If anything, Khalid Sheik Mohammed, in new writings from his Guantanamo Bay cell, and Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, on trial in Manhattan federal court, are using courtroom theater, intentionally or not, to press their case that the United States is such a bully in the Middle East that even killing civilians was justified.
"The entire trial is frozen in time if you think about it," said Karen J Greenberg, the director of the Center on National Security at Fordham Law School who was one of the few people in the Manhattan courtroom Thursday when the surprise announcement was made that Abu Ghaith would testify. "Because the trial is focused on the moment of 9/11, it makes everybody seem like they're frozen in the time of 9/11."
Mohammed, who was captured in Pakistan in 2003, boasted that Afghanistan under Taliban leadership "was the first Islamic state that treated all Muslim men equally, whether they be Chinese, Indian, Chechnyan, Arabs, or Westerners."
There was no mention of women.
He claimed the US closed some embassies and canceled some joint military maneuvers in Jordan because of publicity he orchestrated while in charge of al-Qaida's media wing, including the release of some clips from bin Laden speeches, the publication of a video called "Destroying the Destroyer" and the appearance of pictures of al-Qaida military training camps.
Mohammed remains devoted to bin Laden, killed in a 2011 US attack on his compound in Pakistan, saying the al-Qaida founder was "very wise in every order he gave us." And he was especially proud of what he claimed was al-Qaida's cost to the American economy.
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