Milan Court Indicts 26 Americans In Abduction
CIA Operatives May Be Tried in Absentia
By Sarah Delaney and Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, February 17, 2007; Page A01
ROME, Feb. 16 -- An Italian judge gave approval Friday for what will be the first overseas criminal trial of CIA officers involved in a covert counterterrorism operation, as a court in Milan indicted more than two dozen Americans on charges of kidnapping a radical Muslim cleric four years ago.
After a judicial hearing that lasted two months, the court handed down indictments against 25 CIA operatives, a U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel and five Italian spies who are accused of grabbing an imam, Osama Mustafa Hassan Nasr, off the street and stuffing him into a white van as he walked to noonday prayers Feb. 17, 2003. Nasr was taken from Milan to his native Egypt, where he claims he was tortured in prison for more than three years.
The trial is scheduled to open June 8 and will challenge the legality of a long-standing CIA practice known as "extraordinary rendition," in which terrorism suspects are secretly abducted and taken to other countries for interrogation. None of the American defendants is in custody, nor are they expected to appear in court. Prosecutors said they will be tried in absentia.
Arrest warrants against the CIA operatives were obtained in 2005. A judge approved the indictments Friday after the judicial hearing and a lengthy criminal investigation that retraced in minute detail how the CIA put together the kidnapping plot.
The CIA and the State Department declined to comment on the indictments. "This is an issue that is before the judiciary in Italy," State Department spokesman Tom Casey said.
It is the second case in which criminal charges have been filed against CIA officers for illegally abducting a terrorism suspect. German prosecutors in Munich issued arrest warrants last month for 13 CIA operatives suspected of kidnapping a Lebanese German man, Khaled el-Masri, in the Balkans in December 2003 and taking him to Afghanistan. He was released five months later after the CIA realized they had grabbed the wrong man.
In addition, the Swiss government announced this week that it had approved a criminal investigation into the use of Switzerland's airspace to fly Nasr from Italy to a U.S. military base in Germany after his abduction.
He was put on another CIA-chartered plane to Cairo soon afterward.
The Milan prosecution team, headed by investigating magistrate Armando Spataro, has asked the Italian government to file a request with the U.S. Justice Department for extradition of the 26 American defendants. The request has already been refused once, by Roberto Castelli, then Italy's justice minister. But it is being reconsidered by a new Italian government that came to power last year.
The indictment publishes the names of the 25 CIA operatives, including the CIA's former Rome station chief Jeffrey Castelli and former Milan substation chief Robert Seldon Lady, who are accused of conspiring with the Italian military intelligence agency, known as Sismi.
Most of the CIA operatives named in the indictments had been using undercover aliases; prosecutors said they do not know the operatives' true identities and acknowledged that it is unlikely they will be found or brought to Italy to stand trial.
A former Sismi director, Gen. Nicolo Pollari, has also been charged.
― and what (ooo), Saturday, 17 February 2007 17:09 (seventeen years ago) link
"american retard government tries to divert attention away from problems at home, thinks it owns the world, causes trouble and unrest everywhere, fails to see it's inviting even more terrorist attacks as long as it doesn't fuck off home and shuts the fuck up, acts surprised when its stupid crap comes back to bite it in the ass, rest of world desperately trying to decide whether to laugh or cry about this. Again."
Obviously, its not like this - or, at least, not that simple.
This story has little to do with CIA and counter terrorism, and a lot to do with internal fights and feuds between Italian political factions - even inside our current government.
Thinking that everything happening in the world is caused by the United States government, that's very American. :)
― Marco Damiani (Marco D), Sunday, 18 February 2007 11:24 (seventeen years ago) link