I'll just briefly summarize, and again, I touched on this a few times.
Five years ago, there were assumptions made about who Omar Khadr was, what he did, and the strength of the evidence against him. It was clear that he was responsible for throwing a hand grenade in a firefight in Afghanistan, because there was one hand grenade and there was one combatant who could have thrown it, namely Omar Khadr. Now we know, based on information that has come to light largely as a result of the investigation that was conducted after the decision to charge Omar was made, that not only were there other hand grenades being thrown by both sides in that compound in close proximity, but there were multiple combatants alive and fighting, and that there is no real evidence that Omar Khadr was responsible for the death of the U.S. soldier. Indeed, we will never know with complete certainty what happened in the course of that firefight, for the same reason as we cannot expect to know what happened in the course of a battle on a foreign battlefield five or six or more years ago.
But with all of that said, I want to impress upon the members of the subcommittee that it's not a question of whether Omar is guilty or innocent. This subcommittee is no more the place to try Omar Khadr than the military commission in Guantánamo Bay. Even if he did everything that the U.S. government said he did, what he is guilty of, at worst, is throwing a hand grenade as a soldier in a firefight against people who were trying to kill him. If that happened and it had the unfortunate consequences that it did, then that's a tragedy. However, it is important to recognize that Omar Khadr has spent almost six years in some of the most rigorous conditions of confinement imaginable and has paid whatever penalty, if any is appropriate from that conduct, for that crime.
So as this committee does its work and sits down to evaluate whether or not the U.S. has complied with its obligations under the Optional Protocol—and we believe it has not—please do not get tied down in the question of whether Omar Khadr is innocent or guilty. The answer for Canada today is the same in any event, and that is to bring this young man home to face due process in a legitimate system under Canadian law.
Thank you.