In a rare confession of ignorance, George W. Bush admitted not knowing
what crimes, if any, were committed by the
hundreds of Muslims, young and old, held without charge or trial at
Guantánamo
Bay. “I don’t know what these men have
done,” said the president, “but I know
they’re the worst of the worst.” Unlike the
serenely confident Bush, Moazzam
Begg is a man without convictions; he even lacks arraignments and
indictments.
After three years of harsh imprisonment in Guantánamo,
Bagram, and Kandahar, he
was released, without explanation or apology. Bush is as likely to read
|
ENEMY
COMBATANT
Moazzam Begg
New Press
$26.95, 352 pages |
Begg’s
memoir,
Enemy Combatant, as view
the film
An Inconvenient Truth.
However, despite a few stylistic infelicities, it is hard for any
honest reader
to rank its level-headed author as “the worst of the
worst.”
Begg’s
ordeal began in Islamabad at midnight on January 31, 2002. Without
waking his
pregnant wife or their three children, Pakistani agents under American
supervision bound Begg’s hands and ankles, threw a hood over
his head, and
spirited him away. He would eventually be transferred to American
custody,
spend 20 months in solitary confinement, and endure more than 300
interrogations. He witnessed the murders of two fellow detainees and
was
himself tormented physically and mentally. Begg’s Caribbean
holiday came to an
end January 25, 2005, when he was flown home to England.
After
recounting his midnight abduction, Begg circles back to his childhood
in
Birmingham. Though his mother, who died when he was 6, was born in
Delhi, and
his father in Agra, Begg is a native Englishman. His father, a banker
who wrote
Urdu poetry, sent him to a Jewish primary school because of
“its high standards
of education and emphasis on religious and moral ethics, coupled with
kosher dietary
laws similar to our own.” During adolescence, Begg got into
violent scrapes as
a member of a gang called the Lynx that was formed to counter racist
skinheads.
In 1993, during a visit with relatives in Pakistan, he underwent what
he calls
“a life-changing experience” when he traveled to
Afghanistan to camp among
mujahideen training for the insurgency in Kashmir. By the time he
returned to
Britain, Begg had renewed his commitment to Islam and to fellow Muslims
throughout the world.
After
September 11, 2001, skittish American security officials might have had
reason
to be wary of Begg, though he claims that he never joined al Qaeda nor
sympathized with its operations targeting civilians. The Islamic
bookstore he
ran in Birmingham became a meeting place for malcontents and a
collection point
for questionable charities. Begg traveled to the Balkans to bring
relief
supplies to beleaguered Bosnian Muslims, and he actively supported
resistance
movements in Chechnya and Afghanistan. In order to raise his children
more
effectively in their faith, he moved the family to Afghanistan. During
the
chaos of the American campaign against the Taliban, they fled to
Pakistan,
which is where, taken into custody, Begg began his long-term captivity.
Begg’s
memoir offers vivid details of existence in an 8-by-6-foot steel cage
and of
insults to spirit and body that its author bore without quite cracking.
For all
the degradation and deprivation that Begg was forced to undergo, he is
especially indignant about a confession that agents of the FBI prepared
for him
to sign. Beyond the untruths that he is asked to affirm, Begg is deeply
offended by the shoddy style of the document. “This is
terrible,” he complains.
“The English used here is terrible. Nobody could ever believe
that I would
write such a document.” Begg, who also speaks Urdu and
Arabic, prides himself
on his fluency in English, and he disdains the uncouth recruits
guarding him
for being inarticulate in their shared native language. His command of
English,
as well as his broad interests in literature, history, and theology,
sets him
apart from most of those he encounters, in orange jump suits or
military
uniforms, and must have been a psychological resource that helped him
to
survive. Yet it must be said that the English prose of
Enemy
Combatant, written with the help of
journalist Victoria Brittain, is undistinguished and suffers from
occasional
solecisms, such as the recurrent phrase “different
to,” as in Begg’s statement
that the briny scent that greeted him at Guantánamo
“was distinctly different
to the smell of the sea in Britain.”
The
prologue to
Enemy Combatant asserts
that one of the book’s aims is “to introduce the
voice of reason, which is so
frequently drowned by the roar of hatred and intolerance.”
That voice is heard
when Begg is able to strike up a meaningful conversation and even a
friendship
with several of his guards, despite the chasms of culture and power
that
separate them. The voice of reason spoke also in the recent Supreme
Court
decision that President Bush lacks authority to conduct war-crimes
tribunals at
Guantánamo and that “military
commissions” there are illegal under both
military-justice law and the Geneva conventions.
At 5’3”,
Begg presents himself as an underdog whose favorite movie is
Braveheart.
What he says about himself in
Enemy Combatant could
be disingenuous, but
unless it could prove that he was an enemy or a combatant, the United
States
had no business abducting him from a foreign land and imprisoning him
for three
years. Such contempt for the sovereignty of other nations and the
rights of
individuals to habeas corpus and due process betrays American
principles and
alienates potential allies. It aligns this country with North Korea,
Zimbabwe,
Syria, and other regimes that are the worst of the worst.