#56 March/April 2002
The Washington Free Press Washington's Independent Journal of News, Ideas & Culture
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Frankencorn Threatens Mexico’s Ancient Maize Stocks
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CANADA FISH FARMS ENDANGER MARINE ENVIRONMENT
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PETA SUES ON BEHALF OF FARM ANIMALS

FRANKENSOY REQUIRES MORE HERBICIDES

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DO NOT EAT VEAL

EUROPE GOING ORGANIC

PUSH FOR ORGANIC PROGRAMS AT WSU

Why Airbus will Beat the Crap out of Boeing
by Martin Nix, contributor

Clinton on AIDS, War, Climate Change, Globalization

‘Curious, Odd & Interesting’
The Eighth Lively Art: Conversations with Painters, Poets,Musicians, and the Wicked Witch of the West
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Endocrine Disruptors and the Transgendered
By Christine Johnson, contributor

New Findings on Global Warming

What Is a ‘Just’ War? Religious Leaders Speak Out
by David Harrison, Contributor

Local Vet Counters the Big Lie about Pearl Harbor
By Captain O’Kelly McCluskey, WWII DAV

Case Against John Walker Lindh is Underwhelming
By Glenn Sacks, contributor

Unique No More
opinion by Donald Torrence, contributor

US in Afghanistan: Just War or Justifying Oil Profits?
opinion by David Ross, Contributor

Sharon Plans Alternative to Arafat
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Mexican Workers Fight Electricity Deregulation
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By David Bacon, contributor

NASA Commits ‘Wanton Pollution’ of Solar System
opinion by Jackie Alan Giuliano, PhD (via ENS)

The Secret National Epidemic
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Trident: Blurred Mission Makes Use More Likely
by Glen Milner

US Needs All the Languages It Can Get
By Domenico Maceri, PhD, contributor

Case Against John Walker Lindh is Underwhelming

By Glenn Sacks, contributor

The vitriol being leveled from all sides at John Walker Lindh, the American who allegedly was fighting alongside the Al Qaida terrorist groups in Afghanistan, would lead one to think that the 10-count indictment handed down by the US government is overwhelming. In reality, it is distinctly underwhelming. Let’s look at the two principal charges:

Charge 1: Conspiracy to Murder US Nationals

The indictment refers to 1) alleged attempts by Lindh to kill American soldiers in Afghanistan, and 2) the death of American CIA agent Johnny Michael Spann. In both instances, the government’s case is weak. The indictment itself admits that Lindh went to Afghanistan to join the Taliban before the Sept.11 attack on the New York City World Trade Towers, and that after the US entered the war, Lindh and his fellow soldiers retreated from the region of combat as soon as US planes began to bomb Taliban positions, first in Takhar and later in Kunduz. It also states that soon afterwards Lindh surrendered to the Northern Alliance. There is no evidence that Lindh ever fired a shot at American forces. Even if he had, he could persuasively argue that he did so under duress, since the Taliban routinely shot those who attempted to desert or who disobeyed orders.

The evidence is also slim that Lindh had anything to do with Spann’s death. With his hands tied behind his back, Lindh was interrogated by Spann and another CIA agent in the Qala-I Janghi prison in Mazar-e Sharif on Nov. 25. When a riot broke out shortly afterward (in which Spann was quickly overwhelmed and killed), Lindh was shot in the leg. He retreated to a basement, where he and others surrendered on Dec. 1. Given that he was unarmed and quite possibly still had his hands tied behind his back at the time the riot broke out, it is unlikely that he had anything to do with Spann’s death.

Charge 2: Walker conspired to provide material aid and support to foreign terrorist organizations, principally Al Qaida.

Lindh was in an Al Qaida camp in June because the Taliban sent him there to receive his combat training in Arabic, a language he had learned while studying in Yemen. Lindh does not speak Pashtun or the other local languages spoken by the Taliban. In camp he received a month of training in weapons and on how to hold defensive positions in combat, and then he returned to the Taliban.

The indictment admits that when Al Qaida asked Lindh to carry out terrorist missions against the US and Israel, Lindh refused, instead opting to fight the Northern Alliance from the Taliban’s line of trenches in Northeastern Afghanistan. As a white, middle class American, Lindh’s ability to blend in would have made him the perfect candidate to assist in terrorist actions against the US or Israel. If Al Qaida had believed that Lindh would have been willing to help them, would they have allowed such a uniquely valuable individual to be fighting as a common foot soldier?

The government’s case has other weaknesses, the gravest of which is that the charges are based almost entirely upon Lindh’s confessions—confessions which appear to be tainted and which may well be thrown out by the court. According to Lindh’s defense, he asked to see a lawyer shortly after he was captured but was told that there were none available. Until he agreed to waive his Miranda rights, Lindh was allegedly kept in an unheated metal shipping container, in the freezing winter cold, naked and shackled to his bed with only one blanket, while one of his two wounds was left untreated.

If Lindh’s confessions are thrown out, what case remains? The December CNN interview—conducted while Lindh lay doubly wounded, malnourished, and on painkillers—damns him as a person but does not constitute strong evidence of the government’s principal charges. And it is questionable that jurors are going to put much stock in any testimony against him which the US might solicit from captured Al Qaida fighters.

Lindh may have been an amoral outlaw, or he may simply have been a confused kid who looked for adventure in the wrong place and at the wrong time. But a murderer and a terrorist, or a conspirator in either, he isn’t.


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