WASHINGTON, US
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, accused as the mastermind of Al-Qaeda’s Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, has agreed to plead guilty, the Defense Department said Wednesday.
The development points to a
long-delayed resolution in an attack that killed thousands and altered the
course of the United States and much of the Middle East.
Mohammed and two accomplices,
Walid Bin Attash and Mustafa Al-Hawsawi, are expected to enter the pleas at the
military commission at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as soon as next week.
Defense lawyers have requested
the men receive life sentences in exchange for the guilty pleas, according to
letters from the federal government received by relatives of some of the nearly
3,000 people killed outright on the morning of Sept. 11.
Terry Strada, the head of one
group of families of the nearly 3,000 direct victims of the 9/11 attacks,
invoked the dozens of relatives who have died while awaiting justice for the
killings when she heard news of the plea agreement.
“They were cowards when they
planned the attack,” she said of the defendants. “And they’re cowards today.”
Pentagon officials declined to
immediately release the full terms of the plea bargains.
The US agreement with the men
comes more than 16 years after their prosecution began for Al-Qaeda’s attack.
It comes more than 20 years after militants commandeered four commercial
airliners to use as fuel-filled missiles, flying them into the World Trade
Center in New York and the Pentagon.
Al-Qaeda hijackers headed a
fourth plane to Washington, but crew members and passengers tried to storm the
cockpit, and the plane crashed into a Pennsylvania field.
The attack triggered what
President George W. Bush’s administration called its war on terror, prompting
the US military invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq and years of US operations
against armed extremist groups elsewhere in the Middle East.
The attack and US retaliation
brought the overthrow of two governments outright, devastated communities and
countries caught in the battle, and played a role in inspiring the 2011 Arab
Spring popular uprisings against authoritarian Middle East governments.
At home, the attacks inspired
a sharply more militaristic and nationalist turn to American society and
culture.
US authorities point to
Mohammed as the source of the idea to use planes as weapons. He allegedly
received approval from Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, whom US forces killed
in 2011, to craft what became the 9/11 hijackings and killings.
Authorities captured Mohammed
in 2003. Mohammed was subjected to waterboarding 183 times while in CIA custody
before coming to Guantanamo, and targeted by other forms of torture and
coercive questioning.
The use of torture has proven
one of the most formidable obstacles in US efforts to try the men in the
military commission at Guantanamo, owing to the inadmissibility of evidence
linked to abuse.
Torture has accounted for much
of the delay of the proceedings, along with the courtroom’s location a plane
ride away from the United States.
Daphne Eviatar, a director at
the Amnesty International USA rights group, said Wednesday she welcomed news of
some accountability in the attacks.
She urged the Biden
administration to close the Guantanamo Bay detention center, which holds people
taken into custody in the so-called war on terror. Many have since been
cleared, but are awaiting approval to leave for other countries.
Additionally, Eviatar said,
“the Biden administration must also take all necessary measures to ensure that
a program of state-sanctioned enforced disappearance, torture and other
ill-treatment will never be perpetrated by the United States again.”
Strada, national chairperson
of a group of families of victims called 9/11 Families United, had been at
Manhattan federal court for a hearing on one of many civil lawsuits when she
heard news of the plea agreement.
Strada said many families have
just wanted to see the men admit guilt.
“For me personally, I wanted
to see a trial,” she said. “And they just took away the justice I was
expecting, a trial and the punishment.”
Michael Burke, one of the
family members receiving the government notice of the plea bargain, condemned
the long wait for justice, and the outcome.
“It took months or a year at
the Nuremberg trials,” said Burke, whose fire captain brother Billy died in the
collapse of the World Trade Center’s North Tower. “To me, it always been
disgraceful that these guys, 23 years later, have not been convicted and
punished for their attacks, or the crime. I never understood how it took so
long.”
“I think people would be
shocked if you could go back in time and tell the people who just watched the
towers go down, ‘Oh, hey, in 23 years, these guys who are responsible for this
crime we just witnessed are going to be getting plea deals so they can avoid
death and serve life in prison,” he said.
Burke’s brother, New York City
fire captain Billy Burke, ordered his men out but remained on the 27th floor of
the North Tower with two men who’d stayed behind: a quadriplegic who, because
the elevators had gone out, was essentially stuck there in his wheelchair and
that man’s friend.
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