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    9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, accomplices make plea deals with U.S.

    By Tom Vanden Brook, Michael Loria and Josh Meyer, USA TODAY,

    6 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1PCtgI_0ujh8q7M00
    This photo obtained March 1, 2003, shows Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, alleged organizer of the September 11, 2001, attacks, shortly after his capture. A proposal to allow alleged perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks to plead guilty and avoid the death penalty poses a powerful dilemma for victims' families, some of whom still want to seek the ultimate retribution after two decades of legal limbo. The proposal detailed by prosecutors in a letter this month could offer families of the nearly 3,000 victims the best path to a resolution of a case bogged down in pre-trial maneuverings in the Guantanamo military commissions for years -- and with no end in sight. HANDOUT, HO/AFP via Getty Images

    WASHINGTON - An al Qaeda operative jailed at Guantanamo prison for nearly two decades and considered to be the mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks has entered into a plea agreement, along with two of his lieutenants in the terror organization, the U.S. Department of Defense announced Wednesday.

    Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, or KSM as he is called by U.S. intelligence agents, is described as the “ principal architect of the 9/11 attacks ” in the 2004 report by the 9/11 Commission. Two of his accomplices in the planning for the 9/11 attack, Walid Bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawasawi, also entered into plea agreements Wednesday, the DOD said in a statement .

    All three men have been in U.S. custody since 2003 , spending time at Guantanamo and prisons overseas.

    Defense officials did not specify any details about the plea agreements, saying only that they had been reached with the Convening Authority for Military Commissions Susan Escallier.

    But the New York Times, citing unnamed Pentagon officials, said the men agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy charges in exchange for a life sentence. The Times also reported that all three men entered into the pleas in exchange for the removal of the death penalty as a possible punishment.

    Mohammed is described in court papers as an al Qaeda militant and the principal architect of the 9/11 assault on New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon outside Washington. Nearly 3,000 people died in the attacks, which launched a U.S. offensive labeled the War on Terror.

    Federal authorities captured him in his native Pakistan native in 2003 and he was imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay in 2006.

    9/11 families previously said they didn't want plea deals

    The Department of Defense first disclosed last year that prosecutors were working on a plea deal that would spare Mohammed and his accomplices their lives.

    Many 9/11 families slammed the potential agreement at that time, telling USA TODAY it amounted to a slap in the face to families seeking answers and accountability.

    "The fact that there are now potential plea deals being offered right at the anniversary, it’s just a horrible, terrible feeling of betrayal,” Terry Strada told USA TODAY in the story. Strada's husband Tom died on the 104th floor of the World Trade Center’ North Tower. “I mean, justice has not been served in two decades. How much more do they expect the families to be able to take? People are dying without seeing justice done.”

    President Joe Biden also issued a statement when the plea deals were first proposed, saying he concurred with the Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin’s recommendation not to accept deals suggested by the 9/11 defendants and their lawyers.

    “The Administration,” the White House said in a 2023 statement to USA TODAY, “is committed to ensuring that the military commissions process is fair and delivers justice to the victims, survivors, families, and those accused of crimes.”

    Investigators who worked on the case argued a plea agreement would deprive the public of the kind of official record produced in open court.

    "The American people deserve to hear what the evidence is and not be satisfied with the fact that their government is telling them, well, we have these people, and they are guilty,” former FBI Agent Frank Pellegrino told USA TODAY at the time.

    Highly educated, tortured in CIA custody

    In CIA custody, interrogators subjected Mohammed to “enhanced interrogation techniques” including waterboarding him 183 times, according to the Senate Intelligence Committee's 2014 report on the agency’s detention and interrogation programs .

    The 9/11 Commission report describes Mohammed as “highly educated” and the “model of the terrorist entrepreneur.”

    KSM orchestrated various terrorist plots, according to the report, including “car bombing, political assassination, aircraft bombing, hijacking, reservoir poisoning, and, ultimately, the use of aircraft as missiles guided by suicide operatives.”

    He grew up in Kuwait but traces his ethnic roots to the Baluchistan region between Pakistan and Iran, the report says. He was raised in a religious family, joined the Muslim Brotherhood at 16 and became “enamored of violent jihad at youth camps in the desert.”

    In 1983, he moved from Kuwait to the U.S. to attend Chowan College, a small Baptist school in North Carolina. He transferred a semester later to North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro and earned a degree in December 1986, the report says.

    KSM took up the anti-Soviet Afghan cause soon after graduating, according to the 9/11 Commission. He traveled to Peshawar, Pakistan, where he fell in with notable Afghan mujahideen who became his mentors.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, accomplices make plea deals with U.S.

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