By Jacob G. Hornberger
What would happen if agents of the Venezuelan
government entered the United States, kidnapped a
person suspected of being a terrorist, and whisked him
away to Cuba to have him tortured?
I’ll tell you: U.S. officials would be hopping mad,
along with all their statist supporters. “Bomb them
into the Stone Age!” the statists would scream. “Nuke
’em! Nuke ’em all, both in Venezuela and Cuba!” they’d
cry.
But what happens when agents of the U.S. Empire
enter Italy, kidnap a person suspected of being a
terrorist, and whisk him away to Egypt to have him
tortured?
Answer: The U.S. Empire and its statist supporters
exclaim, “What great freedom fighters we have working
for the Empire!”
Alas, the Italian courts don’t agree. This week an
Italian appeals court not only upheld the criminal
convictions of 23 CIA agents who kidnapped a man on
the streets of Milan and whisked him away to Egypt to
have him tortured, it actually increased their
sentences — from 5-8 years to 7-9 years. The agents
were convicted last November — in absentia because
they were too scared to return to face their accusers.
The Italian court rejected the notion that following
orders of their superiors mitigated their crime (which
is precisely what the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal
held at the end of World War II).
Meanwhile, the Obama administration takes the same
position as the Bush administration. It refuses to
extradite the CIA felons to Italy to serve out their
sentences.
Why doesn’t the U.S. Empire’s refusal to send these
convicted felons to Italy constitute “harboring
terrorists”? Isn’t the supposed reason that U.S.
troops are killing and dying in Afghanistan is because
of the Empire’s purported concern that the Taliban
will “harbor terrorists” if it returns to power?
Given the Empire’s refusal to send those CIA
convicts to Italy to face the music, the irony is that
real reason that the Bush administration got mad at
the Taliban was its refusal to comply with Bush’s
unconditional demand to deliver Osama bin Laden to the
United States.
Even today, the Empire refuses to extradite accused
terrorist Luis Posada Carriles to face justice in
Venezuela. He’s the CIA operative who is accused of
planting a bomb on a Cuban civilian airliner, which
ended up killing dozens of innocent people, including
the members of Cuba’s fencing team. Why isn’t the
Empire’s refusal to turn Posada over to Venezuelan
authorities considered “harboring a terrorist”?
Oh well, no one has ever accused the Empire of
moral consistency. But the Italian episode certainly
demonstrates the utter hypocrisy of U.S. foreign
policy. When foreigners engage in terrorism, the
Empire calls them terrorists. When members of the
Empire engage in terrorism, the Empire calls them
“freedom fighters.”
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
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