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    Apr 5, 2012 |Story| KIAH-LTV
  1. 9/11 Co-conspirators going to trial

    How about it, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other men now face federal charges for plotting the September 11<sup>th</sup> terrorist attacks in New York, Washington, and Shanksville, Pennsylvania, that killed nearly 3,000 people.
    KIAH
    How about it, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four other men now face federal charges for plotting the September 11th terrorist attacks in New York, Washington, and Shanksville, Pennsylvania, that killed nearly 3,000 people. K-S-M and the others face...

    Tags: Terrorism, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Raymond W. Kelly, Computer Crime, Al-Qaeda

  2. Feb 16, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. Ex-Maryland man faces Guantanamo war crimes trial

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A Pentagon legal official approved war crimes charges Wednesday for a Pakistani detainee at Guantanamo who is accused of joining al-Qaida and taking part in a series of post-Sept. 11 terror plots after spending much of his...

    Tags: International Law, National Security, Central Intelligence Agency, Murder, Al-Qaeda

  4. Jul 11, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. Trying terror suspects in the U.S.: Tough and just

    The debate over how the U.S. deals with suspected terrorists captured outside the war zones of Iraq and Afghanistan flared up again last week when the Obama administration announced charges in New York against a Somali man with alleged ties to militant groups in North Africa and the Middle East. The move directly challenges a ban imposed by Congress last year that prohibits the government from transporting Guantanamo Bay detainees captured overseas to this country for trial in civilian courts. The case is also likely to revive long-running controversies over the fate of the military detention center at Guantanamo Bay, the role of military commissions in trying terrorist suspects and what rights detainees have during interrogations.
    The debate over how the U.S. deals with suspected terrorists captured outside the war zones of Iraq and Afghanistan flared up again last week when the Obama administration announced charges in New York against a Somali man with alleged ties to militant...

    Tags: Somalia, National Security, FBI, Al-Qaeda, Republican Party

  6. May 5, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. |Story
  8. May 31, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Did waterboarding lead to bin Laden? We don't know and it doesn't matter

    The successful raid on Osama bin Laden's safe house in Pakistan has reinvigorated debate over the role that "enhanced interrogation techniques" have played in fighting al-Qaida. No one is switching sides, which has turned the argument into a theological...

    Tags: Osama bin Laden, Abusive Behavior, Al-Qaeda, George W. Bush, Los Angeles Times

  10. Jun 1, 2011 |Story| WPIX-LTV
  11. 9/11 Mastermind To Stand Trial In Guantanamo

    According to the Pentagon, Military prosecutors have refiled terrorism and murder charges against the accused mastermind of the attacks on 9/11 along with four other men under a revamped trial process established at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
    Pix11.com
    According to the Pentagon, Military prosecutors have refiled terrorism and murder charges against the accused mastermind of the attacks on 9/11 along with four other men under a revamped trial process established at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. //

    Tags: Terrorism, Pennsylvania, National Security, Murder, Lawyers

  12. May 3, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. |Story
  14. May 4, 2011 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  15. Tortured arguments, revisited

    What a sorry spectacle to see the usual suspects &mdash; a veritable coalition of the willing-to-torture crowd from the Bush era &mdash; seizing on the death of Osama bin Laden as evidence that enhanced interrogation techniques work. It is a leap of logic on par with justifying the U.S. invasion into Iraq on false pretenses of hidden weapons of mass destruction and then claiming vindication because terrorist groups subsequently became involved in the conflict and, well, weren't we in the business of fighting them?
    What a sorry spectacle to see the usual suspects — a veritable coalition of the willing-to-torture crowd from the Bush era — seizing on the death of Osama bin Laden as evidence that enhanced interrogation techniques work. It is a leap of logic...

    Tags: National Security, U.S. Department of Justice, Al-Qaeda, Washington (U.S. state), George W. Bush

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