Uyghurs
sold out in the US
Republican leaders in the United States appear eager to hand President
Barack Obama a political defeat and diminish his prestige and domestic
and international clout - at the cost of the continued detention of 17
Uyghur prisoners at Guantanamo in Cuba.
By accident or design, the US Republicans were able to forestall the
imminent release of the Uyghurs from Guantanamo to the US and Europe -
detainees that the US had long ago determined posed no threat to the US
and has been attempting to release for years.
The Uyghur cause had been a favorite of anti-communist Republicans.
Uyghurs are an ethnic group from Central Asia and Xinjiang
province in western China. The ones in Guantanamo were captured in
Afghanistan in late 2001.
The Uyghur's high-profile champion in Congress, California Republican
Dana Rohrabacher, wrote Secretary of Defense Robert Gates in June of 2008
requesting that the 17 Uyghur detainees be released from Guantanamo into
parole into the US.
Rohrabacher also called on the US government to provide an apology and
perhaps compensation for any abuse the detainees had endured.
The Uyghurs - and the Republicans' principled position on the issue -
fell victim to the conviction of top Republicans that it was of vital
importance that the Obama administration suffer a conspicuous setback on
an issue that the GOP still sees as political gold: terrorism.
In a recent newspaper column, Newt Gingrich, a key Republican strategist,
burned the Republicans' bridges to the Uyghur cause with an inflammatory
and misleading attack on the 17 Uyghur detainees at Guantanamo.
Gingrich insisted that the Uyghurs were too dangerous to be released into
the Uyghur community in Virginia and accused them of being "trained
mass killers instructed by the same terrorists responsible for killing
3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001", who "were trained, most
likely in the weapons, explosives and ideology of mass killing, by Abdul
Haq, a member of al-Qaeda's shura, or top advisory council."
Gingrich claimed the Uyghurs also committed perhaps the ultimate
sacrilege against American values:
At Guantanamo
Bay, the Uyghurs are known for picking up television sets on which women
with bared arms appear and hurling them across the room.
Contrary to Gingrich's accusations, the Uyghurs
indignantly riposted that they are not promiscuously flinging television
sets around the camp.
In fact, only one TV was kicked, not tossed, several years ago and the
culprit was considered to be so harmless to the US that he has already
been released to Albania.
The New York Times, in an excellent report on the plight of the detainees
by Tom Golden, had the TV story in June 2008:
They described
their imprisonment as bewildering and traumatic, punctuated by moments of
the absurd. After they were cleared for release, they were able to watch
cartoons and Harry Potter movies, until Mr Mamet smashed the television
because of what he said was the guards' refusal to take him to a doctor.
The set was replaced with one made in China, the men said dismissively;
it broke after a week.
Even if the canard of Islamicist rage against infidel
appliances is debunked, the Uyghurs will find it difficult to deal with
the political realities driving the abrupt sea change in Republican
attitudes.
Republican Lindsey Graham explained how noble causes can be discarded in
a heartbeat when the greater good of political advantage dictates:
Asked whether
any lawmakers were arguing on behalf of releasing the Uyghurs in the US,
he said: "The Uyghur caucus is pretty small."
The caucus of Republican lawmakers anxious to achieve
political traction against Obama at any cost is, on the other hand,
rather large.
The Republican strategists and their allies in Congress and the media
aggressively counter-programmed against Obama's rollout of his new
security strategy scheduled for the week of May 18.
In addition to igniting the Uyghur firestorm, the GOP relentlessly
pounded speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's veracity on the issue of
confidential briefings she received on "enhanced interrogation
techniques".
As a finishing touch, the Republicans sent out ex-vice president Dick
Cheney to steal Obama's thunder with an uncompromising defense of the
George W Bush administration's torture and Guantanamo policies before the
American Enterprise Institute on the same day that Obama delivered his
address on torture and Guantanamo at the National Archives (home of the
US constitution and Bill of Rights).
There are strong indications that the Obama administration expected to
bookend the president's speech with a dramatic demonstration of the moral
and practical efficacy of the rule of law and multi-lateralism in
America's new post-Guantanamo and post-Bush national security policy: the
announcement that the president's team had taken the first concrete steps
to closing Guantanamo by arranging the simultaneous release of the 17
Uyghurs to the US and several European countries.
A knowledgeable observer close to the Uyghurs stated, "There was a high
level of expectation that we would have seen by now [May 22, 2009] a US
release and the simultaneous release of Uyghurs to other willing
countries."
When the Uyghur release plan blew up, Obama found himself deprived of the
key advantage of his office - the ability to deliver substantive,
spectacular results in addition to speeches.
Instead of triumphantly turning the page on the most dismal achievements
of the Bush administration - torture and indefinite detention - and
pointing the way to dispersing the 241 detainees still at Guantanamo and
closing the despised detention facility, Obama discovered, to his
chagrin, that the Republicans had fought him to a draw.
The Obama administration had apparently made the error of relying on the
traditional bipartisan sympathy for the Uyghurs that extended from
human-rights Democratic liberals to red-meat communist rollback
conservatives, and neglected the necessary political spadework prior to
the announcement.
In the face of an organized attack by the Republicans and spooked by the
eagerness of the political press to report and incite a compelling
political conflict, the Democratic leadership of Congress retreated in
disarray, and stripped funds to close Guantanamo from the Defense
Appropriation Bill.
As the Democrats regrouped, they called on the Obama administration for a
do-over, this time presumably including detailed discussion and planning
for the initiative, as well as preparations to handle aggressive,
across-the-board pushback from the emboldened Republicans and their
allies.
Gingrich may simply be attempting to gain traction for the Republicans by
attacking the Democrats' perceived weakness in the matter of national
security. It may also be that Gingrich has a more concrete goal: trying
to sabotage an incipient grand bargain by the Obama administration to
distribute the detainees throughout Europe.
That is a deal that relied on a crucial confidence-building measure:
America's willingness to take its share of Uyghurs - and diplomatic heat
from the Chinese - and provide diplomatic cover to the Germans and
whatever other country might also step up to accept Uyghur detainees.
The idea of simultaneous release of Uyghurs to US and European custody
had already been floated in the international press as early as June of
last year, during the last months of the Bush administration.
A report in Der Spiegel on May 12 of this year updated the current status
of the initiative in the Obama administration, and perhaps attracted
Gingrich's baleful attention. It stated that US Attorney General Eric
Holder had asked Germany to take nine Uyghurs, who would presumably find
a happy home among the 500 expatriate Uyghurs living in Munich.
The article explicitly addressed the issue of linkage between US and
European releases.
Washington now
seems to realize they too might have to take a couple of Uyghurs in
before European allies like Germany do the same - if for no other reason
than to present a common front to the Chinese ... You cannot expect the
Europeans to do what you are not prepared to do yourselves, said another
high ranking American official, who believes that Germany could
eventually be asked to consider further prisoners of different
nationalities.
A contemporaneous
statement by Uyghur emigre leader Rebiya Kadeer also pointed to a
multinational package deal: "I hope that some of them will be
released to the United States," says Kadeer, who now lives in
Northern Virginia.
With the current collapse of political will for America to take its fair
share of Uyghurs, European support can no longer be assured.
Tom Malinowski,
Washington advocacy director at Human Rights Watch, said the
administration understood that the US needed to take some of the
detainees in order to encourage Europe to help, but that the
congressional rhetoric would complicate those efforts.
"You can't argue these people are too dangerous to be released in
the United States and then ask Germany to take them, that doesn't
work," said Malinowski.
The German wavering occasioned by the failure of the
US to commit to taking some Uyghur detainees can be seen from the
position taken by long-time Bush adversary Gerhard Schroeder, who would
certainly be happy to endorse the multi-lateralist foreign policy
initiatives of Obama.
From a May 18, 2009, article in Deutsche Welle entitled "Steinmeier
against accepting Uyghur from Guantanamo",
[Foreign Minister] Steinmeier has received support for his statement
from former German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, who told Der Spiegel
that accepting Uyghurs would certainly put a strain on German-Chinese
relations.
Schroeder said that while he is in favor of supporting US President
Barack Obama in his efforts to close Guantanamo, only the US is in a
position to take in the Uyghurs without suffering any political
consequences from China.
Whether or not Gingrich consciously and cynically
stampeded the US Congress on the matter of Uyghur detainees in the US to
scupper the joint European/American release and deny Obama a political
triumph, his assertion of the danger the Uyghurs pose is a
misrepresentation of the conclusions reached both by the Bush and Obama
administrations.
The Uyghurs' descriptions of their brief and haphazard training was
apparently enough to assure the US government of their harmlessness.
Their lack of hostility toward the US was acknowledged early on, and most
recently the Uyghurs have been serving their time in the low-security
sector of Guantanamo known as Camp Iguana - whose privileges apparently
include television.
The public record illustrates the casual, feckless nature of the
Guantanamo Uyghurs' encounter with the extremist training/fighting
infrastructure along the Afghan-Pakistan border.
Indeed, the picture of the detainees is of wannabe pro-American Uyghur
freedom fighters, not death-to-America Islamicist jihadniks.
One of the detainees, seemingly eager to highlight his
pro-liberty/pro-free market sympathies to the Bush administration,
described what drove him to flee China for the destitute,
terrorist-infested reaches of the Pashtun homeland: high taxes.
The reason we
left the country was twofold: first, to do business, because it was
getting more difficult to do business with rising taxes in China.
Secondly, political pressure on Uyghurs had increased. So I left for
abroad in 2000 in the hope of doing some business to better the situation
of me and my family in a more free environment.
Actually, China has instituted preferential tax
policies to aid in the development of Xinjiang.
Be that as it may, it seems clear that many of the Uyghurs were engaged
in anti-Chinese activities as they rusticated along the Pakistan border:
although some of the captives were innocents snared in the web of bounty
hunters, many of them did confess to receiving training on firing a
single shared AK-47 rifle at an ETIM-affiliated camp at Tora Bora,
according to a study of the publicly available court documents by Long
War Journal, and statements some of them made to the media.
Yes, he travelled
to Afghanistan. Yes, he learned to fire a semi-automatic weapon there.
"But I only ever used the weapon once, I shot four or five bullets.
And never at people. And never in combat situations."
That's what Hassan Anvar told his captors at Guantanamo about his time at
a training camp in the mountainous Tora Bora region in Afghanistan. He
also told them that he doesn't hold a grudge against the United States of
America or its allies. "I went to the camp to train to fight against
the Chinese," he said.
Despite the desultory nature of their training, once
the Uyghurs were linked to the alleged ETIM camp - and the fact was
reported in the international media - the Chinese government would be
keen to put them on trial.
ETIM - the East Turkestan Independence Movement - is a dirty word in
Central Asia, to China, and to Uyghur activists themselves. Neither the
US nor the countries bordering Xinjiang have any interest in antagonizing
the People's Republic of China by providing any professions of support,
let alone a haven, for an avowedly militant liberation movement.
After 9/11, the US obliged China by labeling ETIM a terrorist
organization and, in effect, giving China quite a free hand in dealing
with Uyghur unrest in Xinjiang.
The Uyghur emigre community has responded by eschewing the destabilizing
advocacy of separatism.
It has questioned even the existence of something called ETIM as anything
other than a Chinese provocation and excuse for repression, and
constituted itself as the "World Uyghur Congress" promoting
human rights and democratic Uyghur self-determination in Xinjiang.
This studiously non-violent approach, overtly modeled on the political
strategy of the Tibetan exiles, advanced emigre Rebiya Kadeer as the
Uyghurs' answer to the Dalai Lama.
At the very least, these efforts achieved a positive profile for the
Uyghur cause: a Nobel Peace Prize nomination and a private meeting with
former president Bush and his wife for Kadeer, and a Congressional
resolution sponsored by anti-communist firebrand Ilena Ros-Lehtinen and
co-sponsored by 32 Congresspersons across the ideological spectrum
calling on China to release her children from custody.
However, ETIM still lives on in Chinese propaganda, Central Intelligence
Agency dossiers, and, one would imagine, deep in the hearts of some
aggrieved Uyghurs.
The Uyghur detainees' advocates exploited the fact that the US government
failed in any case to demonstrate unambiguous links between ETIM and
al-Qaeda or the Taliban and made the argument that these young men should
be released since they had never displayed any intention of committing
terrorist attacks against the US - the implication being that if they had
sought military training, it was solely for the purpose of the
independence struggle against the Chinese in Xinjiang.
Indeed, the government had classified the Guantanamo Uyghurs as
"non-enemy combatants" as opposed to "enemy
combatants". According to court documents, the US had no interest in
keeping them at Guantanamo and had been trying to offload 10 of the
Uyghurs since 2003, and another five since 2005.
This perceived US tolerance of militantly anti-Chinese Uyghurs and their
sympathizers among the emigre community disturbs the Chinese government,
which seeks to deter potential domestic copycats by demonstrating its
determination to pursue armed separatists outside China's borders, deny
them military or political havens, and bring them back to China for trial
and punishment.
For China, the Uyghur issue is inextricably linked to the chaotic and
dangerous situation in Central Asia.
Since the days of the anti-Soviet jihad, several hundred Uyghur militants
have trained and fought in Afghanistan and western Pakistan, and some
brought their expertise and anger back to the struggle in Xinjiang. With
the resurgence of the Taliban's fortunes, China is concerned that
anti-Chinese militants will find a safe haven, material support, and
allies in Taliban-dominated areas.
As early as 1992, 22 Uyghur separatists were killed in an armed clash
near Kashgar in Xinjiang and the Chinese government shut down its road
links with Pakistan, including the legendary Karakorum Highway, for
several months to stop the destabilizing flow of fighters, drugs, and
AIDS out of the Pashtun areas.
Before 9/11, a special training camp for Uyghurs was reportedly operated
near Tora Bora under al-Qaeda and Taliban auspices near the Pakistan
border, and a safe house maintained in the Afghan provincial town of
Jalalabad.
According to one report at www.americanthinker.com, the Chinese claim
1,000 Uyghur militants trained in al-Qaeda camps.
China reports that the ETIM has ties to Central Asia
Uyghur Hezbollah in Kazakstan and that 1,000 Uyghurs were trained by
al-Qaeda. They maintain that 600 of them escaped to Pakistan, 300 were
caught by US forces on the battlefield in Afghanistan and 110 returned to
China and were caught. At the beginning of the conflict in Afghanistan,
US forces did, in fact, report that 15 Uyghurs were imprisoned at
Guantanamo Bay.
Chinese government has been extremely aggressive in
its efforts to ensure that any Uyghur militants seeking independence for
Xinjiang do not find welcome anywhere, especially in Pakistan.
China may be hyping the ETIM threat, but clearly regards it as a
significant security issue, as B Raman reported:
Talking to a
group of senior Pakistani newspaper editors after a visit to China in
2003, [Pakistan's President] Musharraf was reported to have stated that
he was shocked by the strong language used by the Chinese leaders while
talking of the activities of the Uyghur jihadi terrorists from Pakistani
territory.
However, except for the killing of alleged ETIM head Hahsan Mahsum in the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas in 2003 by Pakistani forces, for
several years Chinese efforts to get Pakistan to hand over East Turkestan
fighters were unsuccessful. China noticed.
In October 2008, on the occasion of Pakistani President Asif Ali
Zardari's first official visit to China, the Chinese media pointedly
published a detailed bill of particulars of the eight most-wanted ETIM
terrorists, presumably so that the Pakistani government could not excuse
continued inaction with any pretended confusion as to who Beijing was
after and why.
In April 2009, Pakistan finally agreed to extradite nine Uyghurs to
China.
As for the US, after 9/11, Chinese implacability turned the issue of
repatriating the 22 Uyghurs, who were captured and delivered to the US
for incarceration at Guantanamo, into a legal and geopolitical headache.
In 2002, the US government made the dubious decision to share the
detainees' dossiers with the Chinese, and even allow Chinese
interrogators to come to Guantanamo to question the Uyghurs.
The US obligingly softened up the Uyghurs with the "frequent flier
program" - a sleep deprivation technique (ironically, it came to US
notice when the Chinese practiced it on US prisoners of war during the
Korean War) involving waking them up every 15 minutes - in the run-up to
the interrogation.
The Uyghurs reported that the Chinese interrogators threatened them and
insisted they return to China; not surprisingly they refused. Beijing,
its determination perhaps buttressed by the intelligence shared by the
United States and the takeaway from its interrogations, demanded that the
Uyghurs be repatriated.
The Bush administration, which quietly repatriated several hundred
Guantanamo detainees during its two terms, could not bring itself to
agree.
Instead, it dug a nice, deep hole for itself.
First it classified the Uyghurs as anti-Chinese combatants. Then it
decided it could not transfer them to China for fear of torture and
execution.
The US government, which has blithely returned dozens of rendered
Egyptians to the tender mercies of the Egyptian police, took repatriation
to China off the table, perhaps because of the Bush administration's
stated sympathy for the Uyghur cause and Rabiya Kadeer.
According to the New York Times last year:
Some officials at the Pentagon advocated sending the
Uyghurs back to China, and the State Department eventually sought and
received assurances from the Chinese that they would treat the men
humanely. But senior officials finally decided not to repatriate them,
citing China's past treatment of the Uyghur minority.
As John Bellinger, Legal Adviser, State Department,
testified before the House sub-committee on International Organizations,
Human Rights, and Oversight in June 2008:
We are concerned
about the situation of the Uyghurs. We made the decision early on because
we thought they would be mistreated if returned to China. That even
though a number of years back we had concluded not that they were wrongly
picked up - they were picked up because they were in a training camp in
Afghanistan - but it was concluded rapidly that they were not trying to
fight us but they were trying to fight the Chinese. So we made the
decision early on that they need to be sent somewhere but they just
couldn't be sent back to China.
But even the world's only superpower found that
domiciling 17 Uyghurs was beyond its reach.
After the Albanians, in response to considerable American diplomatic and
financial inducements, agreed to accept five Uyghurs, the United States
couldn't find any country in the world willing to take the rest.
Vijay Padmanabhan, who worked on repatriations as a lawyer for the State
Department, talked to Frontline about the largely futile efforts to find
another country that would accept the Uyghurs.
Which countries did you approach?
There was a point in 2005 or 2006
when the US government had all of our embassies in every country that was
a reasonable possibility go forward and ask them if they would consider
accepting Guantanamo detainees for resettlement. African countries, Asian
countries, South American countries. Every country in the European Union.
And the answer was almost universally no. So without saying, this country
is in, this country is out, the reality is that just about every country
has been approached on this question.
After Albania stepped up and took the five Uyghurs in
2006 (one of whom recently obtained asylum in Sweden), Chinese pressure
on the Albanians has been relentless.
As a result the Albanians have refused to take any more Uyghurs.
The State Department tried to shop the remaining Uyghurs to Germany and
Sweden, two countries with Uyghur populations, and also went far afield -
way far afield - to places like Gabon in an unsuccessful search for a
refuge.
Beijing was also able to prevail upon the Australian government in
January 2009 to openly refuse to take any Guantanamo Uyghur detainees,
either.
Even as the Bush administration was bedeviled by the practical problem of
dispersing the Uyghurs, its efforts were complicated by a major legal
issue. Classifying the Uyghurs as "non-enemy combatants" pulled
them out of the "war on terror" limbo of sanctioned indefinite
detention, and put them in reach of the US legal system and habeas
corpus.
The Bush administration was thereby placed in the impossible position of
trying to justify the indefinite detention of people who were no threat
to the US.
In October 2008, a US judge ruled that the Uyghurs' continued detention
at Guantanamo was legally indefensible and called for the detainees to be
released into the custody of Rebiya Kadeer and the avowedly non-violent
Uyghur emigres in the Washington, DC area.
The Bush administration, reportedly at the insistence of the Department
of Homeland Security, decided not to take this opportunity to solve its
Uyghur problem with domestic parole. Instead it obtained a stay of the
ruling (the decision was reversed by a higher court and is now under
appeal) and continued to detain the Uyghurs at Guantanamo.
While Washington has dithered, China has been unwavering in its determination
to deny the Uyghurs a refuge outside of Guantanamo or China.
Wherever the US diplomats went, according to the Times, they were dogged
by the Chinese government:
"The
Chinese keep coming in behind us and scaring different countries with
whom they have financial or trade relationships," said one
administration official, who insisted on anonymity in discussing
diplomatic issues.
Now the Chinese government has found an unlikely ally in its battle
against the release of the Uyghur detainees: Newt Gingrich.
Supporters of the Uyghurs are guardedly optimistic that the Obama
administration will ride out the political storm, mobilize its allies and
advocates, and get the Uyghurs' release right on its second try.
But one observer wondered if the Uyghur detainees will be the ones who
"turn the lights out at Guantanamo" - the last ones to leave,
long after the rest of the camp's population had been dispersed.
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