Al Ansar guest houses


The Al Ansar guest house is a name Joint Task Force Guantanamo counter-terrorism analysts have applied to several guest houses they consider suspicious.
Close to one hundred Guantanamo captives had their continued
extrajudicial detention justified, at least in part, due to allegations
that they had stayed in suspicious guest houses.

Location

JTF-GTMO allegations place guest houses named al Ansar in Kabul, Afghanistan; Peshawar, Pakistan; and Kandahar.

History

During the Russo-Afghan War, Osama bin Laden and Abdullah Azzam rented a house in University Town, Peshawar, which they named "Beit-al-Ansar". Here, with the approval of the CIA, the ISI and the Saudi Istikhbarat, they established a logistics base for the thousands of Arab fighters arriving in the city. Bin Laden would vet the volunteers before assigning them to the various Afghan factions
Bin Laden would lead religious debates, many centred on the Sura Yasin of the Qur'an which are reported to have played a pivotal role in the formation of the al Qaida network.
Saad Al-Faqih, reported to be an expert on al Qaeda's history, has stated that al Qaeda's origin was tied to a computer system situated in the "bait al-Ansar guesthouse"
At the 2005 bail hearing for Hassan Almrei in Canada, an unidentified Canadian Security Intelligence Service agent named only as J.P. stated that Bayt al-Ansar had been "associated with al-Qaeda... since 1984", although even the most liberal estimates suggest that the group didn't even exist until 1988-1990.

Allegations against Guantanamo captives that involve Al Ansar

According to the Summary of Evidence memo prepared for Sabri Mohammed Ebrahim Al Qurashi's first annual Administrative Review Board, on 26 July 2005:
In the Summary of Evidence memo prepared for Zuhail Abdo Anam Said Al Sharabi's Administrative Review Board hearings he faced the allegations:
According to a Summary of Evidence memo was prepared for
Abdullah Mohammed Khan's first annual
Administrative Review Board,
on 29 July 2005.
According to the Summary of Evidence memo prepared for
Jalal Salam Awad Awad's
second annual
Administrative Review Board,
on 7 February 2006