Terrorist Friendly Obama Helps Free Convicted Al Qaeda Terrorist After Serving Only 1/5 Of Sentence For Murdering US Army Medic

Terrorist Friendly Obama Helps Free Convicted Al Qaeda Terrorist After Serving Only 1/5 Of Sentence For Murdering US Army Medic

Terrorist Friendly Obama Helps Free Convicted Al Qaeda Terrorist After Serving Only 1/5 Of Sentence For Murdering US Army Medic

Just look at the picture of this piece of shit bearded terrorist, and tell me if you think this terrorist has “changed his jihadist ways” as they claim.

That is total bullshit! Omar Khadr is probably a more dangerous terrorist today than when he was initially arrested, and should have been made to server his entire sentence.

The terrorist’s best friend continues to be the criminally-corrupt Obama administration, who helps terrorists with every possible opportunity they get.

This time, the terrorist-friendly Obama administration has helped Omar Khadr, an Al Qaeda terrorist, get released from Guantanamo Bay and a Canadian prison, after murdering a U.S. Army Delta Force medic in Afghanistan with a grenade.

The terrorist loving Obama administration even limited the terrorist’s sentence to eight years, instead of the 40 years the jury gave him, and permitted the terrorist to escape Gitmo, and serve out his reduced prison sentence in Canada, only serving 1/5 of his sentence.

There has never been a US president and administration who helped the terrorist, but it’s hard to keep track of all of the terrorists that team Obama have helped escape their imprisonment, or helped in other ways, because there are probably hundreds of them.

I wonder if these foreign terrorist organizations are giving money to Obama in exchange for helping their fellow terrorists?
I would not doubt it for one second!

Obama should be sent to Guantanamo Bay and waterboarded, to find out why he continually sides with the terrorists instead of protecting the American People.

A former teen terrorist who killed a U.S. Army Delta Force medic in Afghanistan in 2002 was ordered released Thursday by a Canadian judge who said the former Guantanamo Bay detainee once sentenced to 40 years in prison has changed his jihadist ways.

Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen who was just 15 when he threw the grenade that killed U.S. Army medic Christopher Speer in Afghanistan during a 2002 firefight, was ordered freed on bail by an Edmonton appeals judge. Now 28, Khadr claims to be a different person from the young Al Qaeda follower who admitted killing Speer, but critics say he has not paid the price.

“Omar Khadr is a convicted Al Qaeda terrorist, guilty of war crimes.” – Ezra Levant, author

“Omar Khadr is a convicted Al Qaeda terrorist, guilty of war crimes,” Ezra Levant, author of “The Enemy Within: Terror, Lies, and the Whitewashing of Omar Khadr,” told FoxNews.com. “He murdered a U.S. medic in cold blood. A jury sentenced him to 40 years in prison, but President Obama offered him a plea deal for just eight years, and now parole will reduce that further. This isn’t sufficient, especially given that Khadr has never publicly renounced terrorism or Al Qaeda, or his own father’s terrorism.”

Speer, 28, of Denver, was a sergeant first class who was with four other soldiers on reconnaissance patrol when they entered a building in the Khost province that had been destroyed by air attacks. They were ambushed by terrorists, including Khadr, and Speer died a month later at a facility at Ramstein Air Base in Germany.

Khadr, who was born in Toronto, but grew up mostly in Pakistan, where his father was accused of being an associate of Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, confessed to throwing the grenade as part of a plea deal he accepted in 2010. The confession Khadr signed acknowledged that he built and helped place explosives for Al Qaeda, and noted that U.S. soldiers gave women and children an opportunity to leave the compound where Khadr and Al Qaeda fighters were hiding before they began the bombing. One woman and a child left the compound and survived, but Khadr stayed. Khadr, who was badly injured, was arrested at the scene, and sent to Guantanamo.

Although a military jury gave him a 40-year sentence, the term was merely symbolic, as the U.S. Justice Department had agreed to limit the sentence to eight years, and permitted the time to be served in Canada. Khadr is appealing his U.S. conviction of war crimes, for killing a medic.

US Army Medic Christopher Speer was killed in Afghanistan in 2002.

U.S. State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke was asked Wednesday at a press briefing about whether the U.S. was opposed to an early release, but declined to say and noted that “we respect the independent processes of the Canadian judiciary, and we respect Canada’s sovereignty.”

Khadr’s lawyer said he is sorry for his actions

“Omar apologized to Tabitha Speer [the wife of the murdered medic] in the courtroom in Guantanamo. He has no memory of throwing a hand grenade as he had been seriously injured from the bombing,” Dennis Edney, Khadr’s attorney, told FoxNews.com on Wednesday.

In prison, Khadr gave up useful information about Al Qaeda, including the location of roadside explosives he had helped plant, according to a Pentagon report filed when he was held at Guantanamo. However, the report also noted that Khadr “has never expressed any genuine remorse for the killing of that soldier” and that he “has grown increasingly hostile toward his interrogators and the guard force and he remains committed to extremist Islamic values.”

Reports from when he was kept at Guantanamo Bay also indicate that he was sometimes abusive to guards, calling one black female guard a “slave” and a “b****”, according to testimony by forensic psychiatrist Dr. Michael Welner at Khadr’s sentencing. Welner has interviewed Guantanamo prison guards and reviewed Khadr’s files.

Khadr’s lawyer disputes Welner’s account, calling it “untrue” and saying that “the judge advocate in charge of the Guantanamo prisoners — McCarthy — gave evidence at the trial that Omar was a good kid, was helpful and had no ideological beliefs.”

He also questions the reliability of the U.S. government’s account in general.

“One cannot consider Guantanamo as a reliable place. Its people and its processes are unreliable. The trial was a kangaroo court,” Edney said. Khadr is also trying to have his 2010 conviction formally overturned in the Canadian court system.

There have been no complaints about Khadr’s behavior in prison in recent years, and one Canadian court has found that he has been a “model prisoner.”

Critics note that even if Khadr poses little risk, there is no doubt about his radical background.

“When he was captured, the U.S. seized home movie propaganda videos of Khadr building IEDs, etc. There is no doubt he was a terrorist,” Levant said.

Few believe that Khadr would commit terrorism again given his recent track record – and he will also have to wear a tracking device and follow a 10 p.m. curfew as part of his release terms – but terrorism experts say that in general, penalties for terrorists should be stiff to keep them from attacking again.

“The terrorism recidivism rate is quite high, particularly for Islamist terrorists,” Max Abrahms, a political science professor at Northeastern University, told FoxNews.com. “Indeed, a very large portion of the most senior Islamic State [ISIS] leadership was once behind bars. When you release from prison an Islamist terrorist, do not be surprised if he re-engages in terrorism.”

Advocates for Khadr, who have started groups like “FREE Omar Khadr NOW,” argue that Khadr, in particular, cannot be held responsible for what he did due to his young age when he was part of Al Qaeda.

Levant says that Khadr’s youth has been exaggerated.

“He was just a few weeks shy of his 16th birthday. We prosecute murderers at that age all the time. He was no child,” Levant said.

“There were real children involved here — the fatherless kids of the murder victim, Christopher Speer,” he added.

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