MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
There are few occasions for international irritation more abrasive than the refusal by one sovereign to honor the request of another that a fugitive from justice be surrendered to the tribunals if the aggrieved nation.
Recall that the proximate casus belli for the longest war in American history was the refusal by the Taliban rump Afghan government to extradite Osama Bin Laden.
Sometimes the tug of war over the person of a wanted fugitive takes on added poignancy where the government holding (or harboring) the fugitive is subject to competing demands from a stronger interlocutor. Thus, it took Panama less than a day to decide that Italy was not, after all, going to bring to justice the **CIA station chief already tried in absentia and sentenced to prison for kidnapping committed in Milan. In that instance the USA put down its ( big) foot and justice was evaded.
Conversely, when it has suited our purposes, we have denied extradition for accused terrorists and *self confessed mass murderers. One of those accused terrorists, as it happens, was a Chechen whose extradition to the justice system of Russia was refused because (somewhat in eerie echo of Mullah Omar's recalcitrant posture vis- a-vis Bin Laden) we decided that our own independent judgment as to the validity of the charges against him was to be honored over the demands of the aggrieved nation.
Which brings us to Edward Snowden, and the back of Vlad Putin's hand (or perhaps merely a single digit thereof). Besieged as they are with our importunities, the Russians have taken this occasion to reference some 20 fugitives, demands for whose extradition have brought the Russians no satisfaction.
On behalf of the families who wait still to see Orlando Bosch before a Cuban court, and the aggrieved Mullah rendered for torture by the fugitive CIA station chief whose extradition we handily blocked, I say , right on, Vlad.
Stick it to'em. nobody likes a double :standard pleading hypocrite.
*www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orlando_Bosch **http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2013/0719/Italy-eyes-ex-CIA-spook-...
Comments
by jollyroger on Tue, 07/23/2013 - 9:15pm
Did Russia actually ask for the Tsarnaevs?
by erica2000 (not verified) on Thu, 07/25/2013 - 2:52pm
by jollyroger on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 12:56am
by jollyroger on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 1:00am
by jollyroger on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 1:08am
by jollyroger on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 1:11am
Ah! Sorry Jolly, somehow I missed the second article, which made the whole thing make more sense.
by erica20 on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 2:49pm
by jollyroger on Sat, 07/27/2013 - 8:36pm
It's always tricky to know which of your enemies' enemies are your friends, and whether they're like, best friends, or people you just mostly like but not that much really.
Especially if they might be Mooslims.
by erica20 on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 3:14pm
by jollyroger on Sat, 07/27/2013 - 8:37pm
by jollyroger on Sun, 07/28/2013 - 12:19am
by jollyroger on Sun, 07/28/2013 - 12:23am
"The refugee status in Russia was the first formal support from another government for Mr. Snowden, 30, and seems likely to elicit strong objections from the United States."
YES
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/02/world/europe/edward-snowden-russia.htm...
by jollyroger on Thu, 08/01/2013 - 10:10am