Lori Lowenthal Marcus
Published: August 12th, 2013
Nasser al-Wuhayshi, head of al-Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula assures AQ prisoners they will be set free Nasser al-Wuhayshi, head
of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula assures AQ prisoners they will be set free
One of the most wanted men on the planet, Nasser al-Wuhayshi, who heads the
feared Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) terrorist organization,
released a statement assuring his imprisoned comrades that they would soon be
released.
“The imprisonment will not last and the chains will be broken,” wrote
al-Wuhayshi, according to a report by Al Jazeera, posted on Sunday, August 12. “Your
brothers are about to bring down the walls and thrones of evil… and victory is
within reach,” al-Wuhayshi promised.
And if anyone could make a threat like
that sound credible, it is al-Wuhayshi.
In 2006, the former secretary to Osama
bin Laden escaped from a maximum security prison by digging his way out.
Al-Wuhayshi also united the Yemini and the Saudi branches of al Qaeda. This is
one of the most ruthless, creative, focused terrorist leaders currently alive –
and none of his colleagues are exactly warm and cuddly.
At least in part, it
was Al-Wuhayshi’s call to bin Laden’s successor, al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri,
that triggered the recent closures of U.S. embassies and consulates across much
of the Middle East and Africa. In late July, Al-Wuhayshi pledged loyalty to
al-Zawahiri.
In the July message, al-Wuhayshi condemned the recent waves of
drone strikes launched by the U.S. “Our war with this Zio-Crusader campaign is
ongoing, for they are the ones who choose war, and their people clapped for
them. We are people of war; we were born from its womb and we grew up in its
midst. It is as if we were only created to fight them and bother them.”
The
AQAP leader also pledged to ensure that Sharia law become the law of the land
everywhere. “Our project is to institute the Shariah of Allah on Earth and
reject the man-made laws and constitutions,” Wuhayshi said. “Nothing will rule
the country other than the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of Allah’s Messenger,
Allah’s peace and prayer be upon him, [especially] not with words written in a
constitution to deceive people: ‘Islamic Shariah is the source of legislation.’”
Although not part of the first wave of closures, the U.S. embassy in Yemen was
shut down on Tuesday, August 6. Unlike the U.S. outposts elsewhere in the
Muslim world that were re-opened on Sunday, August 12, there is currently not
even a tentative date for the re-opening of the U.S. embassy in Yemen.
There
have been nearly a dozen drone strikes in Yemen conducted by the U.S since late
July, but terrorism continues unabated. Five Yemeni soldiers were killed by
al-Qaeda terrorists early Sunday morning.
Another trigger for the unprecedented
number of U.S. embassy closures was what seemed to have become a pattern of
prison breakouts in which large numbers of al-Qaeda prisoners have escaped.
There were two prisons in Iraq from which prisoners escaped, and just a few
days later, more than 1,000 prisoners escaped from a Benghazi prison in Libya.
And more than 200 prisoners were released by outside agitators in Pakistan.
Naturally the question arises whether the brazen message to imprisoned al-Qaeda
prisoners that they would soon be released was also intended to include
al-Qaeda prisoners in the U.S. controlled prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and
whether officials were concerned about this possibility.
That question may have
been addressed in a series of court briefings regarding certain frisk
procedures that included “genital searches” for prisoners at the Gitmo
facility, and whether descriptions of those procedures could be withheld from
the public.
According to a declaration signed in June by Colonel John Bogdan,
the prison warden at Guantanamo, certain details about “operational-security
and force-protection procedures,” if made public, “would better enable our
enemies to attack the detention facilities at Guantanamo or undermine security
at the facility.”
Ayman al-Zawahri, al-Qaeda’s leader, identified the [Joint
Task Force-Guantanamo] detention facilities as a target during a 22-minute
video posted July 31, 2013, stating: ‘The terror network will spare no effort
to free prisoners held at the US military-run detention centre in Cuba,”
according to Al Jazeera. print tell a friend About the Author: Lori Lowenthal
Marcus is the US correspondent for The Jewish Press. She is a recovered lawyer
who previously practiced First Amendment law and taught in Philadelphia-area
graduate and law schools.
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/al-qaeda-leaders-vow-to-release-all-aq-prisoners-including-at-gitmo/2013/08/12/ | The Jewish Press
Read more at: http://www.jewishpress.com/news/al-qaeda-leaders-vow-to-release-all-aq-prisoners-including-at-gitmo/2013/08/12/ | The Jewish Press
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