Gang Extraditions Will Unify Washington against Bukele
Ricardo Valencia
Monday, 6 de june de 2022
Leer en español
Nayib Bukeles presidency is playing out like a low-budget superhero cartoon developed in bureaucratic secrecy and clumsily broadcasted on television and social media. Washingtons patience is up with the circus in which he publicly declares war against the same gangs with whom he represented by officials sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury negotiated a truce to reduce homicides. The leaked audio in which one of his negotiators professes more loyalty to the Mara Salvatrucha than to his cabinet, and admits to aiding the transnational escape of one of the leaders, shows that the government does a poor job of keeping its double life a secret.
Its a tragedy disguised as an epic tale, in which a deified president combats gangs while also dealing with them under the table. Unlike its Guatemalan and Honduran neighbors, the Salvadoran justice system has not heeded the U.S. extradition treaty. Bukele loyalists on the Supreme Court have protected the gang leaders by leaning on excuses ranging from reviewing the terms of the century-old agreement to a supposed fear that a U.S. court will sentence them to life in prison. These arguments reveal that the clamoring of Bukele-aligned legislators for the death penalty is nothing more than yet another trick in the authoritarian circus.
Biden is now weighing options in a tougher extradition strategy. Sources close to the deliberations told me the White House is considering whether to publicly demand that El Salvador turn them over, and to intensely lobby Congress to do the same. One source says that the extradition requests galvanize both Republicans and Democrats. Bukele has refused, the source asserts, mainly because he is scared that the gangs will find more to say about his government once in federal custody.
The gangs have drawn the attention of the entire U.S. government, from the Departments of State and Homeland Security to the FBI. When Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on Bukele in April to extradite some of the MS-13 leaders, the Salvadoran president unwittingly played into the U.S. hand. Foreign Minister Alexandra Hill responded by criticizing the U.S. stance: Friends do not act that way.
More:
https://elfaro.net/en/202206/opinion/26212/Gang-Extraditions-Will-Unify-Washington-against-Bukele.htm