abdul rahim abdul razak al janko was detained by the united states in 2002 after being tortured by alda and imprisoned by the taliban and on suspicion of being a western spy. in the lawsuit, al janko described his time at guantanamo as a kafkaesque nightmare saying he was tortured, beaten, subjected to sleep deprivation and urinated on by u.s. soldiers. he said he attempted suicide 17 times. in 2009 a judge ordered his release, saying that claim he was part of al qaeda defines common sense. but on monday the supreme court left in place a lower court ruling al janko cannot sue because he is an enemy combatant. in a second decision, the court declined the case concerning videos and photographs which according to the center for constitutional rights, would prove the torture of another guantanamo prisoner, mohammed al-qahtani. the move leaves in place a lower court ruling the images could threaten national security by stoking anti-u.s. sentiment. a new report finds u.s. weapons manufacturers are continuing to dominate the global arms trade saudi arabia replacing india as the top market. t