In January 2009,
Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula released several threatening videos. Two of the Al-Qaida spokesmen appearing in the video identified themselves as former Guantanamo captives, and graduates of the
Care rehabilitation center, a Saudi facility intended to deprogram former jihadists. One of the men claiming to be a former Guantanamo captive, identified himself as
Abu Hareth Muhammad al-Oufi claimed to have been Guantanamo captive 333. He appeared in the video with three other men, one of whom was also identified as a former Guantanamo captive,
Guantanamo captive 372,
Abu Sufyan al-Azdi al-Shahri. The other two men were identified as
Abu Baseer al-Wahayshi and
Abu Hureira Qasm al-Rimi. The independent third party terrorist consultants at
SITE Institute confirmed that he was Guantanamo captive 333. Al-Oufi's mother told the
Saudi Gazette that her son's radicalization was due to al-Shihri's influence. His sister said he gave no clues to his defection and disappearance until he received a cell phone call from Al-Shihri, who subsequently picked him up, and then the pair disappeared. She said their father had been bed-ridden since his re-emergence on the al Qaida video. The article also quoted former Guantanamo captive
Abdulaziz Abdulrahman Al-Badah: Robert Worth, reporting in
The New York Times, wrote that fourteen Saudis, formerly held in Guantanamo, had fallen under suspicion of supporting terrorism following their release. He identified "Abu Hareth Muhammad al-Awfi", an alias of al Harbis as on the list, with two of the three other men who appeared in the threatening video, and a third man. ==Surrender==