Quid pro quo pro quo

by Jon Mandle on July 6, 2004

I’m amazed how little comment there seems to have been on this front page story in the NY Times from July 4. That date explains part of the silence, no doubt, but this still strikes me as a Very Big Deal.

In May, 2003, the U.S. returned five terrorism suspects from Guantanamo Bay to Saudi Arabia “as part of a secret three-way deal intended to satisfy important allies in the invasion of Iraq.” In exchange, the Saudi’s later released five Britons and two others [a Canadian and a Belgian] who had been convicted of terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia.” According to the authors, Don van Natta, Jr. and Tim Golden, “The releases were public-relations coups for the Saudi and British governments, which had been facing domestic criticism for their roles in the Iraq war.”

The authors use numerous anonymous sources, but to me, two specific points lend the story credibility. First, they quote from officials who supported the exchange, as well as though who were critical of it. Second, check out the non-denial denial from the spokesman from the National Security Council: “There is no recollection here of any linkage between these two actions.”

Tony’s Blair’s office wouldn’t comment, but an official in the British Foreign Office said: “We were extremely relieved to get the guys out of Saudi. We worked ceaselessly to get them out.” According to the authors, “Mr. Blair was so intent on winning the Britons’ release that he or his top aides pressed the Saudis every month for pardons, officials said. Even Prince Charles personally lobbied Crown Prince Abdullah.” Why were they so concerned to get their nationals released – after all, they had confessed and been convicted of terrorism in a Saudi court? “British diplomats said they believed that the men had been tortured by Saudi security police officers into confessing falsely.” They later retracted their confessions.

What did the Saudis get? “This was something that the Saudis desperately wanted, as a way to show their people that they could get something from the Americans, and that it was not just a one-way street,” an American official said. The authors helpfully point out that “Although Saudi leaders opposed a war with Iraq, they allowed the United States to use several military bases to launch air attacks into Iraq and as a staging ground for American troops.”

And what was in it for the U.S. – you know, aside from buying support for the war in Iraq? “We acted in our national interest to reduce the Guantanamo population at a time when we were able to conclude that we had no further need to detain these individuals,” said the American with knowledge of the negotiations. Wow – clearly the national interest was well served.

But surely those transferred from U.S. custody had been thoroughly investigated and found innocent? “Officials involved in the deliberations said the transfer of the Saudis from Guantanamo initially met with objections from officials at the Pentagon, the Central Intelligence Agency and the Justice Department. Those officials questioned whether some detainees were too dangerous to send back and whether the United States could trust Saudi promises to keep the men imprisoned.” Still, “As part of the arrangement, the United States initially authorized the outright release of one of the Saudi detainees. But a senior American official said the man was kept in custody by the Saudis after a terrorist attack in the kingdom raised concerns about militants’ activities.”

“It didn’t seem right,” said one military official who was involved in the process. “The green light had not appeared on these guys in the way that it had on others” who were released. “It was clear that there was a quid pro quo to the deal that we were not aware of.”

But since U.S. officials voiced these concerns, Saudi Arabia must have handled these individuals with extreme care once they received them, right?

Saudi officials gave contradictory accounts of the current whereabouts of the five men, saying at first that one or two of them had been released, then denying that any had been freed. The officials also gave contradictory accounts of the suspects’ legal status, first saying they had been tried and convicted of seeking to join Taliban forces in Afghanistan, but later saying prosecutions were still pending.

Yes, there’s more – I find almost every one of the following sentences to be a jaw-dropper:

The diplomatic initiative that led to the transfers began in July 2002, when a delegation of Saudi officials visited the American naval base at Guantanamo Bay…. The Saudi officials briefly interviewed each of the roughly 130 Saudi detainees at Guantanamo…. In August 2002, officials said, a diplomatic proposal was put forth by the American ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Robert Jordan, who had served as a personal lawyer for President Bush. Officials said Mr. Jordan first suggested the swap to senior State Department officials, but when Pentagon officials learned of the proposal, several objected, including the defense secretary, Donald H. Rumsfeld….

One American official said the Saudi authorities put forward a list of about 15 candidates for release, which the Americans ultimately disregarded. Instead, Pentagon officials instructed military intelligence officers at Guantanamo to assemble their own list.
But even that list became the subject of controversy at an interagency meeting at the Pentagon in April 2003. Officials from the C.I.A., the Justice Department and the Defense Department — which had produced the list — all raised objections to different detainees, officials involved in the meeting said.

I hadn’t heard about allowing the Saudi visits two years ago, but leave that aside. The proposal to link the prisoners came from Bush’s former personal lawyer who then became the ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Donald Rumsfeld – Donald Rumsfeld! – objected. And when the Pentagon drew up a list of candidates for release, the Dept. of Defense (which drew up the list!), State Dept., and CIA all objected. And yet, somehow, it happened. The authors don’t say, but we can guess who was pushing for it, no?

I obviously have no idea whether the terrorism suspects sent to Saudi Arabia were dangerous – although it seems that they were. (Their names were not released.) If they were innocent and not dangerous, they were being held hostage as bargaining chips – not the first time for this administration. If they were guilty and dangerous, the Administration sacrificed national security and the fight against terror to gain support for the war in Iraq – um, again, not for the first time – discussion here and here. It’s beyond me how anyone can seriously doubt the need for habeas corpus.

When I read this, I said to my wife, “This is unbelievable.” She asked whether I meant that literally. I said that I did – I would have a hard time believing any administration but this one would do such a thing. Then I though for a second: “Well, except for Reagan … and Bush … and Nixon.”

{ 8 comments }

1

Zizka 07.06.04 at 5:08 am

A very very sketchy story, as if censored. As I remember, the Brits were petty criminals and not terrorists, but I may be all wrong. Knowing nothing about any of them on either side makes it pretty murky.

If Rumsfeld was overruled, the Michael Moore alarm goes off.

This is old news. Coming out now seems designed to embarrass Bush. Bush really shouldn’t have screwed with the CIA.

My guess is that they were highly-connected terrorists whose uncles and cousins have a LOT of pull. The acephalous tribal Saudi state makes it almost impossible to punish well-connected people. A Mahfouz who was involved in the Grand Mosque attack was the only one not immediately beheaded, and is alive and free today.

2

taylor 07.06.04 at 5:26 am

This “swap” allegation was headline news in Canada. Here’s a story on the Canadian involved, with his view of things.

http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20040705/SAMPSON05//?query=swap

3

keef 07.06.04 at 6:30 am

A few things:

1) I don’t think the brits were criminals at all — I believe they were merely convenient “arrests” by the saudis and then were tortured to extract “confessions.”

THe US gave back people who were probably real terrorists to get the release of UK citizens who were certainly NOT terrorists.

2) If I recall correctly, the Saudis did not even announce the fact that these people had been returned, and didn’t announce their names. So, how can a return of Saudis help “public opinion” in Saudi Arabia when the public there doesn’t know that anyone , or anyone specificcally, was returned?

In short, maybe it assuaged the saudi royals but it had nothing to do with Saudi “public opinion.”

3) This gives the Saudis encouragement to abduct, torture and extract “confessions” from westerners so they can hold them in hopes the Bush administration will offer them painful concessions to release innocent people.

If you don’t know how the saudi “justice” system operates for non-Saudis, please look into it. It’s pre-medieval.

I’d prefer the US not negotiate with terrorists like the saudis.

Keef

4

Mary Martini 07.06.04 at 11:18 am

It is proved this swop took place, I am one of the relatives of the British men, Saudi officials say they have a justice system NO not true, you are first tortured(James’s case 10 weeks) and dragged in front of three non english speaking bearded men, well you are guilty no matter what, James Cottle one of the men just found out over the weekend he was swopped we are horrified that there seeemed no other way, appease Saudi again seems to be the norm, James was living back in UK and was lured to Bahrain for new work when he was kidnapped in June 2001, this was engineered by Prince Naif to make up his jigsaw of weterners to blame when all along Saudi is crawling with Al-Queda

5

GMT 07.06.04 at 2:35 pm

Sombody noticed.

Quoth the Moore:
When is the real discussion going to begin? If the White House has its way, the CNNs of this country will just keep attacking me with wild-ass claims about how I am in cahoots with Martians or something. And I’ve NEVER even released a suspected Saudi terrorist! I just made a movie! Geez…

6

Peter 07.06.04 at 4:54 pm

The Brits were rounded up and accused of bootlegging (appears near the bottom of page 2). Saudi, as you may or may not know, is a “dry” country where alcohol is forbidden (despite the word alcohol being arabic). The excuse the Saudis used to arrest, torture and sentence to death the Brits involved revolved around some tortuous claim that rival rumrunner gangs were doing the violence, not terrorists. Speaking from experience, there are no rumrunners in Saudi. People living in the compounds there brew their own moonshine (called Sidhiki, or “friend” in arabic) and trade it among co-workers. When a still catches fire, the news reports blame the fire on an “unattended cooking pot.”

All this from a country that claims binLaden is a dupe of the Mossad, and that AlQeda is run by Israelis.

Those of you who have worked in Saudi know that when you get your alien registration card/work permit, it is one of 2 colors: green if you are a muslim, and purple if you are an infidel. Little wonder how the kidnappers know who to kill and who to let go.

Saudi Arabia is not the ally of the US or the UK. I don’t know how long it will take for that to sink in to the folks stateside, or how many more of these things have to happen before they start to wake up.

7

Mary Martini 07.07.04 at 12:26 am

Yes Peter correct, these westerners were not petty criminals they did a home brew like everyone else there, Saudi Royals used to get the best Johnny Walker delivered, there were pubs there too but Saudi turned a blind eye unless it was blatant.

When James Cottle was kidnapped from Bahrain he was never asked about booze just which embassy official gave the orders for the bombings…

8

marc sobel 07.07.04 at 5:46 am

I guess you don’t need habeus corpus if you habeat britti

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