Defense
Department Takes Custody of
High-Value Al Qaeda Operative
By
Jim Garamone
AFPS
The Defense
Department has taken custody of a “high-value” al Qaeda operative, Pentagon
spokesman Bryan Whitman said today. Whitman said
that Muhammad Rahim is now in custody at the detention facility
in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Rahim
is a high-level member of al Qaeda and a close associate of
Osama
bin Laden. “Prior to his arrival in Guantanamo, he has
been held in CIA custody,” Whitman said.
Rahim is
from Afghanistan’s Nangahar province and had close ties
to al Qaeda organizations throughout the Middle East. “He
is one of (bin Laden’s) most trusted facilitators and
procurement specialists,” Whitman said.
Rahim prepared
the Tora Bora complex as a hideout for bin Laden, and assisted
in al Qaeda’s exodus from the area in late 2001. He joined
the terror organization in the mid-1990s, first procuring supplies
and later as a courier. He personally carried messages from
bin Laden to al Qaeda leaders.
“He
had knowledge of or was involved in al Qaeda attacks planned
against coalition forces in Afghanistan,” Whitman said. “At
the time of his capture, he was providing support to anti-coalition
militias, and groups allied with al Qaeda.”
Before 2002,
Rahim procured chemicals for an al Qaeda plot targeting U.S.
forces in Afghanistan, and he worked with al Qaeda paramilitary
commanders to recruit individuals who had access to U.S. military
bases.
Rahim will
be treated appropriately and humanely, in accordance with policies
and procedures for other DoD detainees at Guantanamo, Whitman
said. “He will be treated in accordance with U.S. law
and international obligations, including the convention against
torture, Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, the Detainee
Treatment Act, the Military Commissions Act and applicable
DoD directives and instructions governing detainees operations,” he
said.
This is the
first transfer to Guantanamo since August. The last high-value
detainee transferred was in April 2007. Sixteen high-value
detainees are under DoD control at Guantanamo. There are 280
detainees at the facility.
“It’s
always important to remember that intelligence is one of our
most important tools in the war on terror,” Whitman said. “It’s
been essential in developing our knowledge of al Qaeda’s
structures, operations, finances, logistics, criminal activity,
safe routes, safe havens and intentions to conduct further
attacks.”