Khalid Sheikh Mohammed ( ; also
transliterated as
Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed, and additionally known by at least fifty
alias)(born March 1, 1964, or April 14,
1965) is a
prisoner in U.S. custody for
alleged acts of
terrorism, including
mass murder of
civilians. He was
charged on February
11, 2008, with war crimes and murder by a
U.S. military commission
and faces the death penalty if convicted.
Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed was a member of Osama
bin Laden's al-Qaeda organization,
although he lived in Kuwait
rather than
Afghanistan
, heading al-Qaeda's propaganda operations from sometime around
1999. According to the
9/11 Commission Report he was "the
principal architect of the 9/11 attacks."
He is also believed to
have confessed to a role in many of the most significant terrorist
plots over the last twenty years, including the World Trade
Center 1993 bombings
, the Operation
Bojinka plot, an aborted 2002 attack on the U.S.
Bank Tower
in Los Angeles, the Bali nightclub
bombings
, the failed bombing of American Airlines Flight 63, the
Millennium Plot, and
the murder of Daniel
Pearl.
Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed was captured in Rawalpindi
, Pakistan
, on March 1,
2003, by the Pakistani ISI, possibly in a joint action
with agents of the American Diplomatic Security Service, and
has been in U.S. custody since that time. In September 2006, the
U.S. government announced it had moved Mohammed from a secret
prison to the facility at the Guantanamo Bay
detention camp
. The Red Cross
, Human Rights
Watch and Mohammed have claimed that the harsh treatment and
waterboarding he received from U.S.
authorities, amounts to torture.
In March
2007, after four years in captivity, including six months of
detention at Guantanamo Bay
, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed — as it was claimed by
a Combatant Status
Review Tribunal Hearing in Guantanamo Bay — confessed to
masterminding the September 11
attacks, the Richard
Reid shoe bombing attempt to blow up an airliner over the
Atlantic Ocean, the Bali nightclub bombing
in Indonesia, the 1993 World
Trade Center bombing
and various foiled attacks.
On December 8, 2008, Mohammed and four co-defendants sent a note to
the military judge expressing their desire to confess and plead
guilty.
Early life
Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed is usually reported to have been born in Kuwait
to parents
from Baluchistan
in Pakistan
.
He spent
some of his formative years in Kuwait
, just like
his nephew, Ramzi Yousef (three years
his junior). He joined the
Muslim Brotherhood at age sixteen. He
returned to Pakistan soon after, and after spending some time
there, went to the United States for further study.
He
attended Chowan College, a small
Baptist school in Murfreesboro
, North
Carolina
, for a
semester (beginning in 1983) before transferring to the North Carolina Agricultural and Technical
State University
and completing a degree in mechanical engineering in
1986. The following year he went to Afghanistan
, where he and his brothers (Zahed, Abed, and Aref) fought against the
Soviet
Union
during the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan. (Some sources claim that Khalid was
fighting in Afghanistan before he moved to the United States.)
There, he was introduced to
Abdul
Rasul Sayyaf, of the
Islamic Union
Party. The
9/11 Commission
Report notes on page 149 that "Sayyaf was close to
Ahmed Shah Massoud, the leader of the
Afghan Northern
Alliance".
The 9/11 Commission Report also notes that, "By his own account,
KSM's animus toward the United States stemmed not from his
experiences there as a student, but rather from his violent
disagreement with U.S. foreign policy favoring Israel."
However, according to a U.S. intelligence summary reported on
August 29, 2009 by the Washington Post, his time in the U.S did
lead him to become a terrorist. "KSM's limited and negative
experience in the United States — which included a brief jail stay
because of unpaid bills — almost certainly helped propel him on his
path to becoming a terrorist," according to this intelligence
summary. "He stated that his contact with Americans, while minimal,
confirmed his view that the United States was a debauched and
racist country."
According to the 9/11 Commission, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed after the
Afghan jihad went to work for an
electronics company, working on communications
equipment. In 1988, he helped to head a
non-governmental organization
paid for by Abu Sayyaf, which sponsored and aided Afghan fighters
against the Soviets.
He continued this work until 1992, when he
fought with Muslim fighters in Bosnia and Herzegovina
and supported this effort financially.
Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed moved to Qatar
to work in a
government office as a project engineer for the Qatari Ministry of
Electricity and Water. He stayed at this job until
1996.
Philippines 1994–1995
While he
was in the Philippines
in late 1994 and early 1995, he said that he was a
Saudi
or a
Qatari
plywood exporter and used
the aliases Abdul Majid and Salem Ali.
According
to Philippine police, a waitress named Arminda Costudio at the
Manila Bay Club in Pasay City
claimed that she met a man who introduced himself
as Qatari businessman Salem Ali, who she believes was Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, based on his fattened middle finger — a feature that
Abdul Hakim Murad has
also described. She said she met the man twice at the
Shangri-La Hotel in Makati City
in mid-1994. Each time, he wore a white
tuxedo and paid for dinner with a
wad of cash. He gave out
candies to
group members.
Costudio later became the girlfriend of
Wali Khan Amin Shah while he was
in Metro
Manila
.
Bosnia, 1995
News agency
Adnkronos reports
Khalid Sheik Mohammed traveled to Bosnia in September 1995, and
worked there, under an assumed name, for
Egyptian Relief, as a humanitarian aid
worker.
Quoting a
Sarajevo
paper called Daily
Fokus, they reported local intelligence officials
confirmed he obtained Bosnian citizenship in November 1995.
Those officials told
Daily Fokus that Egyptian Relief was
a front for the
Muslim
Brotherhood.
Qatar, avoiding arrest
In early
1996 he fled to Pakistan
to avoid capture by U.S. authorities. In his
flight from Qatar he was sheltered by Sheikh
Abdullah Bin Khalid Al-Thani,
who was the Qatari Minister of Religious Affairs in 1996.
Alleged terrorist activities
World Trade Center 1993 bombings
This attack was planned by a group of conspirators including
Ramzi Yousef,
Mahmud Abouhalima,
Mohammad Salameh,
Nidal Ayyad and
Ahmad
Ajaj. They received financing from Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,
Yousef's uncle.
Operation Bojinka
After seeing the respect that Ramzi Yousef had gained from the
World Trade Center 1993 bombings, Mohammed decided to engage more
directly in anti-U.S. activities as well.
He traveled to the
Philippines
in 1994 to work with Yousef on Operation Bojinka, a Manila
-based plot
to destroy twelve commercial airliners flying routes between the
United States, East Asia, and Southeast Asia. The 9/11 Commission
Report says that "this marked the first time KSM took part in the
actual planning of a terrorist operation."
"Using airline timetables, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and
Ramzi Yousef devised a scheme whereby five men could, in a single
day, board 12 flights — two each for three of the men, three
each for the other two — assemble and deposit their bombs and
exit the planes, leaving timers to ignite the bombs up to several
days afterward.
By the time the bombs exploded, the men would be far
away and far from reasonable suspicion.
The math was simple: 12 flights with at least 400
people per flight.
Somewhere in the neighborhood of 5,000
deaths.
It would be a day of glory for them, calamity for the
Americans they supposed would fill the aircraft."
Bojinka plans also included renting or buying a Cessna, packing it
with explosives and crash landing it into CIA headquarters, with a
back up plan to hijack the twelfth airliner in the air and use that
instead. This information was reported in detail to the U.S. at the
time. This point was not mentioned in KSM's confession to
involvement in thirty-one terrorist plots, including 9/11.
In December 1994, Yousef had engaged in a test of a bomb on
Philippine Airlines
Flight 434 using only about ten percent of the explosives that
were to be used in each of the bombs to be planted on United States
airliners. The test resulted in the death of a Japanese national on
board a flight from the Philippines to Japan. Mohammed conspired
with Yousef on the plot until it was uncovered on January 6, 1995.
Yousef was captured February 7 of that same year.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was secretly indicted on terrorism charges
in the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New
York in January 1996 for his alleged involvement in Operation
Bojinka, and was subsequently placed on the October 10, 2001,
initial list of the FBI's twenty-two
Most Wanted Terrorists.
Redevelopment of the relationship with Osama bin Laden
By the time the Operation Bojinka plot was discovered, Mohammed was
already safely in Qatar, back at his job as a project engineer at
the country's Ministry of Electricity and Water.
He traveled in 1995
to Sudan
, Yemen
, Malaysia
, and Brazil
to visit
elements of the worldwide jihadist
community, although no evidence connects him to specific terrorist
actions in any of those locations. On his trip to Sudan he
attempted to meet with
Osama bin
Laden, who was at the time living there with the aid of
Sudanese political leader
Hassan al
Turabi.
After a request to arrest Mohammed came to
the Qatari government from the United States in January 1996,
Mohammed fled to Afghanistan
, where he renewed his relationship with Abdul Rasul
Sayyaf and formed a working relationship with the newly migrated
bin Laden later that year. "According to KSM, this was the
first time he had seen bin Laden since 1989. Although they had
fought together [in Afghanistan] in 1987, bin Laden and KSM did not
yet enjoy an especially close working relationship."
Just as Mohammed was re-establishing himself in Afghanistan, bin
Laden and his colleagues were also transplanting their operations
to the same country.
Abu Hafs
al-Masri/Mohammed Atef, bin
Laden's chief of operations, arranged a meeting between bin Laden
and Mohammed in Tora
Bora
sometime in mid-1996, in which Mohammed outlined a
plan that would eventually become the quadruple hijackings of
2001. Bin Laden urged Mohammed to become a
full-fledged member of Al Qaeda, but he continued to refuse such a
commitment until around early 1999, after the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in
Nairobi
and Dar es
Salaam
convinced him that bin Laden was truly committed to
attacking the United States. Mohammed wished to retain some
degree of autonomy as a mujahid. His continuing relationship with
Sayyaf had to be kept hidden from Al Qaeda, as full disclosure
would have been problematic.
The 9/11
Commission Report notes on page 149 that Mohammed moved his family
from Iran
to Karachi
, Pakistan
in 1997. That same year, he attempted without success
to join mujahideen leader Ibn al Khattab in Chechnya
, another area of special interest to
Mohammed. He was apparently unable to travel to
Chechnya, and so he instead returned to Afghanistan, where he
gradually gained stature in Al Qaeda and ultimately accepted bin
Laden's invitation to move to Kandahar
and join the organization as a full-fledged member
(although he claims that he still refused to swear a formal oath of
loyalty to bin Laden). Eventually, he became leader of Al
Qaeda's
media committee.
He also worked on
various unfulfilled plans for attacks in Israel
and
Southeast Asia.He was close to former Jemaah Islamiyah leader Riduan Isamuddin,
better known as Hambali.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed has also been widely described as living a
lavish lifestyle, even while he was on the run from the law. He
traveled all over the world using false passports, and was very
close to being captured by U.S. authorities on numerous
occasions.
In June 2001, he phoned a
cell phone held
by Belgian
Saber Mohammed three
times — as it was believed he was acting as a messenger for
Mosa Zi Zemmori and
Driss Elatellah.
September 11, 2001 attacks
The first hijack plan that Mohammed presented to the leadership of
al-Qaeda called for several airplanes on
both
east and
west coast to be
hijacked and flown into targets. His plan evolved from an earlier
foiled plot known as Operation Bojinka, which called for 10 or more
airliners to be bombed in mid-air or hijacked for use as missiles.
Bin Laden
rejected some potential targets suggested by Mohammed, such as the
U.S.
Bank Tower
in Los Angeles.
In late 1998 or early 1999, bin Laden gave approval for Mohammed to
go forward with organizing the plot. A series of meetings occurred
in spring of 1999, involving Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Osama bin
Laden, and his military chief
Mohammed
Atef. Bin Laden provided leadership for the plot, along with
financial support. Bin Laden was also involved in selecting people
to participate in the plot, including choosing
Mohamed Atta as the lead hijacker. Mohammed
provided operational support, such as selecting targets and helping
arrange travel for the hijackers.
After Atta was chosen as the leader of the mission, "he met with
Bin Laden to discuss the targets: the World Trade Center, which
represented the U.S. economy; the Pentagon, a symbol of the U.S.
military; and the U.S. Capitol, the perceived source of U.S. policy
in support of Israel. The White House was also on the list, as Bin
Laden considered it a political symbol and wanted to attack it as
well."
"Bin Laden had been pressuring KSM (Khalid Sheikh Mohammed) for
months to advance the attack date. According to KSM, bin Laden had
even asked that the attacks occur as early as mid-2000, after
Israeli opposition party leader Ariel Sharon caused an outcry in
the Middle East by visiting a sensitive and contested holy site in
Jerusalem that is sacred to both Muslims and Jews. Although bin
Laden recognized that Atta and the other pilots had only just
arrived in the United States to begin their flight training, the
al-Qaida leader wanted to punish the United States for supporting
Israel. He allegedly told KSM it would be sufficient simply to down
the planes and not hit specific targets. KSM withstood this
pressure, arguing that the operation would not be successful unless
the pilots were fully trained and the hijacking teams were
larger."
In a 2002 interview with
Al Jazeera
journalist
Yosri Fouda, Mohammed
admitted his involvement, along with
Ramzi Binalshibh, in the "Holy Tuesday
operation". KSM, however, disputes this claim via his Personal
Representative: "I never stated to the Al Jazeera reporter that I
was the head of the al Qaida military committee."
Mohammed was arrested
on March 1, 2003 in Rawalpindi
, Pakistan
. Mohammed ultimately ended up at Guantanamo
Bay
.
In March 2007,
Reuters reported that Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed confessed to playing a role in the 9/11 terror
attacks during a secret hearing at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. "I was
responsible for the 9/11 operation from A to Z," Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed said in a statement read Saturday during a Combatant
Status Review Tribunal at the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo
Bay. His confession was read by a member of the U.S. military who
is serving as his personal representative.
Reid "shoe bombing"
According
to al-Qaeda operative Mohammed
Mansour Jabarah, who was captured and interrogated in Oman
in 2003,
Mohammed had sent al Qaeda operative Richard Reid on a mission to bomb
an airline. Jabarah also indicated that both he and Reid
reported to Khalid Shaikh Mohammed.
Daniel Pearl murder
According to a
CNN interview with intelligence
expert Rohan Gunaratna, "
Daniel Pearl
was going in search of the al Qaeda network that was operational in
Karachi, and it was at the instruction of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
that Daniel Pearl was killed." On October 12, 2006,
Time magazine reported that "KSM
confessed under CIA interrogation that he personally committed the
murder."
On March 15, 2007, the Pentagon
released a statement that Mohammed had confessed to
the murder. The statement quoted Mohammed as saying, "I
decapitated with my blessed right hand the head of the American
Jew, Daniel Pearl, in the city of Karachi,
Pakistan
. For those who would like to confirm, there
are pictures of me on the Internet holding his head."
Bali nightclub bombings
Mohammed was also indirectly implicated in the 2002 Bali nightclub
bombings.
In 2006, the Associated Press reported Col. Petrus
Reinhard Golose of Indonesia
's counterterrorism
task force, in which he asserted "Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was
personally involved in setting up the courier system
. . . in which money [to fund suicide bombings] was
carried from Thailand
to Malaysia
and finally to Indonesia's Sumatra
island."
Capture and interrogation

"The CIA happily transmitted his
mugshot, showing a pudgy, unkempt man with matted hair and a
slept-in-looking undershirt, to news organizations around the
world".
On
September 11, 2002, members of Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence
(ISI) claimed to have killed or captured Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
during a raid in Karachi
that resulted in Binalshibh's capture. Some
people have reported that Mohammed escaped, but that his family was
captured.
On March
1, 2003, the ISI reported that they had captured him in a raid in
Rawalpindi,
Pakistan
in a joint
raid with the CIA's Special
Activities Division paramilitary operatives.
Following the report of the capture, some Pakistani officials say
he was immediately transferred to U.S. custody without extradition
proceedings, while others said he remained in Pakistani custody.
The raid took place at the home of
Ahmed Abdul Qudoos, who was also
reportedly arrested as an al-Qaida agent. Qudoos' family told media
that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was not in the house, that Qudoos was
disabled and had never been associated with al-Qaeda, and that the
police conducting the raids did not ask for Mohammed. Other
newspaper accounts said that former Taliban officials in Pakistan
said that Mohammed was not captured and was still at large.
He told American interrogators he would not answer any questions
until he was provided with a lawyer, which was refused to him. He
claims to have been kept naked for several days during his
isolation and interrogations, during which he was "questioned by an
unusual number of female handlers".

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed after
capture.
According to the "unclassified summary of evidence" presented
during the Combatant Status Review Tribunal Hearing in 2007 a
computer hard drive seized during the capture of Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed contained the following:
- information about the four airplanes hijacked on 11 September
2001 including code names, airline company, flight number, target,
pilot name and background information, and names of the
hijackers
- photographs of 19 individuals identified as the 11 September
2001 hijackers
- a document that listed the pilot license fees for Mohammad Atta
and biographies for some of the 11 September 2001 hijackers.
- images of passports and an image of Mohammad Atta.
- transcripts of chat sessions belonging to at least one of the
11 September 2001 hijackers.
- three letters from Osama bin Laden
- spreadsheets that describe money assistance to families of
known al Qaeda members
- a letter to the United Arab Emirates threatening attack if
their government continued to help the United States
- a document that summarized operational procedures and training
requirements of an al Qaeda cell
- a list of killed and wounded al Qaeda militants.
However, at the hearing Khalid Sheikh Mohammed claimed that the
computer belonged not to him but to
Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi arrested
together with him.
On
October 12, 2004, Human Rights
Watch reported that 11 suspects, including Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, had "disappeared" to a
semi-secret prison in Jordan
, and might
have been tortured there under the direction of the
CIA.
Jordanian and American officials denied those allegations.
CIA Director
Michael Hayden told a
Senate committee on February 5, 2008, that the agency had used
waterboarding on Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed. A 2005 U.S. Justice Department memo released in April
2009 stated that Mohammed had undergone waterboarding 183 times in
March 2003.
In October 2006 Mohammed described his mistreatment and torture in
detention, including the waterboarding, to a representative of
International
Committee of the Red Cross. Mohammed said that he had provided
a lot of false information that he had supposed the interrogators
wanted to hear in order to stop the mistreatment.In the 2006
interview with the Red Cross, Mohammed claimed to have been
waterboarded in 5 different sessions during the first month of
interrogation in his third place of detention.
While the Justice Department memos were confusing in that they did not explain exactly what the numbers represented, a U.S. official with knowledge of the interrogation programs explained the 183 figure represented the number of times water was applied to the detainees face during the waterboarding sessions.
In June
2008, a New York Times article citing unnamed CIA officers
claimed that Mohammed was held in a secret facility in Poland
near
Szymany Airport
, about 100 miles north of Warsaw
, where he
was interrogated under waterboarding before he began to
cooperate. The latter claim remains controversial.
Report that interrogators abused his children
Ali Khan, the father of
Majid Khan, another one of
the fourteen "high-value detainees," released an affidavit on
Monday April 16, 2006, that reported that interrogators subjected
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's children, aged six and eight years old, to
abusive interrogation.
Khan's affidavit quoted another of his sons, Mohammed Khan:
Transfer to Guantánamo and hearing before his Combatant Status
Review Tribunal
On September 6, 2006, then-
American President George W. Bush
confirmed, for the first time, that the
CIA had
held "high-value detainees" in secret interrogation centers.
He also
announced that fourteen senior captives, including Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, were being transferred from CIA custody, to military
custody, at Guantanamo Bay detention camp
and that these fourteen captives could now expect
to face charges before Guantanamo military
commissions.
In a September 29, 2006, speech, Bush stated "Once captured,
Abu Zubaydah,
Ramzi Binalshibh, and Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed were taken into custody of the Central Intelligence
Agency. The questioning of these and other suspected terrorists
provided information that helped us protect the American people.
They helped us break up a cell of
Southeast Asian terrorist operatives that had
been groomed for attacks inside the United States. They helped us
disrupt an al Qaeda operation to develop
anthrax for terrorist attacks. They helped us stop a
planned strike on a U.S.
Marine camp in Djibouti
, and to prevent a planned attack on the U.S.
Consulate
in Karachi
, and to foil a plot to hijack passenger planes and
to fly them into Heathrow
Airport
and London's Canary Wharf
."
In March 2007, Mohammed testified before a closed-door hearing in
Guantánamo Bay. According to transcripts of the hearing released by
the Pentagon, he said, "I was responsible for the 9/11 operation,
from A to Z." The transcripts also show him confessing to:
On March 15, 2007,
BBC News reported that
"Transcripts of his testimony were translated from
Arabic and edited by the U.S. Department of Defense
to remove sensitive intelligence material before release. It
appeared, from a judge's question, that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had
made allegations of torture in US custody". In the Defense
Department transcript, Mohammed said his statement was not made
under duress but Mohammed and human rights advocates have alleged
that he was tortured. CIA officials have previously told
ABC News that "Mohammed lasted the longest under
waterboarding, two and a half minutes,
before beginning to talk." Legal experts say this could taint all
his statements. Forensic psychiatrist
Michael Welner, M.D., an expert in false
confessions, observed from the testimony transcript that his
concerns about his family may have been far more influential in
soliciting Mohammed’s cooperation than any earlier reported
mistreatment.
One CIA official cautioned that "many of Mohammed's claims during
interrogation were '
white noise'
designed to send the U.S. on
wild goose
chases or to get him through the day's interrogation session".
For example according to
Mike Rogers, a former FBI
agent and the top
Republican on the terrorism
panel of the
House
Intelligence Committee, he has admitted responsibility for the
Bali nightclub bombing, but his involvement "could have been as
small as arranging a safe house for travel. It could have been
arranging finance." Mohammed also made the admission that he was
"responsible for the 1993 World Trade Center Operation," which
killed six and injured more than 1,000 when a bomb was detonated in
an underground garage, Mohammed did not plan the attack, but he may
have supported it.
Michael Welner
noted that by offering legitimate information to interrogators,
Mohammed had secured the leverage to provide disinformation as
well.
List of confessions
All of these plots can also be referred to as 'Second Oplan
Bojinka'.
- The
February
1993 bombing of the World Trade Center
in New York City
- A failed "shoe bomber" operation
- The
October 2002 attack in Kuwait

- The
nightclub bombing in Bali
, Indonesia
- A
plan for a "second wave" of attacks on major U.S. landmarks after
the 9/11 attacks, including the Library Tower
in Los Angeles, the Sears Tower
in Chicago, the Plaza Bank Building in Seattle
and the Empire State Building
in New York
- Plots
to attack oil tankers and U.S. naval ships in the Straits of
Hormuz
, the Straits of Gibraltar
and in Singapore
- A
plan to blow up the Panama
Canal

- Plans to assassinate Jimmy
Carter
- A plot to blow up suspension bridges in New York City
- A
plan to destroy the Sears
Tower
in Chicago with burning fuel trucks
- Plans
to "destroy" Heathrow
Airport
, Canary
Wharf
and Big
Ben
in London
- A
planned attack on "many" nightclubs in Thailand

- A
plot targeting the New York Stock Exchange
and other U.S. financial targets
- A
plan to destroy buildings in Eilat
, Israel
- Plans to destroy U.S. embassies in Indonesia, Australia and
Japan in 2002.
- Plots
to destroy Israeli
embassies in India, Azerbaijan
, the Philippines
and Australia
- Surveying and financing an attack on an
Israeli
El-Al flight from Bangkok
- Sending several "mujahideen" into Israel to survey "strategic
targets" with the intention of attacking them
- The
November 2002 suicide bombing of a hotel in Mombasa
, Kenya
- The
failed attempt to shoot down an Israeli
passenger jet leaving Mombasa airport
in Kenya
- Plans to attack U.S. targets in South Korea
- Providing financial support for a plan to
attack U.S., British and Jewish targets in
Turkey

- Surveillance of U.S. nuclear power plants in order to attack
them
- A
plot to attack NATO
's
headquarters in Europe
- Planning and surveillance in a 1995 plan (the "Bojinka
Operation") to bomb 12 American passenger jets
- The planned assassination attempt against then-U.S.
President
Bill Clinton during a mid-1990s trip to
the Philippines
.
- "Shared responsibility" for a plot to
kill Pope John Paul
II
- Plans to assassinate Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf
- An
attempt to attack a U.S. oil company in Sumatra
, Indonesia, "owned by the Jewish former [U.S.]
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger"
- The beheading of Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl
Source: BBC
Confession used in Sheikh Omar's defense
On March 19, 2007,
Ahmed Omar
Saeed Sheikh's lawyers cited Mohammed's confession in defense
of their client.
Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, also known as Sheikh Omar, was
sentenced to death in a Pakistani court
for the murder of Daniel Pearl. Omar's lawyers recently announced
that they planned to use Mohammed's confession in an appeal. They
had always acknowledged that Omar played a role in Pearl's murder,
but argue that Mohammed was the actual murderer.
Trial for 9/11
On
February 11, 2008, the United
States Department of Defense
charged Mohammed as well as Ramzi Binalshibh, Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi, Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali and Walid Bin Attash for the September 11, 2001 attacks under
the military
commission system, as established under the Military Commissions Act of
2006. They have reportedly been charged with the murder of
almost 3000 people, terrorism and providing material support for
terrorism and plane hijacking; as well as attacking civilian
objects, intentionally causing serious bodily injury and
destruction of property in violation of the law of war. The charges
against them list 169 overt acts allegedly committed by the
defendants in furtherance of the September 11 events."
The charges include 2,973 individual counts of murder — one
for each person killed in the 9/11 attacks.
The U.S. government is seeking the
death
penalty, which would require the unanimous agreement of the
commission judges.
Human rights groups, including
Amnesty International,
Human Rights Watch and the
Center for Constitutional
Rights, and U.S. military defense lawyers have criticised the
military commissions for lacking necessary rights for a fair trial.
Critics generally argue for a trial either in a
federal district court as a
common criminal suspect, or by
court-martial as a prisoner under the
Geneva Conventions. Mohammed could still
face the death penalty under any of these systems.
The Pentagon insists that Mohammed and the other defendant will
receive a fair trial, with rights "virtually identical" to U.S.
military service personnel. However, there are some differences
between U.S. courts-martial and military commissions.
The U.S. Defence Department has built a $12 million "Expeditionary
Legal Complex" in Guantánamo with a snoop-proof courtroom capable
of trying six alleged co-conspirators before one judge and jury.
Media and other observers are sequestered in a soundproofed room
behind thick glass, at the rear. The judge at the front and a court
security officer have mute buttons to silence the feed to the
observers' booth—if they suspect someone in court could spill
classified information.
The trial, presided over by judge
Ralph
Kohlmann, began on June 5, 2008, with the
arraignment. About thirty-five journalists
watched on closed-circuit TV in a press room inside a converted
hangar, while two dozen others watched through a window from a room
adjacent to the courtroom.
Mohammed insisted he would not be represented by any attorneys. The
other detainees quickly followed suit and said they too wanted to
represent themselves. One of the civilian attorneys Mohammed
spurned, David Nevin, later told the
Associated Press that he would attempt to
meet with Mohammed to "hear him out and see if we can give him
information that is helpful."
Mohammed was careful not to interrupt Kohlmann. He lost his
composure only after the Marine colonel ordered several defense
attorneys to keep quiet "It's an inquisition. It's not a trial,"
Mohammed said in broken English, his voice rising. "After torturing
they transfer us to inquisition-land in Guantanamo."
He explained he believes only in religious
Sharia law and railed against U.S. President
George W. Bush for waging a "crusade war." When judge warned
Mohammed that he faces execution if convicted of organizing the
attacks on America, Mohammed said he welcomes the death penalty.
"Yes, this is what I wish, to be a martyr for a long time,"
Mohammed declared. "I will, God willing, have this, by you."
A sound feed to journalists from the courtroom was turned off
twice.
The sound was also turned off when another defendant discussed
early days of his imprisonment. Judge
Ralph Kohlmann said that in both cases sound
was turned off because classified information was discussed.
On September 23, 2008, in the
voir dire
process, Mohammed questioned the judge on his potential bias at
trial. "Glaring and poking an occasional finger in the air,"
Mohammed told Kohlmann, "The government considers all of us
fanatical extremists," and asked, "How can you, as an officer of
the U.S. Marine Corps, stand over me in judgment?" Insisting that
he was attempting to work out if Kohlmann was a religious
extremist, he continued: "[President] Bush said this is a crusader
war and Osama bin Laden said this is a holy war against the
crusades. If you were part of
Jerry
Falwell or
Pat Robertson’s group,
then you would not be impartial."
For his part, Kohlmann attempted to maintain his dignity,
explaining that he was currently unaffiliated with a church
"because I’ve moved so often." He added that he had previously
worshiped at "various
Lutheran
churches and
Episcopal churches."
Mohammed then proceeded to ask Kohlmann about his views on torture.
As part of the background materials supplied to him — or made
available to the civilian lawyers who are voluntarily assisting him
in his defense — he referred to an ethics seminar that
Kohlmann had conducted at his daughter’s high school in 2005, in
which the students had been asked to consider their responses to a
“Ticking Time Bomb” scenario. Based on a fictional proposition that
a bomb is about to go off, and an unwilling captive knows its
location but is unwilling to disclose the information, the scenario
is widely used by proponents of “enhanced interrogation techniques”
to justify the use of torture.
Kohlmann explained that he encouraged the debate as part of "a
complex question that might be dealt with differently if someone
were specifically trying to save the nation or just looking at it
from an ethical sense or just looking at it from a legal sense,"
and dismissed a combative question from Mohammed — "It seems
that you are supportive of the use of torture for national
security?" — by stating, "I have no idea where that would come
from."
On October 12, 2008, Kohlmann ruled that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
and his four co-charged, should be provided with laptops, so they
can work on their defenses.
In November 2009, according to an Administration official, Mohammed
was being transferred from
Guantanamo
Bay to New York to face a Federal Trial. Four other detainees
will be facing trial in front of civilian
federal court, as well.
Kohlmann unexpectedly replaced
Kohlmann was scheduled to retire in 2009. In November 2008, he was
unexpectedly replaced by
Stephen
Henley.
Possible guilty plea
On December 8, 2008, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his four
co-defendants told the judge that they wished to confess and plead
guilty to all charges. The plea will be delayed until
mental competency hearings for
Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi and Ramzi Binalshibh can be held; Mohammed
said, "We want everyone to plead together."
Spencer Ackerman, writing in the
Washington
Independent, reported that Presiding Officer
Stephen Henley had to consider whether he was
authorized to accept guilty pleas.
Release of new images
On September 9, 2009, images of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and
Ammar al Baluchi were widely republished.
Camp authorities have strict controls over the capture and release
of images of the Guantanamo captives. Journalists and
VIPs visiting Guantanamo are not allowed to take any
pictures that show the captives' faces."
High value" captives, like Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed, are only seen by journalists when they are in the
court room, where cameras are not allowed. However, on September 9,
2009 independent counter-terrorism researchers found new images of
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his nephew Ammar al Baluchi on "jihadist
websites". According to
Carol
Rosenberg, writing in the
Miami
Herald: "The pictures were taken in July, said
International Committee
of the Red Cross spokesman
Bernard
Barrett, under an agreement with prison camp staff that lets
Red Cross delegates photograph detainees and send photos to family
members."
See also
References
External links