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July 5, 2005

CIA Agents Wanted for Kidnapping: Is There No End to US Scandals?

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By Muqtedar Khan

Washington DC is rapidly becoming the scandal capital of the world. The scandals seem to be unending. Starting with the WMDs intelligence fiasco, the Halliburton story, Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, The Quran desecration, Amnesty and the “gulag” episode and now the expose of CIA’s diversification into international kidnapping. What next, a revelation that the CIA’s kidnapping wing has merged with Abu Sayyaf’s gang to expand its kidnapping activities into the far east?

The now unfolding crisis triggered by an Italian judge who has issued arrest orders for 13 individuals allegedly associated with the CIA highlights European anger at what they see as America’s disregard for European laws. The case involves a practice called “extraordinary rendition” – which basically means that Americans kidnap individuals allegedly linked with terrorist groups and take them to countries that use torture to extract information.

Clearly there is more to the case. This is apparently not the first time that US agencies have resorted to the practice of rendition. It has been done before with the collaboration of local officials. But the extraordinary press that this particular incident is getting, obviously due to a determination on the part of Italian officials to go public indicates that there is more to this than extra territorial kidnapping. Italian officials seem to be determined to expose American practices in Italy as illegal, overbearing, arrogant and uncooperative.

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Why would a judge issue warrants that have admittedly zero probability of being executed if not to recruit international public opinion to achieve what he obviously has failed to do through proper channels, whatever they may be. It is my guess that the Italian prosecutor frustrated by his inability to get answers from Americans or persuade the right wing government of Berlusconi to get some answers through higher channels has decided to take his case to the international media. The Italian investigators have gone to great lengths to document in detail the exorbitant expenditure patterns of the CIA agents. They are hoping that the US Congress which has given the Bush administration a lot of latitude to circumvent international laws in its war on terror may at least hold some inquiries into CIA operations if only to review its expense allowances.

The case is exacerbated by European displeasure at the manner in which US intelligence interacts with them. US agencies are eager to get information from all sources but are reluctant to share what they know forcing European agencies – which unlike American’s have to operate in environments with much higher levels of democratic protections and oversight mechanisms – to work in the dark. Since 9/11 US has bullied most countries into sharing whatever intelligence they had on Islamic groups and other militias but has in return shared information only when it became necessary for specific operational purposes. This one-way traffic of information not only rankles officials in other countries but also raises the issue of what use the US is to their own efforts.

The transatlantic divide on this issue is sure to widen. While the US is treating its counter terrorism efforts as a war, hence the sobriquet – war on terror, the Europeans continue to rely on the old paradigm of treating terrorism as a criminal issue. Because the two allies are operating under entirely different paradigms their tactics are also at variance. The problem with this situation is that all the violations are taking place in Europe and the perpetrator is the US.

The guardian reported on June 26, 2005 that several nations to had similar problems with the US and were beginning to take action. Canada is holding hearings into the deportation of a Canadian to Syria for questioning about alleged ties to al-Qaeda. German prosecutors are conducting a criminal investigation into the suspected kidnapping of a German man who was flown to Afghanistan. In Stockholm, a parliamentary investigator has already concluded that CIA agent’s violated Swedish law by subjecting two Egyptian nationals to 'degrading and inhuman treatment' during a rendition in 2001.

Anger and frustration with American tactics will have a severe toll on intelligence cooperation. Already European law enforcement agencies are spending time and resources investigating Americans. Soon they all may have two separate divisions, one to investigate Al Qaeda and the other to investigate illegal US activities. Several recent intelligence commissions have exposed the vast limitations of US intelligence system. Clearly it is woeful. If it loses the faith, support and cooperation of several allied nations then US intelligence gathering and covert operations will have to face more severe challenges with lesser resources.

The key to all such problems is the gross inability of the Bush administration to understand and appreciate the importance and vital significance of multilateralism. Diplomacy is key to international cooperation. Diplomacy is not something that the State Departments alone should pursue; it is a style of management that all American agencies must adopt both overseas and at home. Until the Bush administration develops a more sophisticated understanding of diplomacy it will continue to have periodic scandals in myriad areas.

Dr. Muqtedar Khan is Nonresident Fellow at the Brookings Institution and the author of Jihad For Jerusalem: Identity and Strategy in International Relations (www.ijtihad.org).


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