9/17/2004
Americans Sentenced in Afghanistan

US citizens Jonathan Idema (L) and Edward Carabello (R) talk to each other as Brent Bennett listens at a district court in Afghan capital Kabul, Sept. 15, 2004. Jonathan Idema and Brent Bennett received 10-year terms in prison while Carabello was handed an eight-year term for illegally running a private jail and torturing suspects by Afgan court in Kabul.
Americans Sentenced In Afghan Torture Associated Press September 16, 2004
KABUL, Afghanistan - Three Americans, led by a former Green Beret who boasted he had Pentagon support, were found guilty Wednesday of torturing Afghans in a private jail and were sentenced to prison.
After a 7 1/2-hour session in a stuffy Kabul courtroom, the three-judge panel was unanimous in convicting the former soldier, Jonathan Idema, and his right-hand man, Brent Bennett, on charges of entering Afghanistan illegally, making illegal arrests, establishing a private jail and torturing their captives. They were sentenced to 10 years.
Edward Caraballo, a cameraman who said he was making a film about America’s war on terrorism, received an eight-year term. Four young Afghan accomplices were sentenced to terms ranging from one to five years; one of them burst into tears with the verdict.
Idema, who has a previous fraud conviction, claimed to have had high-level support from the Pentagon and Afghan officials in his group’s efforts to hunt down terrorists, but the U.S. military says the men were freelancers operating outside the law and without its knowledge.
Judge Abdul Baset Bakhtyari dismissed a string of video clips showing Idema talking with Afghan leaders, purported U.S. intelligence officials and NATO troops and said they were operating alone.
Idema, who wore sunglasses and khaki fatigues bearing an American flag throughout the trial, denounced the trial as a throwback to the times of the hard-line Islamic Taliban movement.
“It’s the same sick Taliban judges, the same sick sense of justice,” Idema said as he was led, handcuffed, out of the courtroom. “I knew that the American government wasn’t going to help me.”
The lawyers for Idema and Caraballo said they would appeal. It was unclear whether Bennett, who represented himself, would do so.
Idema spent three years in jail in the 1980s for bilking 60 companies out of more than $200,000. He and Bennett are from Fayetteville, N.C.; Caraballo is from New York.
The group was arrested July 5 after Afghan security forces raided a house in Kabul and discovered eight Afghans who said they had been detained and tortured by the Americans.
Several of them testified they were beaten, burned with scalding water and deprived of food and sleep.
Idema said the prisoners were subjected to “standard interrogation techniques” but no abuse.
Idema claimed to have unearthed a plot to bomb the main American military base north of Kabul and assassinate Afghan leaders. In an interview with The Associated Press, he also claimed to be hot on the trail of Osama bin Laden.
The U.S. military in Afghanistan has admitted receiving a prisoner from Idema and holding him for about two months. NATO forces cooperated briefly with the three, sending explosives experts to assist in three arrest raids in the Afghan capital. They found traces of explosives and suspect electronic components in one raid.
But Idema has since been denounced by the alliance and the American military as an impostor, and disowned by Afghan leaders and the Pentagon. The U.S. military had no comment on the convictions.
The trial was marked by chaotic procedures, dismal translation and constant outbursts from Idema.
A non-Muslim, Idema asked to swear on the Quran before testifying Wednesday. He kissed a copy of Islam’s holy book, prompting one of his former prisoners, an Afghan Supreme Court official with a long black beard, to jump to his feet and acclaim Idema as a convert.
Some in the courtroom audience cried “God is great!” three times in response, moving Idema and his former inmate to exchange smiles.
Later, the defendants and their lawyers appeared stunned by the verdict, which came even though the defense was given no chance to cross-examine witnesses.
Instead, two American defense attorneys drew heavily on several videotapes shot by Caraballo. They showed Idema meeting a man identified as a U.S. Army captain coordinating counterterrorism operations in Kabul, and speaking by phone to officials Idema said were at the Defense Department and the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan.
The supposed captain said on tape that Idema’s group was “rolling up AQ (al-Qaida) like it’s nobody’s business.”
Idema and his lawyer identified Lt. Gen. William Boykin, the deputy undersecretary of defense for intelligence, as his alleged Pentagon sponsor. Pentagon officials said Boykin would not comment on the matter.
Other footage showed Idema being greeted at Kabul’s airport by its director and the city police chief, and meeting with commanders of the Afghan government’s militia.
Idema said the FBI was holding his and Bennett’s passports. He said he had a “non-expirable Afghan military visa” from a spell in Afghanistan around the end of 2001, when he says he fought against the Taliban.
Caraballo’s passport had an entry stamp but no visa, but Idema said their arrival in Afghanistan was arranged by its ambassador to India.
“It’s ridiculous to claim they entered illegally under these circumstances,” said Robert Fogelnest, Caraballo’s attorney.
The judge said the videos only showed they had “private” contacts with Afghan leaders and failed to demonstrate official links to the American military.
Fogelnest said the Afghan legal system was unfit to carry out the trial, and suggested U.S. officials had sacrificed his clients to avoid a scandal.
The U.S. Embassy disagreed: “The government held the trial fairly and in accordance with the Afghan law,” said spokeswoman Beth Lee.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, asked about the fairness of the proceedings, said: “The Afghan government held the trial in accordance with Afghan law. Their decision was handed down by an Afghan court after a full trial had been conducted.”
U.S. and Afghan officials have left open whether the men might be able to serve any final sentence in an American jail, or if the U.S. government will bring more charges against them at home.
Cao’s Note: I am stunned by this article and its implications. “God is Great!” is Al Qaeda’s theme song. In this courtroom, the terrorists were laying in wait for a verdict in their favor. Something’s fishy!!! Did the US Government turn its back on the very people it sent to Afghanistan and for doing the very job they were supposed to be doing? Do you suppose it’s true that we don’t really want Bin Laden to ever be caught? That the US Government itself is standing in the way of that happening by sticking a monkey wrench into the works whenever progress is being made? Is this the fate awaiting American Contractors abroad? Or were these guys just loose cannon bounty hunters looking for Bin Laden on their own, and should be grateful that they didn’t meet the same fate as Nick Berg?
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December 24th, 2005 at 10:46 am
FREE OUR LOYAL AMERICANS. CERTAINLY BARBARA AND GEORGE BUSH SHOULD UNDERSTAND THE MEANING OF THE SEASON. HOPE TO SEE THEM BEFORE THE NEW YEAR. DR. SUCICH
April 30th, 2006 at 5:49 pm
Americans go home or come to our countries peacefully and abiding local laws.
April 30th, 2006 at 6:05 pm
hmmmm. What an interesting statement, specially considering we’re fighting the war on terror. Do you mean to tell me we should follow the law of the ousted Taliban because Karzai is granting them amnesty?
Maybe you should check Afghan Law and then tell me what laws the Afghans followed in the original Taliban kangaroo court that convicted them of those nonexistent ‘crimes’.
They didn’t break any laws and that’s why they were ordered released after their second trial when they were declared innocent.
The anti-terrorist fighting mujahideen love them! So tell me what the hell you’re talking about or sod off.