Thursday, November 11, 2010

Waterboarding claims based on 9/11 confessions

The leader of al-Qaida, which still suffers from the near drowning technique the CIA torture session agent tried to get information about those arrested in Pakistan in March 2003.




potential attack on Heathrow Airport, Canary Wharf and Big Ben is part of a detailed list of 31 items Mohammed confessed later hearing at Guantanamo.



Muhammad said he wanted to "destroy" their plot details, instead of disaster in 2001 New York World Trade Center shoebombing failure of an airliner over the Atlantic in London, Richard Reid.



The terrorists also admitted involvement in a nightclub in the 2002 Bali bombings, an attack on a Kenyan hotel in the same year and the head of the Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Pakistan.



Mohammed is one of three suspected al-Qaeda's water torture, Saudi Arabia, and Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-born Nashira, charged with coordinating the suicide bombing of the USS Cole, Aden.



The British government has long rejected the use of water torture, which they consider to be torture. In his speech last month, the head of MI6, Sir John Sawers, said that his ministry had "absolutely nothing" to do torture, which he described as "illegal and disgusting."



The interview, Bush described a close relationship between Tony Blair, but was rejected by public opinion in Britain, the war in Iraq. "No matter how people see me in the UK is just. It does not matter, and it honestly. Sometimes it's not important, then," he said.



Mr. Bush recalled how when Blair could face a no confidence vote in Parliament on the eve of the war, offered him the opportunity to choose to send British troops into Iraq.



He said that "rather than lose power, I'd much rather have Tony and his intelligence and strategic thinking to the prime minister as a strong and important ally."




 However, Mr Blair told him: "If my government fees and fines."

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