we spend the hour with mansoor adayfi. at the age of 18, he left his home in yemen to do research in afghanistan. shortly before he was scheduled to return home, he was kidnapped by afghan warlords and then sold to the cia for a bounty after the september 11 attacks. he was jailed and tortured in afghanistan and then was transported to the u.s. military prison at guantanamo in 2002 where he was held without charge for 14 years, many of those year in solitary confinement. mansoor became known as detainee 441. in 2016, he was released against his will to serbia, which he compares to guantanamo 2.0. by the time mansoor was released, he had spent more than half of his life locked up. mansoor adayfi has just published a memoir titled "don't forget us here: lost and found at guantanamo." i spoke to him in september from his home in belgrade. i began by asking him to talk about how he ended up at guantanamo. >> let's go back like 38 years, which actually, i -- like, when people ask me, "how old are you?" i say 24, because i don't