GUANTANAMO BAY U.S. NAVAL BASE, Cuba (Reuters) - A Canadian accused
of killing a U.S. soldier in Afghanistan should not be tried as a war
criminal because he was a child soldier for al Qaeda, too young to
voluntarily join its forces, his military defense lawyer told a U.S.
war court on Monday.
Navy Lt. William Kuebler asked a military judge to throw out the
charges against Canadian defendant Omar Khadr, who was shot and
captured at age 15 in a firefight at a suspected al Qaeda compound in
Afghanistan in 2002.
"He is a victim of al Qaeda, not a member of al Qaeda," Kuebler said.
Khadr is the Toronto-born son of an alleged al Qaeda financier. He
is accused of throwing a grenade that killed U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class
Christopher Speer in the firefight and planting roadside bombs intended
to kill other U.S. or coalition soldiers in Afghanistan.
Khadr is charged in the Guantanamo war court with murder, attempted
murder, conspiring with al Qaeda, providing material support for
terrorism and spying by conducting surveillance of U.S. military
convoys in Afghanistan. He faces life in prison if convicted.
Kuebler argued that U.S. and international law assume that children
involved in an armed conflict are not there voluntarily, because they
lack the experience and judgment to understand the risk of joining
armed forces. Defense attorneys contend that any charges against Khadr
should be pursued in a civilian court in a juvenile system where the
goal is rehabilitation rather than punishment.
If the U.S. Congress intended to try children as war criminals, it
would have explicitly authorized that in the 2006 law that serves as a
framework for the Guantanamo court, Kuebler said.
But a U.S. Department of Justice attorney, arguing for the
prosecution, said that if Congress intended to exclude juveniles from
the Guantanamo war court, it would have explicitly written that,
because lawmakers knew Khadr could face charges. Instead, Congress
wrote the law using the term "person," which legally refers to "anyone
born alive," Justice Department attorney Andy Oldham said.
Khadr is the last citizen of a Western nation among the 275 captives
at Guantanamo as part of the Bush administration's war on terrorism.
Charges are now pending against five of the Guantanamo prisoners.
The Pentagon plans to try about 80 of them. But six years after the
detention camp opened, only one captive has been convicted in
Guantanamo's widely criticized tribunal system and that was through a
plea deal.
If the military judge, Army Col. Peter Brownback, refuses to drop
the charges, he "will be the first in Western history to preside over
the trial of alleged war crimes committed by a child," Kuebler said.
Khadr sat quietly during the hearing, clad in a white tunic and
trouser uniform signifying that he complies with camp rules. In his
more than five years at Guantanamo, the once pimply faced boy has grown
into a 21-year-old man with a short, bushy beard.
The judge did not indicate when he would rule on the request to drop the charges. The case is scheduled for trial in May.