The Uighurs, in their own words

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A Uighur terrorist from a videotape released by the Turkistan Islamic Party last year.

On Tuesday, April 20, the US Treasury Department added Abdul Haq, the leader of the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Party (“ETIP” ), to its list of designated terrorists. The move follows a similar designation by the UN, which placed Haq on its list of persons associated with Osama bin Laden, al Qaeda, or the Taliban on April 15.

Abdul Haq is not widely known in the West, as his terrorist activities have focused largely on China. But members of the ETIP, which was previously known as the Eastern Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), have fought throughout Central and South Asia alongside Taliban and al Qaeda forces. And Haq’s organization gained some notoriety last year when it openly threatened the Olympic Games.

Currently, seventeen Uighur men who are suspected members or associates of the organization are detained at Guantanamo. Five other Uighurs who were detained at Gitmo were previously released to Albania in 2006. The men are all from China’s Xinjiang region and are alleged to have traveled to Afghanistan to join the ETIP/ETIM’s jihad.

The Obama administration has expressed its desire to relocate at least some of the current Uighur detainees to American soil. But the Treasury Department’s designation may complicate this effort, as at least ten Uighurs (including two who have been transferred to Albania) have openly admitted their ties to Abdul Haq, as well as another known ETIP/ETIM terrorist named Hassan Mahsum, who was killed in Waziristan in October 2003. As the Treasury Department’s designation notes, Haq became the leader of the ETIP/ETIM “following the death of the previous ETIP leader” – that is, Mahsum.

The Uighur detainees admitted their ties to Haq and Mahsum during their testimony at combatant status review tribunals (CSRT) at Guantanamo. The Uighurs frequently professed their innocence, claiming that they were not targeting Americans and denying that they had anything to do with al Qaeda or the Taliban. But in the context of their denials the Uighur detainees also admitted to training at a terrorist camp in the Tora Bora Mountains. That camp was run by Abdul Haq and Hassan Mahsum, and was most likely supported by al Qaeda and the Taliban.

The UN designation notes that Haq is “involved in fundraising and recruitment for” the ETIP/ETIM. This is consistent with the accounts offered by the Uighur detainees. For example, current detainee Bahtiyar Mahnut explained Abdul Haq’s role during one of his CSRT sessions at Guantanamo. Mahnut lived at the ETIP/ETIM’s Tora Bora training camp for several months in 2001, until the American bombing campaign forced him and his fellow Uighurs to flee.

“The person running the camp was named Abdul Haq, and he was a Uighur,” Mahnut said. Haq oversaw Mahnut’s integration into the ETIP/ETIM’s training program. Mahnut explained:

“I trained on the AK-47 and physical fitness activities. The first day I came to the camp, Abdul Haq told me that I had to give him my passport and whenever I wanted to leave I could ask for it back. He then took my passport from me. Our clothing and baggage was inside the house at the time. We left everything in the house when we left.”

The scenario described by Mahnut is consistent with the modus operandi of al Qaeda and the Taliban. New recruits are frequently commanded to turn over their passports and other identifying information. They then take on a new identity as a jihadist committed to the terrorists’ uncompromising ideology. Some of the Uighur detainees held at Gitmo have confirmed that they changed names upon their arrival in Afghanistan.

Two witnesses at Mahnut’s CSRT confirmed Abdul Haq’s role in running the Tora Bora camp. One of Mahnut’s fellow Uighur detainees, Saidullah Khalik, admitted he was captured with Mahnut and that he received weapons training. When Khalik was asked who ran the camp, he responded: “Abdul Haq.”

Another Uighur detainee held at Gitmo, Hajiakbar Abdulghupur, also testified as a witness at Mahnut’s tribunal. Abdulghupur was captured with Mahnut and Khalik and identified the head of the Tora Bora camp as “Abdul Haq.”

During his own CSRT hearing, Abdulghupur admitted he was trained at the Tora Bora camp, but said the American-led bombing campaign sent the Uighurs scrambling for refuge. In a Q&A session with one of the tribunal members overseeing his CSRT hearing, Abdulghupur explained that he and his fellow Uighur detainees awaited Abdul Haq’s instructions.

“[Abdulghupur]: We didn’t have any leaders or anyone to lead us. When we were in the cave we were waiting for someone to come up the mountains and lead us to the city or tell us what we should do. That’s why we were waiting.

[Tribunal Member]: So your use of the word leaders at that time meant a guide to take you to Pakistan?

Abdulghupur: We were waiting for Abdul Haq, he was in charge of the group. We were waiting for him to come up to give orders or take us somewhere else. That’s what I mean. (emphasis added)

Tribunal Member: He was in charge of the training camp?

Abdulghupur: Yes, he was the one responsible for the camp.”

Uighur detainee Akhdar Qasem Basit admitted training at Tora Bora during his CSRT at Gitmo. Basit, who was transferred from Gitmo to Albania in 2006, says he went to Kyrgyzstan in 2001 to do “some small business” and then a friend told him he should go to Afghanistan. During his CSRT session, Basit said that Abdul Haq (or another individual) may have been his contact in Jalalabad en route to Tora Bora. Basit explained:

“Q: When you were in Jalalabad did you spend the night and, if so, with whom?

A: It has been a while. I cannot remember. When I got to Afghanistan, I made a phone call and a person came and picked me up.

Q: Did that person take you to that camp at Tora Bora?

A: I cannot remember. One person took me to Jalalabad and then two people took me to Tora Bora.

Q: Do you know any of their names?

A: I do not remember. I did tell the interrogators one of them is maybe Abdul Wares (ph.) or Abdul Haq.”

While Basit may have had difficulty remembering the name of his contact, a current Uighur detainee, Ahmed Mohamed, had no trouble naming Abdul Haq. During his CSRT hearing, Mohamed named Haq twice:

“Tribunal Member: Do you know who ran the camp?

Mohamed: A person named Abdul Haq. 

Tribunal Member: Who provided the training at the camp Abdul Haq or whom?

Mohamed: Abdul Haq would train sometimes but there was another guy who did all the training but he got killed from the first bomb.”

The other “guy” Mohamed mentioned is likely Hassan Mahsum. Mahsum was killed by Pakistani forces in Waziristan in 2003. But prior to his departure from this world, Mahsum reportedly mingled with a Who’s Who of both the Taliban and al Qaeda and brokered deals to allow the ETIP/ETIM to operate in pre-9/11 Afghanistan.

Uighur detainee Hozaifa Parhat discussed Abdul Haq and Hassan Mahsum during his CSRT hearing at Gitmo. Parhat left China for Afghanistan in May 2001, and then trained and lived at the Tora Bora camp for several months. During his CSRT testimony, Parhat had the following exchange with one of his tribunal members.

“Tribunal Member: There is an important gentleman in the Uighur community by the name of Hassan Mahsum; do you know who this man is?

Parhat: Yes. I saw that person.

Tribunal Member: Who is he, please?

Parhat: He is a Turkistani person. [Note: As the DOD transcript notes, the Uighurs frequently refer to themselves as “Turkistani.” ]

Tribunal Member: Is he the leader of your Uighur group?

Parhat: Yes.

Tribunal Member: Would he give the Uighurs in the camp guidance and instruction on what to do?

Parhat: Maybe he would do that and there was another person and he was the leader of the camp guiding all the people. I saw this person twice at the camp. I forgot the leader name.

Tribunal Member: Would that be Mr. Abdul Haq?

Parhat: Yes.

Tribunal Member: We heard this name from the other Uighur people.

Parhat: I told that to the interrogators.”

Uighur detainee Yusef Abbas admitted during his CSRT hearing that he was personally trained by Hassan Mahsum. Abbas did not deny that he lived and trained at the Tora Bora camp, but claims he did not know the name of the Tora Bora Mountains until he learned it from his interrogators. Similarly, other Uighur detainees professed their ignorance when it came to name of the location of the ETIP/ETIM camp. The transcription of Abbas’s CSRT session spells Mahsum’s name as “Maxum,” but this is most likely a phonetic misspelling.

“Tribunal President: Who trained you on the Kalashnikov rifle?

Abbas: The person’s name was Abdul Maxum.

Tribunal Present: Was Abdul Maxum a Uighur?

Abbas: Yes.”

Abdul Hehim, who was transferred to Albania in 2006, testified during the CSRT for his fellow Uighur detainee Abdul Ghappar Abdul Rahman. Hehim denied knowing anything about Ghappar’s training, but admitted that he was trained by Mahsum. [Note: Again, Mahsum’s name was was misspelled in the DOD’s transcript.]

“Q: Did you see Abdul Ghappar receive any kind of military or weapon training?

A: There was a guy named Abdul Mahsen, he was the one that trained me on the Kalashnikov. I don’t know who gave Abdul Ghappar the weapons training. I never seen (sic) him have weapons or military training.”

Like Abbas and Hehim, Abdullah Abdulqadirakhun admitted during his CSRT that he was trained by Mahsum at the Tora Bora camp. In addition, he explained that Abdul Haq was the man in charge.

“Tribunal Member: In the camp where you got training on the gun, who was your instructor?

Abdullah: His name was Hassan Mahsum. He was killed by the bombing. He is the one who trained me. [Note: Mahsum was not killed during the bombing of Tora Bora, but later in 2003, after his escape to Pakistan.]

Tribunal Member: He was a Uighur also?

Abdullah: Yes.

Tribunal Member: Who was over all in charge of the camp? Was it any particular group or organization that was responsible for the camp?

Abdullah: There was a guy Abdul Haq, he was the one [in charge] over all the guests at the camp. He would tell us to do this and do that, but I did not know if there was another organization that was in charge of the camp. I don’t know.” (emphasis added)

During another CSRT session, Uighur detainee Emam Abdulahat also testified that Abdul Haq managed the Tora Bora camp.

“Tribunal Member: Where was the camp located?

Abdulahat: The camp was just outside Jalalabad, it was located in the foothills of the mountains, by some housing area.

Tribunal Member: Do you know who managed the camp?

Abdulahat: Abdul Haq.”

It is clear that Abdul Haq, who has now been designated by both the US and the UN, ran the ETIP/ETIM’s Tora Bora camp. A number of current Uighur detainees have admitted as much.

Haq’s ties to the Uighur detainees are disconcerting, to say the least. The Treasury Department notes that Haq is a member of al Qaeda’s Shura Council – a position reserved for only key terrorists with close ties to the terror organization. Haq’s active plotting raises additional red flags.

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The Turkistan Islamic Party threatened to attack the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China.

“Abdul Haq commands a terror group that sought to sow violence and fracture international unity at the 2008 Olympic Games in China,” Stuart Levey, Treasury Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, was quoted as saying in the Treasury Department’s press release. Levey was likely citing a video made by Abdul Haq’s group last year. In the video, an associate of Abdul Haq, or perhaps Haq himself, is seen standing in front of al Qaeda’s black flag while issuing threats against civilians and Chinese personnel attending the 2008 Olympic games.

The Treasury Department explains: “Under Haq, trained terrorists planned to sabotage the Olympic Games by conducting terrorist attacks within China before the Olympics began.”

A recent video released by the ETIP, and transcribed by the NEFA Foundation, drives home the threat posed by the group. Abdul Haq tells viewers that his organization survived the death of its previous leader, Hassan Mahsum. And the ETIP will not stop its pursuit of violent jihad. Haq explained:

We are, Allah-willing, proceeding along this path with all of our strength in order to rescue our oppressed brothers in East Turkistan – and Allah-willing, we are working on rescuing our oppressed brothers from the hands of the Communists until we make Allah’s religion supreme and we live a precious life in the shadow of Islamic Shariah law, or else be rewarded with martyrdom in the cause of Allah We are plotting for the Chinese to suffer the torture of Allah, or else by our hands 

In sum, Abdul Haq is not some noble freedom fighter who is simply opposed to China’s oppressive regime. Haq is a violent jihadist who shares al Qaeda’s ideology, maintains operational ties to the organization as a member of its Shura Council, and seeks the creation of a radical Islamist state throughout Central and South Asia.

As Undersecretary Levey explained in the Treasury Department’s press release, “Today, we stand together with the world in condemning this brutal terrorist and isolating him from the international financial system.”

As the Treasury Department attempts to isolate Abdul Haq, the Obama administration debates what to do with a cadre of his trainees who are currently imprisoned at Gitmo.

And Abdul Haq continues to plot terror.

Thomas Joscelyn is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Senior Editor for FDD's Long War Journal.

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11 Comments

  • Midnight says:

    I recieved an inter-agency memo today concerning factional infighting. I was then directed to see this journalist piece. You do some excellent work even when it seems off beat to me at the time. The point. In fighting between the tribes has been a major problem from both angles for years, they don’t want it and the US military shouldn’t.
    I come to this because I prefer at most times to focus on the major positions in this war as compared to some who don’t. I type too fast not to make typos, move too fast through it al not to have to go back through it and this man came to my attention quite some time ago. He would be an excellent man to want alive, I am often struck by the new technique in this war, that takes no live men. Dead men never talk. To write this mans story would be a great deed in life.
    Pakistan is having a problem with keeping it’s democracy alive right now even though it is beneficial to all because they have a very diverse culture. It is men like this, great men who are like a rock, everything that you send against them breaks. Regardless. I question a great many things these days, except the one thing that I would like to add myself, a great plan followed through on is equally as strong.

  • Weeger says:

    Interesting article, but I must question how the US government came to determine that Abdul Haq is a terrorist and the leader of ETIP/ETIM. I wonder how much of this information came from the Chinese government, which would be highly motivated to make such allegations. The video or videos cited do not prove that the person in the video was actually Abdul Haq or was the same Abdul Haq mentioned in the Gitmo Uyghurs’ CSRTs.

  • Micah says:

    “That camp was run by Abdul Haq and Hassan Mahsum, and was most likely supported by al Qaeda and the Taliban.”
    Look, we can put all the indirect ties together and say they are terrorist this and terrorist that, but at the end of the day, the Uighar movement in XinJIang is one that is not so black and white. I don’t feel like dragging this out much, but I really don’t think this is a very strong argument in terms of demonizing them along the axis of the global war on terror.
    The Uighar resistance network does not have the abilities to run strong within the borders of China, and if their best chance of survival, mobilization, training and recruiting is by going to training camps in Tora Bora, and now Pakistan, well, you know thats just the way it is. I think we need to be a bit broader about who we point the fingers at. I in no way agree with the discourse China has used in XinJiang over the decades, and if there is resistance, and this resistance grows, well China asked for it.
    I think the Uighar movement in XinJiang is a regional, and not an international, conflict, but if you want to connect all the dots and mold it into a global threat, well im not going to buy it. Tibet has been far more peaceful, and is still nowhere near gaining independence. Infact, as far as I know, XinJiang has obtained more autonomy than Tibet. So it all comes down to what works: violent resistance or ongoing & firm dialogue? That is not an easy question, but if resistance is the path to achieve its political goals, then we can’t blame them.
    Interesting article, but im not going to take the Uighar threat seriously, as far as the global jihadist threat goes, at this point in time.

  • Micah says:

    More to the point, I think the XinJiang deal is similar to Chechnya. Over the years its rhetoric and language has taken on the language of “global jihadism”, but this is more of a survival mechanism. As Tony Wood brilliantly pointed out in his book, Chechnya: The Case for Independence, a similar point was made: any resistance movement will cling on to the identity that gives it the best chance of survival. When your oppressed, crushed, and driven to extreme depravity, you will adopt whatever image gives you the best chance of survival, and cling to what scraps you can obtain, if scraps are your only option. Just like the Chechen resistance and its descent into “Jihadism” took place more and more into the 2nd war, similar the XinJiang movement has followed this similar path.
    However, at the end of the day, when you weigh the priorities of each movement, Chechen and Uighar national and ethnic identity still and always will outweigh the identity of global-Jihadism.

  • Glenmore says:

    Re. “The men are all from China’s Xinjiang region and are alleged to have traveled to Afghanistan to join the ETIP/ETIM’s jihad.”
    I cannot comment on why these – or any specific – Uighurs traveled to Afghanistan, but one should keep in mind that East Turkestan trade (and smuggling) links with Afghanistan are ancient (pre-dating Mohammed) yet ongoing.

  • Bill Roggio says:

    Perhaps you might actually want to read the propaganda put out by the ETIP/ETIM. They tell you exactly who they are and who their allies are. Al Qaeda doesn’t let jsut any nationalist resistance movement into its camps.
    When comparing this to Chechnya, perhaps you might want to inquire about Abu Hafs al Urdani, Abu al Walid al Ghamdi, Abu Omar Saif, Ibn al Khattab and Saif al Islam lal Masri, and see how important they were in the Chechen “resistance.” I’m certainly not saying all of the Chechen rebels were al Qaeda, but al Qaeda made a serious push to radicalize the movement, and succeeded. Just loo at what Dokku Umarov, the current leader of the Chechen “resistance” as to say.

  • Micah says:

    its because the nationalist resistance of Chechnya was so deprived they took the funds and aid from the Arab world, and men like Khattab were able to solidify themselves among the ranks of Chechen resistance. When the Chechens adopted Islamic identity it enabled them to connect across national borders to get support from Arabs and networks that otherwise would not exactly support a movement that was merely a Chechen-identity. The transition into Jihadism was largely a financial and logistical motive. Yes it worked, but at the end of the day, I don’t think Chechen jihadists are going to be a threat to the United States or Europe even though they may use the language of global-Jihadism now and verbally state their allegiance to the global Jihad or Bin Laden or this or that. I think its similar with the Uighars. Im just not convinced yet that Uighar jihadists (regardless of the language or identity they use at this point) are actually going to be mobilized for campaigns that don’t benefit strictly a XinJiang east Turkestan cause.

  • Micah says:

    Also, there has been some Chechen Jihadists who were fairly moderate, such as Suldyev (who did cling to the jihadist identity and some even say the early ideas of the Caucasus Emirate were in the planning stages during his short lived reign), who convinced Shamil Basayev not to commit terrorist attacks against civilians anymore. I actually think Dokku Umarov is fairly moderate compared to most jihadists. But thats another story.
    In the interviews on the latest Al Jazeera special with x-Chechen rebels still living in UK (who still communicate with the resistance in Chechnya), even they talk about how it began as a nationalist movement and by the 2nd war, they were all praying and its partly the loss of rational hope to win the war militarily; they went into a state of depravity and isolation, and Islamic faith was all they had left, and minuscule scraps of support from Arabs was the ONLY support they had on the outside. It was financial and logistical necessity that eroded the movement into taking on an Islamic flavor. But i still don’t think they are a threat to anyone but Russia or the Kadyrov gov.

  • Thomas Joscelyn says:

    Micah,

    I’m on the record as saying that the Uighurs should not be considered the “worst of the worst” in terms of their terrorist activities. So, I see your point and understand your arguments.

    However, I think that where we may see things a bit differently is that al Qaeda’s strategy has always been to fold these “local” organizations into its global jihad. That strategy has been successful in countries like Algeria, Sudan, Somalia and whole regions like Southeast Asia. The Algerian GIA/GSPC went from waging a civil war and targeting the military regime there to executing terrorist attacks against France to directly taking part in the millennium plot against the LAX airport. Several groups in Southeast Asia (JI, Abu Sayyaf, etc.) have followed a similar pattern, going from targeting “local” governments to waging international jihad. They even played host to planning meetings for 9/11.

    So, this is part of al Qaeda’s deliberate strategy to bring these local groups into the international jihad.

    You say that you don’t think that this will happen with the Uighurs because, for example, it hasn’t happened with the Chechens. Time will tell exactly how far their jihad reaches. But the problem is that both the Uighur and Chechen jihadists have already extended their reach beyond their primary local conflicts. Rohan Gunaratna and B. Raman have pointed out that the ETIM/ETIP has fought alongside the Taliban and al Qaeda throughout Central and South Asia. It is clear that the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a key al Qaeda affiliate, maintains deep ties to the ETIM/ETIP. In his book Descent Into Chaos, Ahmed Rashid is critical of the Chinese claims against the ETIM/ETIP but nonetheless cites, on several occasions, the fact that the Uighurs have fought alongside the Taliban and al Qaeda.

    And, as the State Department has noted, “two ETIM members were deported to China from Kyrgyzstan for plotting to attack the US Embassy in Kyrgyzstan as well as other US interests abroad” in May of 2002. Part of the intel against these two ETIM members may or may not have come from China. I don’t know, but that doesn’t make it automatically invalid as Kyrgyzstan also pointed the finger at the ETIM for this plot.

    So, there is already evidence that the ETIM/ETIP has not confined its conflict to China. In fact, I think you could argue that a substantial portion of its resources have been deployed elsewhere (including Northern Pakistan for training alongside al Qaeda and the Taliban…see the ETIP’s own propaganda videos).

    Finally, keep in mind too that the Chechen al Qaeda affiliates have already declared that their jihad is global. Chechen terrorists have shown up in Iraq, Afghanistan and probably elsewhere. So, those groups are not confined in their opposition to Russia either.

    These are just some additional points to consider when weighing the threats posed by these groups. My points are not intended to be dispositive.

  • “We didn’t have any leaders or anyone to lead us. When we were in the cave we were waiting for someone to come up the mountains and lead us to the city or tell us what we should do. That’s why we were waiting.”
    Only thing is I bet that they’re not this disorganized anymore.

  • Aaron M says:

    “The Obama administration has expressed its desire to relocate at least some of the current Uighur detainees to American soil.”
    The efforts made by the Obama administration prove this statement by the author is false.
    Department of Justice, under the Obama administration, succesfully overturned the D.C. District Court ruling by Judge Urbina to release the remaining Uighur detainees into the United Sates in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals (Kiyemba v. Obama).
    Obama, et al. prevented the release on the basis that the Executive, under Art. 1

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