A Mockery of Justice: Torture Victim to Face Trial at Guantánamo After 25 Years

18.2.26

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Abd al-Rahim Al-Nashiri, in a photo taken in recent years at Guantánamo by representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross, and made available to his family.

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In the long, dark farce of Guantánamo’s military commissions, the recently announced and almost entirely ignored decision by the Pentagon to turn down a plea deal for Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri, a prominent CIA torture victim and the alleged architect of the Al-Qaeda attack on the USS Cole in October 2000, and to proceed, instead, with an unwinnable trial, is just the latest manifestation of a refusal by successive US administrations to reckon with the corrosive effects of the use of torture.

With this decision, the Trump administration has now embraced a sickening and enduring bi-partisan consensus that, when it comes to those accused of the gravest crimes at Guantánamo — including the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 — it is preferable to cling to an unworkable belief in vengeance, through a fantastical belief in successful prosecutions that involve the death penalty, than to admit that the use of torture on the defendants has thoroughly undermined that possibility.

The reality, which every administration has denied — from Bush to Obama, and from Biden to Trump — is that torture, undertaken over many years in the CIA’s global network of “black site” torture prisons, is so fundamentally incompatible with justice that the only viable way forward is to agree to plea deals that take the death penalty off the table in exchange for lifelong imprisonment at Guantánamo and full and frank confessions that bring some measure of “closure.”

The history of the military commissions — ill-advisedly revived in November 2001 under the direction of Dick Cheney, revived again in 2006 after a Supreme Court ruling that they were illegal and unconstitutional, and revived again under President Obama in 2009 — is one of almost entirely abject failure, despite the expenditure of billions of dollars to try to prove otherwise.

Only eleven men have been successfully prosecuted, with only two of those verdicts reached after a trial, and with the rest achieved through plea deals, and even this meager number has been undermined by successful appeals that have overturned three of those convictions, and left a fourth hanging by a dubious thread of legitimacy.

However, when it comes to the longest-running efforts to prosecute a handful of “high-value” individuals allegedly involved in major acts of terrorism — Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri and five men accused of involvement in the 9/11 attacks — the weight of torture has been stifling efforts to proceed with successful prosecutions for 18 years.

After the men were brought to Guantánamo from the “black sites”, where Al-Nashiri had been held for nearly four years, in September 2006, they were initially charged in 2008, but had those charges dropped when President Obama took office. In November 2009, Obama’s Attorney General, Eric Holder, announced that the 9/11 trial would take place in a US federal court, while five others, including Al-Nashiri, would face trials in a third version of the military commissions.

The New York trial never went ahead. Obama crumpled under Republican pressure, and the trial was shunted back to Guantánamo, where eventually, in 2012, the five men were charged again.

Ever since, however — for 16 years in Al-Nashiri’s case, and 14 in the cases of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and the four other men charged in connection with the 9/11 attacks — pre-trial hearings have inconclusively dragged on and on like a Groundhog Day of predictable futility, as the defense teams seek to expose the extent of their clients’ torture, while prosecutors try to keep it hidden.

In Al-Nashiri’s case, numerous international bodies have also, in these long years of unaddressed injustice, issued devastating rulings and opinions regarding his case. In July 2014, the European Court of Human Rights condemned the US for implementing a program of extraordinary rendition and torture, and Poland for hosting a CIA “black site” from 2002 to 2003, where he was held, and in February 2015 the Court ordered Poland to pay €100,000 in damages to Al-Nashiri.

In addition, in 2018, Al-Nashiri’s trial was engulfed in scandal, and there was further international outrage in May 2018, when the European Court of Human Rights condemned the US and Romania for holding Al-Nashiri in a “black site”, and ordered the Romanian government to pay him €100,000 in damages.

Further condemnation took place in June 2023, in another blow to the US government, when the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention condemned Al-Nashiri’s imprisonment as arbitrary and called for his release, including, in their opinion, a devastating declaration by Dr. Sondra Crosby, “an expert in internal medicine and the treatment of victims of torture,” who had met with him for approximately 30 hours, and described him as “one of the most severely traumatized individuals I have ever seen.”

The 9/11 plea deals

Finally, in February 2023, after, as I described it in my summary of the commissions, “convicted Al-Qaeda courier Majid Khan was released via a plea deal, having been allowed to deliver a devastating statement about his torture in CIA ‘black sites’, and at Guantánamo, which shocked his military jury to such an extent that seven of the eight jury members urged clemency for him, prosecutors recognized that a successful prosecution in the 9/11 trial was unviable.”

“As a result”, as I proceeded to explain, “they began negotiations with the defense teams, and the convening authority, Brig. Gen. Susan Escallier, for plea deals, in which, with the death penalty taken off the table, they would be imprisoned for life at Guantánamo, having provided a full and frank account of their actions. The plea deals were successfully concluded at the end of July 2024, but the defense secretary Lloyd Austin then tried to revoke them, even though it seemed clear that he had no authority to do so. Although the military judge overruled him, along with the military commission review court, the [Biden] administration then appealed in federal court, leaving the plea deals in limbo as they left office.”

Khalid Shaikh Mohammad, Walid bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawsawi, all photographed at Guantánamo in recent years by representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

In July 2025, a three-judge panel in the D.C. Circuit Court (the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia) ruled by 2 to 1 that Lloyd Austin “indisputably had legal authority to withdraw from the agreements.” The majority — Obama appointee Judge Patricia Millett and Trump appointee Neomi Rao — added that, “Having properly assumed the convening authority, the Secretary determined that the ‘families and the American public deserve the opportunity to see military commission trials carried out’”, adding, “The secretary acted within the bounds of his legal authority, and we decline to second-guess his judgment.”

The dissenting judge, Robert Wilkins, another Obama appointee, called it a “stunning” ruling (and not in positive sense), chastising his colleagues for not deferring to the decisions of military courts interpreting military rules.

The ruling hurled KSM and his two co-defendants — Walid Bin Attash and Mustafa Al-Hawsawi — back into the seemingly perennial uncertainty of pre-trial hearings, while the other two co-defendants, who had not agreed to the plea deals, continued to face their own ongoing travails. One, Ammar Al-Baluchi, has continued to pursue his own case against the government, while the other, Ramzi Bin Al-Shibh, was ruled unfit to stand trial by a DOD Sanity Board in August 2023, and, ever since, has been in legal limbo.

The plea deal for Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri

Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri, meanwhile, continued to challenge the government’s efforts to use information derived from so-called “clean team” interrogations after he arrived at Guantánamo as evidence in his case, a challenge that mirrored similar efforts by KSM and the 9/11 co-accused.

In August 2023, the judge in Al-Nashiri’s case, Col. Lanny J. Acosta Jr., had delivered a powerful ruling refuting the viability of the “clean team” interrogations, which had been designed to get him to replicate confessions he had made under torture without any coercion being used, on the basis that it was impossible for him to have delivered any kind of uncoerced self-incriminating statement after the torture to which he was subjected.

Prosecutors appealed the ruling, but on January 30, 2025, the appeals court, the Court of Military Commission Review, upheld Col. Acosta’s ruling, with Allison Miller, one of Al-Nashiri’s lawyers, telling the New York Times that the court had “unanimously rejected” the government’s request to “reinstate” the use of his discredited confession.

The decision confirmed a recognition by prosecutors — as with the 9/11 trial two years before — to abandon hopes for a successful prosecution, and, instead, to negotiate a plea deal. The deal, which, as with the 9/11 deal, dropped the death penalty in exchange for a full confession and lifetime imprisonment at Guantánamo, was announced by Allison Miller at the start of two weeks of hearings in March 2025, as reported by the New York Times, which also noted that Miller had said that a decision on the deal would need to be reached by Donald Trump’s defense secretary Pete Hegseth, but that, at the time, “a military chain of command ha[d] yet to send it to him.”

The plea deal had been agreed on December 12, 2024, but the chief prosecutor, Rear Adm. Aaron C. Rugh, had declined to present it to Lloyd Austin so close to the end of the Biden presidency, and the latest judge in the case, Col. Matthew S. Fitzgerald, had “acknowledged the political climate”, as the Times described it, stating, “We all realize we are operating in dynamic circumstances.” The Times also noted that the lead prosecutor, Capt. Timothy J. Stinson, a Navy lawyer, had “declined to comment on whether he had endorsed the agreement”, although Allison Miller “said in court that he had.”

Writing for the Times, Carol Rosenberg also noted that, since the USS Cole attack, “parents of sailors who were killed in the attack have passed away and many victims have stopped traveling to the Navy base to watch the painfully slow pretrial proceedings.”

Only one, Rosenberg noted, James G. Parlier, a retired Navy command master chief who survived the attack, had undertaken the difficult journey to Guantánamo to observe the proceedings. “For years”, she stated, “he had bristled at the delays and pressed for a capital trial”, but had finally “come to support resolving it through a plea agreement, at the risk of angering some of his former shipmates.”

“We’ve got to close that chapter of our lives,” he said, adding, “There are others who feel the same as me, want to get on with it. I know even if there’s going to be a death sentence we’ll be old men or dead by then.”

Having been told that “the proposed sentencing range would be 20 years to life imprisonment”, he said, “I’m fine with that”, noting that, by the time the sentence ended, “Mr. Nashiri would be over 80.”

Trump’s DOD rejects the plea deal 

Despite the promise of “closure”, however, as with the 9/11 trial, when the Pentagon finally responded, the DOD, under Trump, took the same position as Lloyd Austin under Biden, rejecting the “plea agreement and a sentence of up to life in prison” and “setting the stage for the first death penalty trial at Guantánamo Bay to start this summer”, as lawyers explained to Rosenberg for the New York Times on February 5.

The decision, which was not taken by Pete Hegseth, was instead taken by Steve Feinberg, the deputy defense secretary, a businessman worth $5 billion, who, during his confirmation hearing, refused to acknowledge that Russia had invaded Ukraine, and also expressed support for large-scale firings within the Defense Department.

Although prosecutors acknowledged that they had supported the plea deal, they “notified the victims and relatives of those killed in the attack of the decision”, and “invited them to sign up to attend the trial, which is scheduled to start with the selection of a military jury on June 1 and could last six months.”

As Rosenberg explained, under the plea deal, “Mr. Nashiri would have admitted to his specific role in the attack and a military panel would have decided a sentence in the range of 20 years to life in prison. Victims would have testified to their loss, and defense lawyers and the defendant could have offered arguments for leniency that would probably have included descriptions of his torture.”

Instead, with his own discredited confessions excluded, “much of the trial evidence will likely involve US agents testifying about people they questioned at the time in Yemen, financial transactions and other documents they tied to an alias for Mr. Nashiri, who is accused of helping the bombers acquire vessels, explosives and safe houses.”

Another of the survivors, Paul Abney, a retired Navy master chief, expressed his disappointment with the decision, stating that he had “supported the plea bargain to resolve the case sooner ‘mainly for the family members, and for the survivors.’”

“It’s been a long, drawn-out process”, he added, further explaining that, although “there may be families that want to see the death penalty, personally I’d just like to see an end to this, to get some accountability and to give some finality to this thing.”

He said, however, that he would attend the trial “to represent the ship, those who had died and survivors who find the trip too painful”, although he made a point of noting that the prosecutors had “wanted the plea deal”, and had “spent a lot of time working on that.”

The disappointment was also summed up concisely by Allison Miller, who said it “would have brought actual finality to a nearly 26-year-old crime.” Instead, she predicted that the trial itself would air “the horrors perpetuated against Mr. al-Nashiri by the American government”, adding that, even if he is convicted, the case “will likely last through decades of appellate and post-conviction litigation.”

As with the aborted 9/11 plea deal, I can only, in conclusion, echo what I said about Lloyd Austin’s capitulation to notions of unfulfillable vengeance 18 months ago; that it was a shamefully missed opportunity to “redress the malignant folly at the heart of the detention policies undertaken in the ‘war on terror’: responding to terrorism with torture.”

Who knows, now, if there will ever be any closure or any kind of justice?

* * * * *

Andy Worthington is a freelance investigative journalist, activist, author, photographer (of a photo-journalism project, ‘The State of London’, which ran from 2012 to 2023), film-maker and singer-songwriter (the lead singer and main songwriter for the London-based band The Four Fathers, whose music is available via Bandcamp). He is the co-founder of the Close Guantánamo campaign (see the ongoing photo campaign here) and the successful We Stand With Shaker campaign of 2014-15, and the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison and of two other books: Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion and The Battle of the Beanfield. He is also the co-director (with Polly Nash) of the documentary film, “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo”, which you can watch on YouTube here.

In 2017, Andy became very involved in housing issues. He is the narrator of the documentary film, ‘Concrete Soldiers UK’, about the destruction of council estates, and the inspiring resistance of residents, he wrote a song ‘Grenfell’, in the aftermath of the entirely preventable fire in June 2017 that killed over 70 people, and, in 2018, he was part of the occupation of the Old Tidemill Wildlife Garden in Deptford, to try to prevent its destruction — and that of 16 structurally sound council flats next door — by Lewisham Council and Peabody.

Since 2019, Andy has become increasingly involved in environmental activism, recognizing that climate change poses an unprecedented threat to life on earth, and that the window for change — requiring a severe reduction in the emission of all greenhouse gases, and the dismantling of our suicidal global capitalist system — is rapidly shrinking, as tipping points are reached that are occurring much quicker than even pessimistic climate scientists expected. You can read his articles about the climate crisis here. He has also, since, October 2023, been sickened and appalled by Israel’s genocide in Gaza, and you can read his detailed coverage here.

To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to Andy’s new Substack account, set up in November 2024, where he’ll be sending out a weekly newsletter, or his RSS feed — and he can also be found on Facebook (and here), Twitter and YouTube. Also see the six-part definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, The Complete Guantánamo Files, the definitive Guantánamo habeas list, and the full military commissions list.

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23 Responses

  1. Andy Worthington says...

    When I posted this on Facebook, I wrote:

    My analysis of the recent, and almost entirely overlooked announcement by the Pentagon that it was turning down a plea deal negotiated in December 2024 with torture victim and #Guantanamo prisoner Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri, the alleged architect of the bombing of the USS Cole in 2000.

    The decision prioritizes vengeance, and an unwinnable trial, over the reality that successful prosecutions involving the death penalty at Guantanamo are bound to fail, because of the torture to which the defendants were subjected over many years when they were held in CIA “black sites.”

    In 2023, this was recognized by prosecutors in the 9/11 trial, who then negotiated plea deals taking the death penalty off the table in exchange for full confessions and life imprisonment. These were agreed in August 2024, but were then immediately challenged by then-defense secretary Lloyd Austin, who succeeded in having them overturned by the D.C. Circuit Court last June, after he had already left office.

    Al-Nashiri’s plea deal was publicly announced in March 2025, also taking the death penalty off the table in exchange for a full confession and life imprisonment, but it was finally turned down, just two weeks ago, not by Pete Hegseth, but by the billionaire deputy defense secretary, Steve Feinberg.

    The decision brings the Biden and Trump administrations into a rare accord, in which both, shamefully, oppose the only viable outcomes for the 9/11 trial and the trial of Al-Nashiri that can bring “closure” and some measure of justice over a quarter of a century after the USS Cole bombing took place, and nearly 25 years since the 9/11 attacks.

  2. Andy Worthington says...

    Fiona Russell Powell wrote:

    Of course it was overlooked. All the Epstein, ICE, Iran and Greenland shenanigans are providing excellent smokescreens for a whole load of horrendous shit they’re continuing to do, and sneaky bills getting passed.

  3. Andy Worthington says...

    Yes, that’s certainly true, Fiona, although even before all this only one US mainstream media outlet, the New York Times, had bothered to cover Guantanamo on a regular basis.

  4. Andy Worthington says...

    Fiona Russell Powell wrote:

    Andy, the New York Times is a curate’s egg – good in parts, but those parts aren’t as good as they used to be because they elbowed out all the good writers and reporters for not following the official narrative on you-know-where. Great reporters like Chris Hughes who used to head the Middle East desk. The fact that “they” reversed Obama’s order to close Guantanamo was always an ominous omen, I think.

  5. Andy Worthington says...

    I have very little time for them in general because of that, Fiona, and while their Guantanamo coverage is commendable it’s predictably quite “centrist”, whereas my notion of journalism is that you should let people know why they should be angry.

  6. Andy Worthington says...

    Gail Helt wrote:

    Unbelievable.

  7. Andy Worthington says...

    But oh so predictable, Gail. It doesn’t matter who’s in charge; none of them want to give up on their ever-vengeful desire for the death penalty, even when confronted with the reality that successful prosecutions are impossible.

  8. Andy Worthington says...

    Fiona Russell Powell wrote, in response to 5, above:

    Andy, calling them “centrist” is quite polite! I can think of a few other choice words: Establishment stenographers, NATO nations media shills, and others doing the rounds currently. Remember the term “yellow journalism”? Well, I believe it’s now blood red. Stick to being part of the alternative pack – it’s the future. Young people know they can’t trust MSM anymore.

  9. Andy Worthington says...

    “Centrist” is meant as an insult, Fiona. We’re dominated by them, both in the media and the political world – defenders of a brutal status quo, with a liberal veneer that they think justifies their lack of critical engagement with the horrors they openly or tacitly endorse. To cite just two examples, the leadership of the Democratic Party and the leadership of the Labour government here in the UK are just as complicit, and the media are their mouthpieces.

    I’m proud to be “alternative”, because I lack the moral abdication to join in with the corruption, but it’s troubling that independent critical voices are so often also stifled in this media and political landscape that suppresses dissent through algorithms, threats and bans. Of course, I’m delighted that so many young people see through it, but it’s also true that much of the alternative news they’re consuming is just as unreliable, sadly. We need people to look at the world through a moral lens, and not be swayed by allegedly charismatic individuals who are really just self-seeking grifters.

  10. Andy Worthington says...

    Susan McLucas wrote:

    What is wrong with this country. You’re right; I hadn’t heard about this. So shameful!

  11. Andy Worthington says...

    Good to hear from you, Susan. Shamefully, the only mainstream news outlet that reported it was the New York Times. No one else even bothered to pick up on it, and the problem with the Times’ coverage, of course, is that it level-headedly refuses to properly engage with the screaming illegality and unfairness of it all.

  12. Andy Worthington says...

    Éilís Ní Annraic wrote:

    ‘Trial’ is really not the word for the proceedings that go on in the Guantánamo concentration camp.

  13. Andy Worthington says...

    Good to hear from you, Éilís. On a very fundamental level, you’re right, but the military commissions are the only part of the surviving infrastructure of the “war on terror” where defense teams are paid by the government to represent their clients, and where review processes exist that can, and do challenge rulings. In contrast, those who have never been charged with a crime at Guantanamo (six of the 15 men still held) have almost no rights whatsoever.

  14. Andy Worthington says...

    Éilís Ní Annraic wrote:

    Yes, but those ‘trials’, apart from themselves constituting crimes under international law (since the hostages themselves are mostly accused of defending their countries from US attack), are designed to allow totally unverifiable, and often fabricated evidence with no meaningful limitations. It would be more accurate to describe these propaganda exercises as ‘pre-execution propaganda’.

  15. Andy Worthington says...

    The first version of the commissions, introduced by Dick Cheney, was intended to launder information derived from torture, Éilís, but one of the main reasons that the version reconstituted under Obama has struggled so much to reach the trial phase in the most high-profile cases is because defense lawyers have been able to robustly challenge the government’s supposed evidence, derived from the so-called “clean team” interrogations that took place shortly after the men were brought from the CIA “black sites.”

  16. Andy Worthington says...

    Lizzy Arizona wrote:

    So thankful you keep writing about our buzzaro world of injustice. Love you Andy.

  17. Andy Worthington says...

    Thanks so much for the wonderfully supportive words, Lizzy! 🙏✊

  18. Andy Worthington says...

    Barbara Bendzunas wrote:

    If more people knew what our government does in secrecy, change would come.

  19. Andy Worthington says...

    We need more of a focus on people power, Barbara. Too many people trust that things will change for the better when “their” party is elected, even though very little really changes, and too many people also think that avoiding politics entirely isn’t a political decision, even though it always is. Tribalism and apathy – the two enemies of change.

  20. Andy Worthington says...

    Fiona Russell Powell wrote, in response to 9, above:

    Andy, many young people aren’t nearly as lost, stupid or ill-informed as I admit I had previously thought and I’m very pleased to have been wrong. They’re reading more history and are becoming natural researchers. I think once someone’s eyes and mind have been opened to the fact that authority figures and trusted sources have lied, even once, they’re on the alert. Certainly, they have the knowledge that it’s possible. As soon as they spot it again, and then again, they know it’s deliberate and they’re off and running, questioning everything. It warms my heart because I’m very worried about the young ‘uns, very angry at what’s been handed to them by our generation and how they’re going to have to fight for any chance at a decent future at all. However, our inherent humanity, our ability to empathize and our independent thought faculties cannot be legislated for, no matter how hard the bustards try. There’s such a burgeoning mistrust of Establishment sources of information now – especially among the switched-on kids – that those in control are beginning to worry about it. Of course, the internet is their biggest tool for spreading disinformation and controlling minds. But, it’s a double-edged sword! Mind you, mechanisms are currently being put in place to crack down on it. Also, what you call Centrist, I call another word. Not a swear word – though it could be argued …

  21. Andy Worthington says...

    Thanks for that resounding endorsement of young people and their insight, Fiona, which I applaud and recognize, despite my misgivings about misinformation. I think we shouldn’t underestimate how much a livestreamed genocide, wholeheartedly supported by our own leaders, radicalized so many young people, and how there’s no coming back from it.

  22. Andy Worthington says...

    Suzan Koch wrote:

    No emoji for this one. The rule for the Rulers of the World – U.S. get to decide and control and then do whatever they want to do and no one who responds in kind, shall go untortured or escape from a lifetime imprisonment. My first assumption is that anyone they decided to keep in Guantanamo had to be innocent beyond perhaps fighting back against the U.S.’s reign of terror. It is sick – really there are no words which will sufficiently describe the depths of evil the U.S.Government and Military, including Intel and Special Forces are willing to descend to and have. I blame those at the top and our MSM, which often or always promotes the lies fed to them by those in power.

  23. Andy Worthington says...

    Thanks for your thoughts, Suzan. Very good to hear from you. And thanks also for highlighting the failure of the mainstream media to properly challenge the narrative – or, now, to even remember that the prison is still open and 15 men are still held: https://www.closeguantanamo.org/Prisoners

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Andy Worthington

Investigative journalist, author, campaigner, commentator and public speaker. Recognized as an authority on Guantánamo and the “war on terror.” Co-founder, Close Guantánamo and We Stand With Shaker, singer/songwriter (The Four Fathers).
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