Abdul Rahim Wardak

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Abdul Rahim Wardak

Abdul Rahim Wardak is the Defence Minister of Afghanistan. He was appointed by President Hamid Karzai on December 23, 2004.1 Before this appointment General Wardak was the deputy Defence Minister to Mohammed Fahim. Wardak was also involved in the Soviet war in Afghanistan. He is an ethnic Pashtun from Wardak.

Contents

Career

General Wardak has studied overseas in U.S. military schools as well as in Egypt. He joined the army in Afghanistan and became an officer in the 1980s but defected to the Mujahideen movement, and joined the National Islamic Front of Afghanistan party of Pir Sayyed Ahmad Gailani. He was a notable Mujahideen commander, and testified several times before the U.S Congress during the war against the Soviets. In 1989, he was wounded by a Scud missile and received treatment in the United States.

Posts Wardak has held2
lecturer Cadet University
Assistant of Protocol Afghan Defense Ministry
military assistant National Islamic Front of Afghanistan during the "years of migration"
military assistant tri-lateral unity
commander of the Jihadi fronts National Islamic Front of Afghanistan
member Itehad-e-Mujahiddin
member of the security committee of Kabul City
Chief of the Army Staff
Director Military Officers Society
Director Education Committee
Commission member Rehabilitation of the National Army Commission
Director Disarmament Program
Director Reform of National Army

Not "reasonably available" to provide testimony for Guantanamo detainees

Two Guantanamo Bay detainees, Hiztullah Nasrat Yar and his father, Nasrat Khan, claimed, during their Combatant Status Review Tribunals, that Yar had been assigned the responsibility to guard the weapons cache that triggered his arrest by General Wardak himself. 3 They had requested Wardak provide an affidavit, testifying to his role. Their Tribunals had told them that the State Department had contacted the Afghan government, and that Wardak's testimony would be unavailable.

Another Guantanamo detainee Hamidullah, claimed to be a protege of General Wardak's, because they both supported the restoration of Zahir Shah, the last King of Afghanistan.

The Boston Globe reported that Guantanamo detainees were routinely told that witnesses who could have been found with a trivial effort were "not reasonably available.45

References

External links

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Preceded by
Mohammed Fahim
Minister of Defense
December 2004 – Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 19 November 2008, at 20:40.

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