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via Former Guantanamo detainee was on ground in Benghazi during terror attack, source says | Fox News.
A former Guantanamo Bay detainee with Al Qaeda ties was in Benghazi
the night of the Sept. 11 attack, according to a source on the ground in
Libya.
The source told Fox News that ex-detainee Sufian bin Qumu, who is
suspected of running camps in eastern Libya where some of the assailants
trained, is also a “respected member” of Ansar al-Sharia — one of the
Islamist groups identified in State Department email traffic two hours
after the attack.
Two sources familiar with the investigation, when asked about bin
Qumu’s whereabouts the night of the attack, did not dispute the claim he
was in Benghazi.
While it is not clear whether bin Qumu was directing the assault, his
security file from Guantanamo may be revealing. Having already trained
in Usama bin Laden’s camps, in 1998 bin Qumu joined the Taliban in
Pakistan and “communicated with likely extremist elements via radio
during this period indicating a position of leadership,” the file shows.
Fox News’ ongoing reporting on the attack has shown that at least
four key Benghazi suspects have ties to the Al Qaeda senior leadership
in Pakistan. They include bin Qumu and Muhammad Jamal, whose network is
also suspected of training jihadists for the attack. Jamal was held, and
later released by, Egyptian authorities. Earlier this month, the State
Department’s terrorist designation for Jamal and his network cites
letters he exchanged with Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, where Jamal
asked for money and explained the scope of his training camps, which
included Libya and the Sinai.
Fox News was first to report that two other suspects have ties to the
Al Qaeda senior leadership — one believed to be a former courier and
the other, a bodyguard for the network. Faraj al Chalabi, identified to
Fox News as the bodyguard, was also in Afghanistan with bin Laden until
the U.S. invasion in October 2001.
The hunt is still underway for suspects in the attack more than a
year later, though some have questioned the administration’s resolve.
After Fox News reported earlier this week that the Benghazi suspects
are not included on the State Department’s “Rewards for Justice”
program, which offers cash for tips that lead to suspected terrorists,
Republican Rep. Michael McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security
Committee, wrote to Secretary of State John Kerry questioning the
omission.
The letter is now being circulated on Capitol Hill for signatures,
Fox News has learned, and should be delivered to Kerry’s office no later
than next week.
A draft reviewed by Fox News includes highly critical language. “We
fail to understand how such an important counterterrorism tool could not
be used by the administration, when you and the president claim that
bringing the assailants to justice is such a high priority,” the draft
says.
Bin Qumu was transferred to Guantanamo on May 5, 2002, and released
to Libya on Sept. 28, 2007, where he was initially held and later
released. His Guantanamo review file, originally a classified document
but made public by WikiLeaks, says he is a “former member of the Libyan
Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), a probable member of al Qaida and a
member of the North African Extremist Network. Detainee is a medium to
high risk and he is likely to pose a threat to the US and it’s interests
and allies.”
A review of State Department cables, also made public by WikiLeaks,
shows that former Ambassador Chris Stevens, who was killed in the 2012
attack, was interested in bin Qumu’s fate once he was transferred from
the U.S. military detention facility to Libya. Stevens had one of his
subordinates meet with bin Qumu at the Libyan jail.
Before he was promoted to U.S. ambassador to Libya in May 2012,
Stevens served as CDA, or “Charge de Affairs,” at the embassy in
Tripoli. In 2008 cables, Stevens noted that he and his team from the
politics and economic section of the embassy were visiting prisons to
ensure the welfare of repatriated Guantanamo detainees from Libya. This
included bin Qumu, who is referred to as ISN 557 in the cables dated
from September 2008.
One cable says: “During our previous meeting on June 10, the security
official who facilitated the meeting explained that detention protocols
for extremists and terrorists mandate that they be held in solitary
detention to preclude the possibility that they could recruit other
members of the prison population. End note.”
Former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton noted to Fox News that “as we
returned Gitmo inmates to Libya to be imprisoned by Muammar Qaddafi, the
U.S. government was tasked with officially inquiring about their
welfare in Libyan prisons.”
Fox News’ Bret Baier was first to report last fall that the
intelligence community believed the former detainee was involved in the
Benghazi terrorist attack.
Representatives with the CIA and National Counterterrorism Center declined to comment for this report. The FBI did not respond.
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