March 08, 2005
The Ransom Of The Red Reporter
By
Michelle Malkin
International furor over
Giuliana Sgrena, an Italian communist writer who
claims American troops in Iraq may have deliberately
shot at her
car after being
released by kidnappers, misses the
bigger scandal.
The scandal is not that an anti-war
propagandist has accused the U.S. of targeting
journalists.
That’s par for the course. (Yes,
hello again,
Eason Jordan.)
The scandal is not that mainstream
media sympathizers are blaming our military and dredging
up every last shooting accident along the treacherous
routes to Baghdad Airport.
Again, no surprise here.
The scandal is that Italy—our
reputed
ally in the global War on Terror—negotiated with
Sgrena’s Islamist kidnappers and may have forked over a
massive ransom to cutthroats for Sgrena’s release.
Where is the uproar over this
Islamist insurgency subsidy plan?
Iraqi politician Younadem Kana told
Belgian state TV that he had
"non-official"
information that Italy paid the terrorists $1
million in tribute. The Washington Times,
citing the Italian newspaper La Stampa,
pinned the ransom figure at $6 million. Italian
newspaper Corriere della Sera
reported that the Italian Government forked over
between $10 million $13.4 million to free Sgrena.
Whatever the final tally, it’s a
whopping bounty that will undoubtedly come in handy for
cash-hungry killers in need of spiffy new
rocket-propelled grenade launchers, AK-47s, mortars,
landmines, components for vehicle-borne improvised
explosive devices, and recruitment fees. (To put this
windfall in perspective, bear in mind that the 9/11 plot
was a half-million dollar drop in the bucket for Osama
bin Laden.)
Or maybe Italian advocates of this
terrorist get-rich-quick scheme think the thugs will
spend their money on Prada handbags and Versace couture.
Both the Italian government and
members of the Iraq Islamic Army who abducted Sgrena
vehemently deny that money was exchanged. Yet, even as
his government was officially rebuff reports of a ransom
arrangement in the Sgrena affair, Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi was
quoted by the newspaper Il Messaggero
conceding: "We have to rethink our strategy in
dealing with kidnappings."
A little late for a do-over, don’t
you think?
According to the New York Post,
Lucia Annunziata, former president of Italian state
television RAI, said government sources estimate Italy
has paid kidnappers nearly $15 million for hostages in
the past year alone. Indeed, last September, Gustavo
Selva, chairman of parliament's foreign affairs
committee, confirmed that two Italian aid workers—who
praised their kidnappers as “resisters”--were freed
after the government paid at least $1 million in cash to
their Iraqi captors.
The admission came after heated
denials by top government officials. Selva, auditioning
Italy for a spot in the
Axis of Weasels pantheon, mused at the time:
"In
principle, we shouldn't give in to blackmail but this
time we had to, although it's a dangerous path to take
because, obviously, it could encourage others to take
hostages, either for political reasons or for criminal
reasons.”
Ransom row after Italians freed, CNN, October 4,
2004
How do you say “No duh” in
Italian?
To be fair to Italy, which
continues to maintain a 3,000-troop presence in Iraq
despite enormous anti-war pressure, its reported payoffs
to terrorists are dwarfed by the
mollycoddlers in Manila and Malaysia, who have fed
Abu Sayyaf’s
head-chopping kidnappers tens of millions in tribute
over the past several years—money that is now reportedly
being channeled to worldwide al Qaeda operations.
Still, you would expect a country
that once embraced the defiant spirit of Fabrizio
Quattrochi—the
murdered Italian security guard taken hostage in
Iraq last year who stoically told his assassins,
“I’m going to show you how an Italian dies”—to
resist the Quisling impulse with every fiber of its
collective being.
The consequences of capitulation
are bloody obvious.
When you allow your people to be
used as terrorist collection plates, the thugs will keep
coming back for more.
Might as well hang a sign around
the neck of every Italian citizen left in Iraq:
Buon appetito.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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