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Muslim Chaplain Lands In Brig

Sept. 22, 2003


Army Capt. Yousef Yee  (Photo: AP)



"Most people want to know how Sept. 11 fits into Islam. What happened is un-Islamic and categorically denied by a great majority of Muslim scholars around the world."
Capt. Yousef Yee, to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer


Cells in the U.S. base in Guantanamo Bay (Photo: AP)


(CBS/AP) The military chaplain now held on suspicion of trying to pass secrets to terrorist detainees was once a public face of the Bush administration's effort to assure Muslims that they were not the targets of the war on terrorism.

According to the Los Angeles Times, Army Capt. Yousef Yee was mentioned in a U.S. Embassy news release after the Sept. 11 attacks. He was also the subject of a Voice of America profile.

Now, Yee, 35, is in a military brig in South Carolina, where he can be confined under the Uniform Code of Military Justice for up to two months without being charged.

Yee, the Muslim military chaplain who ministered to suspected al Qaeda terrorists at a U.S. detention center in Cuba, was arrested Sept. 10 in Jacksonville, Fla.

A senior law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Saturday that FBI agents confiscated documents Yee was carrying and questioned him before he was handed over to the military. According to The Times, those documents included a map of the Guantanamo facility.

Col. David McWilliams, spokesman for U.S. Southern Command, which oversees the Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, said Sunday in a telephone interview from command headquarters in Miami that military authorities are awaiting the investigation's outcome.

McWilliams refused to characterize in any way what Yee is suspected of having done. He said the chaplain raised the suspicions of U.S. Customs officials when he arrived in Jacksonville on a flight from Guantanamo Bay.

On Sept. 15 a military magistrate determined that there was sufficient reason to hold Yee in confinement, McWilliams said, pending outcome of the investigation.

Yee is being held in a Navy brig in Charleston, S.C. — the same place where officials are holding Yaser Esam Hamdi, an American-born Saudi who allegedly fought with the Taliban in Afghanistan, and Jose Padilla, a former Chicago gang member charged with plotting to detonate a bomb.

McWilliams said a military lawyer has been assigned Yee, but the spokesman would not identify the lawyer.

Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, commander of Joint Task Force-Guantanamo, the military organization that runs the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, will decide on the next step in the Yee case after he receives results of the Pentagon investigation, McWilliams said.

If charges are brought, Miller could decide to proceed to a court-martial, recommend administrative action or opt not to pursue any charges.

Born in Springfield, N.J., to Chinese immigrants, Yee was raised a Lutheran. He graduated West Point in 1990, attended airborne school and helped operate Patriot missile batteries in the Gulf War. Then he left the Army.

He apparently converted to Islam in 1991, according to The Times. After leaving the service, he traveled to Syria, married a local woman and changed his first name James to Yousef, reports The Times.

Yee subsequently returned to the military as one of the 17 Muslims among its 3,150 chaplains.

He told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer: "Most people want to know how Sept. 11 fits into Islam. What happened is un-Islamic and categorically denied by a great majority of Muslim scholars around the world."

He was transferred to Guantanamo Bay in November.

Once at Guantanamo, Yee made his presence known right away.

He made sure every Muslim prisoner had a copy of the Koran, held Friday prayer services, shifted the meal schedule to allow fasting during Ramadan, and played the call to prayer five times a day over prison loudspeakers. He also explained Muslim practices to non-Muslim soldiers through the base newspaper, reports The Times.

Muslim groups have shown concern over the arrest and detention. One suggested the documents may have had an innocent purpose.

Ibrahim Hooper of the Council on American-Islamic Relations told The Times he hoped "that the case is not enveloped in a shroud of secrecy in terms of secret tribunals and secret evidence."

©MMIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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