Key 9/11 suspect confesses guilt

brother4ever

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The alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks has confessed to his role in them, and 29 other terror plots around the world, the Pentagon says.
"I was responsible for the 9/11 operation, from A to Z," said Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in a transcript of a US hearing at Guantanamo Bay prison camp.

He also said he had planned attacks on Big Ben and Heathrow airport in London.

The hearing held at the weekend ruled he was an "enemy combatant" who should remain in detention indefinitely.

It now opens the way for Mohammed to face criminal charges and eventually a trial before a special military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay.

KEY TARGETS
Library Tower, Los Angeles
Sears Tower, Chicago
Plaza Bank, Washington State
Empire State Building, NY
Heathrow Airport, London
Big Ben, London


The 14 key detainees

According to the transcripts, Sheikh Mohammed admitted responsibility for a series of attacks, including the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center in New York and the attempt by the so-called shoe bomber, Richard Reid, to down an American plane.

He also claimed to be behind plots to assassinate the late Pope John Paul II and former US President Bill Clinton.

Many of the operations, including plans to attack Heathrow Airport and Big Ben in London, never happened.

Transcripts of his testimony were translated from Arabic and edited by the US Defense Department to remove sensitive intelligence material before release.

'Sham tribunals'

Mohammed is the most high-profile of 14 "high value" detainees recently transferred from secret CIA prisons abroad to the Guantanamo Bay camp in Cuba.

The closed-door hearings were held over the weekend. It is the first time Mohammed has faced a court since his capture in March 2003 in Pakistan.

The US hearings have been widely criticised by lawyers and human rights groups as sham tribunals, with no chance for the defendants to get a fair trial.

Mohammed, a Pakistan national, was said to be the third most senior al-Qaeda leader before his capture.

The BBC's security correspondent Gordon Corera says there is nothing new in Mohammed's admission and that there is a transcript of his interrogation over 9/11 available on the web.

Its significance lies in the fact that he made the statements at the hearing, which could now lead to a trial before a military tribunal, our correspondent says.

Here is a link of BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6452573.stm
 
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