Top Al-Qaeda operative Khalid Sheikh Mohammed confessed to plotting the September 11, 2001, terror attacks on the US at a closed-door military hearing, according to an edited transcript released by the Pentagon Wednesday.
Mohammed, a Pakistani, claimed responsibility for a multitude of terror attacks and plots in a statement read by a US military officer representing him at the hearing Saturday at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
"I was responsible for the 9/11 operation, from A to Z," said the statement read in Mohammed's name, according to the transcript.
Mohammed claimed responsibility for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and the 2002 bombing of a nightclub in Bali, Indonesia, among others, according to the transcript of the session.
Although he did not read the statement himself, Mohammed told the tribunal he wrote it. He also made a long, rambling statement justifying his actions as part of a holy war against the United States.
"What I wrote here, is not I'm making myself hero, when I said I was responsible for this or that," he said in broken English. "But your are military man. You know very well there are language for any war."
"If America they want to invade Iraq they will not send for Saddam roses or kisses. They send for a bombardment ... For sure I am American enemies," he said.
Mohammed said he was "not happy" about the 3,000 victims of the 9/11 attacks.
"I feel sorry even. I don't like to kill children and the kids ... I don't like to kill people."
At one point, he compared Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden with George Washington, the army commander who defeated British colonial rule and became the first US president.
"He is doing the same thing. He is just fighting. He needs his independence," he said.
The Pentagon released redacted transcripts of the hearing along with those of two other captured Al-Qaeda operatives -- Abu Faraj al-Libi and Ramzi bin Al-Shibh.
So far six terror suspects have appeared before the military panels since the hearings began Friday on the "enemy combatant" status of 14 top terror suspects held by the United States.
The hearings are to determine whether the detainee can be deemed an "enemy combatant." Such a designation would clear the way for a criminal trial in a US military tribunal.
Captured in 2003, Mohammed is the most important of the 14, who were moved to Guantanamo last year from secret CIA detention facilities overseas.
The presiding officer at one point alluded to a written statement made by Mohammed in which he claimed to have been tortured while in the custody of US agents before arriving in Guantanamo.
When questioned whether he was speaking under duress at the hearing, Mohammed said he was not.
Evidence found on computer hard drives linking Mohammed to the September 11 attacks and other plots was presented against him during the hearing, which was closed to the media.
He is also believed to have taken part in the beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Pakistan in 2002, but from the transcript it was not clear whether he claimed responsibility for the killing.
The Pentagon deleted one of the items in the list of 31 operations that Mohammed claimed to have been involved in.
But in the statement Mohammed laid out a dizzying assortment of attacks and plots against US, British and Israeli targets.
They included a "second wave" of attacks on US skyscrapers and other landmarks that were supposed to follow the September 11 attacks on the United States.
The Empire State Building in New York, the Sears Tower in Chicago, the Library Tower in California and the Plaza Bank in Washington state were among the targets of the second wave.
The New York Stock Exchange and other financial sites were targeted for destruction, he said.
"I was responsible for planning, surveying and financing for the operation to destroy Heathrow Airport, the Canary Wharf Building, and Big Ben on British soil," his statement said.
He said he was responsible for assassination plots on former US president Bill Clinton and the late Pope John Paul II in the Philippines, and a plot to kill former US president Jimmy Carter at an unspecified location.
He said he was behind the bombing of a hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, frequented by Jewish travelers, and the launching of a Russian-made SA-7 surface-to-air missile at an airliner departing from Kenya.
In another plot, he planned to use airplanes flying out of Saudi Arabia to destroy buildings in Elat, Israel, and plotted to destroy Israeli embassies in a number of countries, according to the statement.
He sent several mujahedeen fighters into Israel "to conduct surveillance to hit several strategic targets deep in Israel," according to the statement.
US embassies in various countries and US military bases in South Korea and Turkey also were on his list of targets.
He said he plotted operations against US warships and oil tankers in the Straits of Hormuz, the Straits of Gibraltar and the port of Singapore. And he planned to bomb and destroy the Panama Canal.
An attack that killed two US soldiers in Kuwait and a "shoe bomber" operation to down two US airplanes also were his responsibility, he said in the statement. So was a plot in the 1990s to blow up a dozen US airliners over the Pacific, he said.