04/25/2011 07:08 PM

Al-Qaida's Watch of Choice


Wearing a Casio Enough to Become Terror Suspect


By Simone Utler <http://www.spiegel.de/extra/0,1518,632090,00.html>  

The watch can be found the world over and costs only a few euros. According
to secret documents obtained by SPIEGEL through the WikiLeaks whistleblower
platform, US interrogators at Guantanamo Bay identified potential terrorists
by the watch they wore on their wrist.

They're cheap, easy to buy anywhere in the world and, apparently, are the
hallmark of a terrorist: a digital Casio wristwatch -- strictly speaking,
the black F-91W model or its silver variant, the A-159W. The United States
military considers this watch to be "an indicator of al-Qaida training in
the manufacture of improvised explosive devices (IEDs)" and with it the
identifying feature of a potential terrorist.

This information is contained in the secret documents about prisoners at the
Guantanamo Bay US military prison camp in Cuba, which have just been
released by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks and SPIEGEL, along with
other international media. The " Gitmo Files
<http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,758916,00.html> " comprise
the records of 765 former and current Guantanamo prisoners. Thousands of
pages labeled "secret" and "Noforn" ("Not releasable to foreign nationals")
contain detailed information about the prisoners, their life in the military
prison, the conduct of intelligence agencies and their treatment of the
prisoners.

In one document, titled "Matrix of Threat Indicators for Enemy Combatants"
-- a field guide of recognition and classification of "enemy combatants" --
various items are listed to help interrogators assess a prisoner's
capabilities and intentions. With the aid of this 17-page catalog, the Joint
Task Force responsible for operating the Guantanamo prison camp were
expected to determine whether a suspect could be a possible terrorist
threat, if he had the opportunity.

In the field guide, special attention is given to the items a suspect had in
his possession at the time of his arrest. The Joint Task Force speaks of
"suspicious items," including a satellite phone, military radio/transceiver,
$100 bills and the Casio F-91W watch.

Used to Detonate Bombs 

The mere possession of the watch, which can be purchased for a few dollars
and is worn on the wrists of millions worldwide, is the enough to make a man
suspect.

The footnotes of the document explain that the Joint Task Force identifies
the watch as "the sign of al-Qaida, (which) uses the watch to make bombs."
It's known that the Casio would be given to trainees in Afghan terrorist
training camps for this purpose, where the young men would be taught how to
use the watches in the building of bomb detonators.

According to the secret document, an estimated one-third of all Guantanamo
prisoners who wore the watch "have known connections to explosives, either
having attended explosives training, having association with a facility
where IEDs were made or where explosives training was given, or having
association with a person identified as an explosives expert." 

In the documents on individual inmates, the possession of the Casio watch
would be listed in item 5.b as "property held." Here, too, the wristwatch
will be mentioned in the footnotes as a distinguishing feature of al-Qaida.

According to the Guardian newspaper, more than 50 detainee reports
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/25/guantanamo-files-casio-wristwat
ch-alqaida>  indicate the ownership of a Casio watch, of which 32 prisoners
wore the black F-91W and an additional 20 prisoners wore the silver A-159W
at the time of their arrest.

'The Watch Points to Mecca' 

Even in the so-called Combatant Status Review Tribunal, which gives the
final decision on whether a prisoner is considered an enemy combatant, the
watches were given particular importance, according to transcripts of the
military tribunals of Guantanamo prisoners, which were first released in
2006 after the Associated Press successfully sued to make them public.

At that time, the Munich daily Süddeutsche Zeitung published the examination
of a prisoner who was questioned extensively about his Casio watch. When the
prisoner was told that his watch was used by al-Qaida, he was shocked.
According to the newspaper, the prisoner, a Kuwaiti engineer, said, "We have
two watches in Kuwait: Fossil and Casio. This watch has a compass that shows
the direction of Mecca. I am Muslim and pray five times a day." He said he
needed the watch like many people in Kuwait.

The Kuwaiti, who had traveled after Sept. 11, 2001, to Afghanistan with
$15,000 in his pocket, said, "I swear I don't know if terrorists use it or
if they make explosives with it. If I had known that, I would have thrown it
away. I'm not stupid." He added that, "We have four chaplains" at
Guantanamo. "All of them wear this watch. I am not Taliban or al-Qaida." 

The tribunal asked the Kuwaiti engineer whether he had altered the watch so
that it could emit electrical signals. He responded: "If it were altered it
would have been stupid to keep it." 





URL:


*       http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,758913,00.html

 



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