US offering $5-million reward for
terrorist it released from Gitmo Tuesday,
December 23, 2014
A terrorist formerly
held at the prison camp in Guantánamo who was released to Saudi Arabia in 2006
has a bounty of $5 million on his head for taking part in terrorist activities.
Ibrahim
al-Rubaysh was repatriated back to Saudi Arabia, who enrolled him in their
"rehabilitation" program. It apparently didn't work.
Now
we learn that the U.S. government is secretly admitting that it erred in at
least one case, the release of a Saudi national named Ibrahim al-Rubaysh. In
late 2006 the Bush administration repatriated him back home under a Saudi
Arabian “rehabilitation” program that supposedly reformed Guantanamo Bay
jihadists but instead has served as a training camp for future terrorists. In
fact, in 2008 counterterrorism officials confirmed that many of the terrorists
who return to “the fight” after being released from U.S. custody actually graduated
from the laughable Saudi rehab program, which started under Bush and continued
under Obama.
It
turns out that al-Rubaysh is the poster child for the Saudi rehab’s failures.
He’s a dangerous Al Qaeda operative based in Yemen and now, years after freeing
him, the United States wants him captured. This month the State Department
coined the “senior leader” of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) a Specially
Designated Global Terrorist.
“He serves as a senior advisor for AQAP operational planning and is involved in
the planning of attacks,” a State Department announcement says. “He has served
as a senior AQAP sharia official since 2013, and as a senior AQAP sharia
official, al-Rubaysh provides the justification for attacks conducted by
AQAP. In addition, he has made public statements, including one in August
2014 where he called on Muslims to wage war against the United States.”
The
U.S. government has also offered a $5
million reward for information that could lead to
al-Rubaysh’s capture. The prize is part of a $45 million pot offered by the
State Department’s Rewards for Justice Program involving eight key AQAP
leaders, among them al-Rubaysh. Information on some of al-Rubaysh’s buddies
could net informants $10 million, but he’s only worth half that, according to
the U.S. government. The bottom line remains; The U.S. had him and let him go.
Now it’s offering a chunk of change for his capture. Uncle Sam has paid out
over $125 million to more than 80 people who provided actionable information
that put terrorists behind bars or prevented acts of international terrorism
worldwide. The reward program appears to be the government’s best hope of capturing
this terrorist it once held.
By 2006,
President Bush was under tremendous pressure to release Gitmo prisoners, both
domestically and internationally. The Saudi rehab program looked like a
godsend at the time. The program relied on intense religious instruction
as well as socialization with non-terrorists.
The Saudis
aren't coming clean on what the recidivism rate from the rehab program
is. It's probably higher than the official statements. But the
release of even one terrorist who goes back to the fight is a victory for
al-Qaeda.
Source:http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2014/12/us_offering_5_million_reward_for_terrorist_it_released_from_gitmo.html
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2014/12/us_offering_5_million_reward_for_terrorist_it_released_from_gitmo.html#ixzz3MmHfF2Ow
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Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2014/12/us_offering_5_million_reward_for_terrorist_it_released_from_gitmo.html#ixzz3MmHfF2Ow
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