In the July 12 edition of the Los Angeles Times, Tracy Wilkinson begins
with an extremely apropos reference to an iconographic scene from “Casablanca”:
“Mexicans are shocked — shocked! — to learn that their American neighbors have
been spying on them. What’s more, the Americans have been helping the Mexican
government become better at spying!” (http://www.latimes.com/news/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-mexico-snowden-20130712,0,5645423.story).
Politicians from throughout the
hemisphere are expressing outrage over the alleged infringement of their sovereign
nations. From Mexico’s Enrique Peña Nieto to Argentina’s Cristina Fernández de
Kirchner, heads of state are concerned, distressed, insulted and demanding
clarification. Americans themselves are disturbed and irate over news of widespread
interception of personal communications; in Latin America Snowden’s revelations
are a black eye in the face of Barack Obama’s efforts in U.S.-Latin American
relations, evoking regional criticisms that echo the strained times of purported
CIA-supported dictatorships, coups and assassinations. Of course, just as
Captain Renault was shocked to find gambling going on, no one is genuinely
surprised by eavesdropping, surveillance and spying being carried out by
Americans and numerous others. Every major country in the world maintains
intelligence agencies and almost all embassies and consulates include an
intelligence officer. The tacit
understanding is that you are not supposed to be too overt or too aggressive with
your allies, and by all means you should avoid being discovered. Allies spying
on their friends is an international embarrassment for all parties and creates
significant political problems for the politicians of the countries being
watched as much as for those who ordered the watching. Nobody wants such
incidents to come to light. Just ask Peña Nieto whose predecessor and political
ally Felipe Calderón cozied up U.S. intelligence services.
What Edward Snowden has done spits in the face of the
diplomatic niceties of the various foreign services around the world. In The
United States prior to the 1960s and in many countries to this day, Snowden’s
actions would constitute high treason punishable by death. But every traitor is
a valuable asset to another party, and right now Snowden represents enough
potential information that any foreign government would willingly stick its
neck out to reap the benefits. Bolivia’s
Evo Morales and Venezuela’s Nicolás Madura would be overjoyed to parade Snowden
down the streets of La Paz or Caracas as a massive black-eye in the face of
their ideological enemy, the United States. For them the benefits would be both
symbolic and real. Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff and even Argentina’s Cristina
Fernández de Kirchner, on the other hand, would be equally pleased but
significantly more wary of overt involvement with Snowden. While Snowden assuredly
would like to escape from the transit area of Sheremetyevo International
Airport and enjoy the hospitality of President Morales, for the time being he
remains a man without a country in that he cannot return home, U.S. pressure prevents
him from easily traveling to many countries, and many others cannot afford the
consequences of aiding and abetting America’s de facto public enemy #1. This is
the case for Rousseff who has pursued a global economic policy that can only
benefit from positive relations with the United States. And while Morales might
be preparing his guest suite, the Bolivian president himself could not fly home
from a recent meeting in Russia without his plane being diverted to Vienna by
countries not wanting to act against the interests of the United States. Léo
Gerchmann of the Brazilian News agency RBS reports that Snowden acknowledged
the current impossibility of traveling to Venezuela in a meeting with
representatives from Human Rights Watch (http://www.clicrbs.com.br/anoticia/jsp/default2.jsp?uf=2&local=18&source=a4199059.xml&template=4187.dwt&edition=22344§ion=1485).
Russia is attempting a delicate balancing act. Sergei Loiko
of the Los Angeles Times reports, “The meeting with Snowden also put organizations
that regularly accuse the Russian government of human rights abuses in the
position of being asked to serve as intermediary to the Kremlin on his behalf.”
At the same time, Putin understands the hand he has been dealt. As Alexander Ryklin, editor of the online
Daily Journal,
Putin may dislike and
even despise him for what he is, a traitor in his eyes, but he won't let
Snowden out of his hands"
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