. If they had told the truth in the beginning (like all good muslims should do) then there would have been no need to resort to other methods.

It's a shame that Allah, for all his omnipotence, doesn't seem to know any good psychiatrists that can probably help the way of Islam from being suffocating and foster so much insularity an ignorance.
Savannah5
Happiness and Peace
12:48 PM on 05/05/2012
These men are killing machines and, if permitted, would kill again. In self-defense, we must put them to death.
Their very lives mean death for others.
05:59 PM on 05/05/2012
we don't really even know if they did it. just because they supposedly confessed does not mean anything. they could have been drugged and made to confess.
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10:34 PM on 05/05/2012
Methinks you've been drugged.
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11:38 PM on 05/05/2012
apparently several of them are not only alive but living average lives in the Mid East.....not even hiding.....just part of the Puzzle that DOES NOT FIT !
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11:46 AM on 05/05/2012
we have the admitted terrorist who did the WTC and he gets all these hearings and trials and justice. then you have an american citizen, alleged terrorist activity with no proof nor trial and he is assasinated under obamas order. is justice only for the arabian terrorists
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fco1922
04:45 PM on 05/05/2012
Possibly true but these decisions were taken by the elected representatives of the American public. Americans have only themselves to blame if they are not happy with the result.