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The anonymous accuser of Guantanamo

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
May 26, 2009

A U.S. trooper in uniform enters the Guantanamo detention facility at dawn, inside Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, Cuba. President Barack Obama says he is restarting U.S. military tribunals for the small number of terrorist suspects among all the detainees held at Guantanamo, though with several new legal protections for defendants. (AP)

Have you heard of Matthew Alexander? Unless you follow the debate over terrorist suspects and "enhanced interrogation techniques" very closely, the answer is probably no.  Yet Alexander is one of the most influential voices in the deliberations over what to do with the U.S. terrorist detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

"Major Matthew Alexander, who has actually interrogated al Qaeda suspects in Iraq, attributes half of the deaths of Americans in Iraq to the detention abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo," Democratic Sen. Richard Durbin said on "Meet the Press" Sunday. "Continuing Guantanamo, unfortunately, makes our troops less safe."

A moment later, moderator David Gregory asked Durbin for evidence to support President Obama's assertion that "the existence of Guantanamo likely created more terrorists around the world than it ever detained."  Durbin's answer?  "I just gave it to you: Major Matthew Alexander."

It is widely asserted that Guantanamo has been a key recruiting tool for terrorists around the world. Indeed, it has been asserted so often that the assertion has become conventional wisdom. But what is the source of the conventional wisdom?  To hear Sen. Durbin and some of his allies in the Guantanamo debate tell it, the source is Matthew Alexander. 

Here's the interesting part: Nobody knows who he is.  "Matthew Alexander" is the pseudonym of a man who, according to an online biography, is a former U.S. Air Force officer who "personally conducted more than 300 interrogations in Iraq and supervised more than 1,000." He is the author of a book, "How to Break a Terrorist," in which he describes his part in the interrogations that led to the killing of al Qaeda-in-Iraq chief Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.  He says he wrote the book under an assumed name for security reasons.

Alexander has only been part of the Guantanamo debate for the last six months.  On November 30, 2008, as he began promotion of his book, he published an op-ed in the Washington Post entitled, "I'm Still Tortured by What I Saw in Iraq."  In it, he wrote, "I learned in Iraq that the No. 1 reason foreign fighters flocked there to fight were the abuses carried out at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo…It's no exaggeration to say that at least half of our losses and casualties in that country have come at the hands of foreigners who joined the fray because of our program of detainee abuse." 

That passage has become the basis for much of the argument that Guantanamo should be closed.  Just ask Sen. Durbin.

Since the op-ed was published, Alexander has lived a very public life for a man living under a pseudonym.  He has promoted his book, written other op-eds, and blogged at the Huffington Post.  He has appeared on MSNBC, "The Daily Show," CBS, and Fox.  He has participated in panel discussions and public forums -- all without revealing his real name or much about his background or current activities.

Normally, when one makes an argument as serious as Alexander's, especially in an area that has so many critical policy implications, it's done in a totally public way, in which the advocate's identity is known and his case is subjected to scrutiny in debate. Not this time.  The leading advocate of one side is making his case anonymously.

In addition, when there is a consensus as widespread as the Guantanamo-as-terrorist-recruitment-tool idea is, it's often based on some sort of report, or extensive research, or key document.  In this case, it isn't.  There are certainly other arguments in line with Alexander's -- for example, former U.S. Navy general counsel Alberto Mora has said there are top U.S. military officers who believe that Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo have been responsible for "recruiting insurgent fighters into combat" in Iraq, and thus the deaths of U.S. soldiers.  But a big report that can be studied -- and challenged?  There's not one.

Instead, there's Matthew Alexander. 

There is a case to be made against the terrorist-recruitment argument.  Critics point out that the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the USS Cole, the African embassies, and Khobar Towers happened before there was a Guantanamo.  Also, in 2007 and 2008, American strategy broke the back of the Iraqi insurgency, and terrorist recruitment plummeted, while Guantanamo was still in business.

There are a lot more questions to hash out before a final decision on Guantanamo. What's needed is a full debate -- with all the evidence on the table. "Matthew Alexander" has his position, but the American people should know more about him before making up their mind.

Note: For readers who want to learn more about this topic, please read my post from Monday, "Guantanamo and the question of terrorist recruitment."



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Sad World

May 26, 2009

WHAT ABOUT before GITMO,These people need no excuse.These people will say anything to sell a book.What these people did to our people is unforgivable and if this is what takes to save the lifes of many..............SO BE IT !

 

OxyCon

May 26, 2009

Who is responsible for the influx of foreign jihadists in Pakistan, where they fight alongside the Taliban against Pakistanis?
During the Russian occupation of Afghanistan, who was responsible for the influx of foreign jihadists?
Who is responsible for the influx of foreign jihadists in Chechnya?
And speaking of Chechnya, the Russians were victorious over this breakaway republic and they used extreme torture against the jihadists there.

 

Holdfast

May 26, 2009

So it is not Gitmo itself, but rather its promotion as this evil deathstar that has spurred terrorist recruitment. So I guess we can say that the MSM is most responsible for terrorist recruitment. Sure this argument jumps a few steps and simplifies a few others, but it is no worse than the one put forward by the Air Farce weenie.

 

Heidi

May 26, 2009

"Matthew Alexander" probably never ever served, just like all the other "winter soldiers" the left trots out..
As other's have said, WHAT ABOUT BEFORE GITMO???

 

Al Reasin

May 26, 2009

Michael Yon, I believe, wrote that an interrogator reported to him that Gitmo scared the insurgents enough that a threat to send them there helped gain their cooperation. So did that save American lives? My anecdotal info vs his anecdotal info and I'm not trying to sell a book. And furthermore, if Senator "American soldiers are Nazis" Durbin uses him as a source, well that tarnishes Mr. Alexander's position.

 

Jim Treacher

May 26, 2009

When you make an argument from authority, it's only natural that people will be curious whether you actually have that authority. See Micah Ian Wright, Jesse MacBeth, etc.

 

LifeTrek

May 26, 2009

Even Tom Friedman agrees that Iraq sucked in the terrorists who might attack us here -- why would Obama, the King of Distraction, want to eliminate the one that kept us safe leaving the terrorists main target the States themselves?

 

SEZME66

May 26, 2009

senator dermoid has clearly taken the lead in the joe biden sweepstakes, he will soon be coronated as the senate gaffemeister. a title he has spent years honing his skills to reach.

 

Magic Dog

May 27, 2009

Byron York, fresh from arguing that black support for Obama distorts the polls and therefore we ought to count them at 60%, now wants to doubt Matthew Alexander's bona fides.

There isn't anything you wingnuts won't stoop to, is there?

 

Alan Reasin

May 27, 2009

Magic Dog May 27, 2009: Mr. Alexander has NO bona fides since we need to take his basic information as creditable without having access to verify his background. I always doubt someone who is less than up front and is selling a book.

If you are willing to accept information from effectively anonymous sources, you might be able earn a lot of money from helping those Nigerian persons who need financial help in obtaining their inheritance and are willing to share it with you.

So take care and be safe in life.

 

TNR Rulz!

May 27, 2009

Scott Beauchamp is at it again!

 

Injest

May 27, 2009

The last time I read this story bout the guy who got al-Zarqawi he was an AF Staff Sergeant reservist E-6, no background in Intel, and was put in charge of all interrogations. It was his buddy buddy technique that lead to Zarqawi location.

 


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