Guantánamo Diary
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An unprecedented international publishing event: the first and only diary written by a still-imprisoned Guantánamo detainee.
Since 2002, Mohamedou Slahi has been imprisoned at the detention camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. In all these years, the United States has never charged him with a crime. A federal judge ordered his release in March 2010, but the U.S. government fought that decision, and there is no sign that the United States plans to let him go.
Three years into his captivity Slahi began a diary, recounting his life before he disappeared into U.S. custody, "his endless world tour" of imprisonment and interrogation, and his daily life as a Guantánamo prisoner. His diary is not merely a vivid record of a miscarriage of justice, but a deeply personal memoir - terrifying, darkly humorous, and surprisingly gracious. Published now for the first time, Guantánamo Diary is a document of immense historical importance and a riveting and profoundly revealing listen.
- Listening Length14 hours and 29 minutes
- Audible release dateJanuary 20, 2015
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB00RM5O1E2
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 14 hours and 29 minutes |
|---|---|
| Author | Mohamedou Ould Slahi |
| Narrator | Peter Ganim |
| Audible.com Release Date | January 20, 2015 |
| Publisher | Hachette Audio |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B00RM5O1E2 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #84,919 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #42 in Human Rights (Audible Books & Originals) #112 in Civil Rights & Liberties (Audible Books & Originals) #165 in Human Rights Law (Books) |
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And it works. Apparently every person can be scared and broken to a place where they are willing to cooperate with their tormenters. And for Mohamedou Ould Slahi, the writer of this diary, because his captors never had any concrete evidence against him (although they considered him the #1 prisoner at GITMO), cooperation by Mohamedou consisted of fabricating stories.
Mohamedou had over 100 different interrogators in a period of 6 years and there's a pattern to the sessions. No one can ever tell him what crime he is accused of. He asks how he is "worse than the people you captured with guns in their hands?"
The interrogators respond: "You're very smart!...you meet all the criteria of a top terrorist....[on the] terrorist check-list, you pass with a very high score." What is the checklist?"
"You're Arab, you're young, you went on jihad [in Afghanistan in 1992 to fight Russians], you speak foreign languages, you've been in many countries, you're a graduate in a technical discipline."
Mohamedou asks, "And what crime is that?" The response: "Look at the hijackers; they were the same way." And there's no evidence because according to the interrogators "smart people don't leave any traces."
Mohamedou sees that because his interrogators deal with "what ifs" they are free to "interpret the information [received] as they pleased." Thus, though he spent less than 2 months in Canada, and the Canadians could say only that he was in the company of x or y who were "bad people," or frequented a certain mosque, the Americans said they had "tons of information" on Mohamedou that showed he was the Mastermind of the Millenium Plot.
Mohamedou suggests that the Canadians were anxious to be helpful after letting the people with explosives cross the border. Thus they edited transcripts of Mohamedou's conversations in Canada which leads the U.S. interrogators to keep trying to find out what Mohamedou meant by "tea and sugar" in one conversation. This goes on for 4 years.
When Mohamedou decides to cooperate he knows what the interrogators want so he confesses: "I came to Canada with a plan to blow up the CN Tower in Toronto...supposed to buy a lot of sugar to mix with the explosives..."
It is either tragic or farcical to watch the Americans in their hall of mirrors, creating images, distorting them, bending reality and believing they are being successful.
As Mohamedou's confessions start to give the interrogators the "information" they wanted, when this information confirmed what they believed of Mohamedou, the interrogators become visibly relieved and happy (and the miseries in Mohamedou's life lessen). The interrogators' superiors also become satisfied and happy. It's easy to imagine how as the news spreads all the way to Cheney and Rumsfeld and Bush, these policy setters become smugly satisfied that their methods (call them what you will) were justified.
There's a lot of redaction in the text. It doesn't distract at all from the reality of GITMO Mohamedou shows us. "You're holding me because your country is strong enough to be unjust." he says to interrogators.
At the conclusion of the diary Mohamedou says the U.S. government at first "thought it had managed to gather all the evils of the world in GTMO....so it would perform it's revenge." But then it realized it had gathered "a bunch of non-combatants...and is stuck with the problem."
The U.S. owning up to the problem it created does not seem likely any time soon. Mohamedou was taken by the CIA in 2001; in 2010 the Obama administration appealed a U.S. District Court's ruling that Mohamedou be released. That case is still pending and Mohamedou is still a prisoner.
Page 241
"Oh, ALLAH help me. Oh Allah have mercy on me" SSG Mary kept mimicking my prayers, "ALLAH, ALLAH.... There is no Allah. He let you down!" I smiled at how ignorant she was, talking about the Lord like that. But the Lord is very patient, and doesn't need to rush to punishment, because there is no escaping Him.
Page 270
I gathered my strength, guessed the Kibla, kneeled, and started to pray to God. "Please guide me. I know not what to do. I am surrounded by merciless wolves, who fear not thee." When I was praying I burst into tears, though I suppressed my voice lest the guards hear me. You know there are always serious prayers and lazy prayers. My experience has taught me that God always responds to your serious prayers.
The six-plus years of "interrogation" of Mohamedou Ould Slahi (MOS) included time in his home country Mauritania, Jordon, Afghanistan, and Cuba/GITMO. After September 11, 2001, the USA pursued terrorists with many interrogation "plans" carried out by multiple agencies. As I finished reading this book, two significant news items (ten years after MOS' experiences) appeared on TV. 1) The Jordanian pilot captured by ISIS was burned alive. 2) Since 2002, 649 GITMO detainees were released and 30% were re-engaging in terrorism. Now I must question the usefulness of brutal interrogation, especially if detainees have time and means to tell what happened at GITMO. Up until now, I had seen TV images of detainees walking in chain-link kennels with armed guards on each side. I had not thought about other kinds of "housing" or torture.
As MOS described his survival as a detainee, three stories stood out for me. 1) Female interrogators engaged in sexual abuse and assault of MOS.. What red-blooded USA woman, employed by the government, would expose herself, whisper, and touch a male prisoner? I am disgusted. 2) At one time, interrogators took MOS (hooded and confined) on speed boat rides, apparently to give the impression that MOS was being moved to a new and worse location. Actually, he returned to a different room/chamber at GITMO. This reminded me of fraternity hazing. Why didn't the interrogators simply prepare a bowl of skinned grapes, blindfold MOS, place MOS' hand in the bowl, and tell him these were the eyeballs of other detainees who had been untruthful? 3) Medical doctors repaired and medicated MOS after beatings and starvation. What red-blooded USA doctor would allow the torture to continue?
The diary included descriptions of MOS' life other than prison. For example, he helped prepare a family wedding celebration and described the local traditions. Another time, MOS describes his work of installing telecommunications equipment in the presidential offices in Mauritania. These placed MOS in a broader context of his reality. Most important for MOS was his memorization of the Koran early in life. With or without a printed Koran, with or without a clear direction to Mecca, MOS describes his constant faith and trust in Allah. This seems similar to the Christians who memorize the Bible and hymns, so that if they are ever persecuted and deprived of printed materials, the Christians have a clear direction to God.
Will look for followup work by Larry Siems, et. al.
Top reviews from other countries
Slahi is a very remarkable man, and if you believe him, which I do, (partly because his testimony is believable and partly because relentless interrogation over many years failed to produce any evidence whatsoever contradicting him), his book reveals a man of great strength and a wonderful spirit of forgiveness, although he is also very sparky and stands up for himself but always with humour and a shrewd understanding of the situation he is in, which given the way he was treated is almost beyond belief.
It’s a great story but for me the most interesting thing, for me as a person who has tended to avoid reading about Guantanamo because frankly it is an unpleasant subject, the most interesting thing is what it reveals about the political background in various Arab countries who have slavishly gone along with the Americans, acting as their jailers and torturers, and also within the USA – the way the different military and intelligence agencies relate with each other and also the American government and justice system.
It is also interesting that Slahi thought the Jordanians, although callous, did a much better job as interrogators than the Americans, because they arrived at a judgment about Slahi quickly and easily.
Throughout the book Slahi remains vitally interested in his captors and torturers as people and remains open to them. It is this which makes their characters come alive, through Slahi’s compassion for them.
Thank you Mohamedou ould salahi - and if I could ask a small personal favour please DO NOT EVER stop writing.
Loved how he couldn't stop feeling emotions for his guards despite them having been involved in his torture and degrading treatment.
This is the TRUE story of an innocent man who had been through unbelievable torments at the behest of the US government, under three Presidents, and yet maintained his religious faith. This Faith enabled him to endure, and forgive everyone involved in his torment. He holds no grudges and seeks no revenge.
What an example to us all!














