In the final week of November 2001, a group of CIA and Special Forces operatives oversaw the massacre of a convoy of Taliban soldiers captured in northern Afghanistan. Thousands of prisoners were asphyxiated, burned and beaten to death, buried alive, frozen, drowned, dismembered, and shot with their hands tied behind their backs in multiple locations near Mazar-e-Sharif. In these pages, Waleed Mohammed Haj provides an unprecedented firsthand account of a survivor and eyewitness to these events. In a straightforward and elegant style, the author relives his experiences as a volunteer in the Arab mujahideen unit in northern Afghanistan during the first phase of the American invasion, also describing how and why he went. He recounts the unfolding of the Qala-e-Jangi Massacre as never before seen in print in the English language. He then follows the ordeal of surviving members of the unit at Sheberghan, Qandahar, and the Guantánamo Bay prison complex, where they would form the core group of its earliest detainees. In the latter half of the book, the author provides incisive observations about various aspects of the operation of the camp, reflections on life within its cages and razor-wire fences, and unvarnished descriptions of techniques of repression used there, as well as methods of resistance.
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