Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

Segami

(14,923 posts)
Mon Jul 29, 2013, 08:18 PM Jul 2013

The Lady VANISHES: How a Disgraced CIA Agent “DISAPPEARED”


While it hunts down Snowden, the Obama administration is busy helping Robert Seldon Lady escape kidnapping charges






He came and he went: that was the joke that circulated in 1979 when 70-year-old former Vice President Nelson Rockefeller had a heart attack and died in his Manhattan townhouse in the presence of his evening-gown-clad 25-year-old assistant. In a sense, the same might be said of retired CIA operative Robert Seldon Lady. Recently, Lady proved a one-day wonder. After years in absentia — poof! — he reappeared out of nowhere on the border between Panama and Costa Rica, and made the news when Panamanian officials took him into custody on an Interpol warrant. The CIA’s station chief in Milan back in 2003, he had achieved brief notoriety for overseeing a la dolce vita version of extraordinary rendition as part of Washington’s Global War on Terror. His colleagues kidnapped Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, a radical Muslim cleric and terror suspect, off the streets of Milan, and rendered him via U.S. airbases in Italy and Germany to the torture chambers of Hosni Mubarak’s Egypt. Lady evidently rode shotgun on that transfer.



His Agency associates proved to be the crew that couldn’t spook straight. They left behind such a traceable trail of five-star-hotel and restaurant bills, charges on false credit cards, and unencrypted cell phone calls that the Italian government tracked them down, identified them, and charged 23 of them, Lady included, with kidnapping. Lady fled Italy, leaving behind a multimillion-dollar villa near Turin meant for his retirement. (It was later confiscated and sold to make restitution payments to Nasr.) Convicted in absentia in 2009, Lady received a nine-year sentence (later reduced to six). He had by then essentially vanished after admitting to an Italian newspaper, “Of course it was an illegal operation. But that’s our job. We’re at war against terrorism.” Last week, the Panamanians picked him up. It was the real world equivalent of a magician’s trick. He was nowhere, then suddenly in custody and in the news, and then — poof again! — he wasn’t. Just 24 hours after the retired CIA official found himself under lock and key, he was flown out of Panama, evidently under the protection of Washington, and in mid-air, heading back to the United States, vanished a second time.




State Department spokesperson Marie Harf told reporters on July 19th, “It’s my understanding that he is in fact either en route or back in the United States.” So there he was, possibly in mid-air heading for the homeland and, as far as we know, as far as reporting goes, nothing more. Consider it the CIA version of a miracle. Instead of landing, he just evaporated. And that was that. Not another news story here in the U.S.; no further information from government spokespeople on what happened to him, or why the administration decided to extricate him from Panama and protect him from Italian justice. Nor, as far as I can tell, were there any further questions from the media. When TomDispatch inquired of the State Department, all it got was this bit of stonewallese: “We understand that a U.S citizen was detained by Panamanian authorities, and that Panamanian immigration officials expelled him from Panama on July 19. Panama’s actions are consistent with its rights to determine whether to admit or expel non-citizens from its territory.”


In other words, he came and he went.

Edward Snowden: The Opposite of a Magician’s Trick



When Lady was first detained, there was a little flurry of news stories and a little frisson of tension. Would a retired CIA agent convicted of a serious crime involving kidnapping and torture be extradited to Italy to serve his sentence? But that tension had no chance to build because (as anyone might have predicted) luck was a Lady that week. After all, the country that took him into custody on that Interpol warrant was a genuine rarity in a changing Latin America. It was still an ally of the United States, which had once built a canal across its territory, controlled its politics for years, and in 1989 sent in the U.S. military to forcefully sort out those politics once again. Italy wanted Lady back and evidently requested that Panama hand him over (though the countries had no extradition treaty). But could anyone be surprised by what happened or by the role Washington clearly played in settling Lady’s fate? If you had paid any attention to the global pressure Washington was exerting in an “international manhunt” to get Edward Snowden, the NSA whistleblower it had already charged under the draconian Espionage Act, back to its shores, you knew which direction Robert Seldon Lady would be heading when he hit the nearest plane out of Panama — and I don’t mean Italy.


cont'




http://www.salon.com/2013/07/29/u_s_chased_down_snowden_but_let_cia_operative_robert_seldon_lady_disappear_partner/
8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The Lady VANISHES: How a Disgraced CIA Agent “DISAPPEARED” (Original Post) Segami Jul 2013 OP
SECRET Government Is a One-Way Mirror. Octafish Jul 2013 #1
If one is a thug and henchman/kidnapper for the gov't,, that's snappyturtle Jul 2013 #2
You didn't leave enough 'blank' writing space! Segami Jul 2013 #3
+1 nashville_brook Jul 2013 #4
Boy, what a lovely bunch of coconuts we have. DeSwiss Jul 2013 #5
Prolly sitting poolside with Kissinger. Spitfire of ATJ Jul 2013 #6
Kidnapping is OK. Whistleblowing that embarrasses the regime is a felony. Tierra_y_Libertad Jul 2013 #7
More on the rendering story mogster Jul 2013 #8

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
1. SECRET Government Is a One-Way Mirror.
Mon Jul 29, 2013, 08:35 PM
Jul 2013

The Keepers of the Secrets can see We the People.

We the People can't see Them, or what They do, including what they've done to the Constitution.

So, one day, when everyone is really down the road, no one will remember that there's another side to the mirror or even that there once was a time when there was no mirror.

snappyturtle

(14,656 posts)
2. If one is a thug and henchman/kidnapper for the gov't,, that's
Mon Jul 29, 2013, 08:56 PM
Jul 2013

good. Defender of the Constitution, that's bad.

Can't wait to hear the spin by ..........(fill in the blank).

 

DeSwiss

(27,137 posts)
5. Boy, what a lovely bunch of coconuts we have.
Mon Jul 29, 2013, 10:58 PM
Jul 2013
- I hope you realize that idiots are running the world. Trying to, anyway. Some how this song seems appropriate at this juncture:
[center]

[/center]
K&R

The shock of discovering that most of the power in the world is held by ignorant and greedy people can really bum you out at first; but after you've lived with it a few decades, it becomes, like cancer and other plagues, just another problem that we will solve eventually if we keep working at it. ~Robert Anton Wilson


Latest Discussions»General Discussion»The Lady VANISHES: How a ...