Thursday, March 17, 2011

Cui Bono? Cui Cares?

I'm surprised by all the media interest about who paid the blood money to set Raymond Davis free.

U.S. citizen and CIA contractor Raymond Davis was released from a Pakistani prison on Wednesday after $2.3 million was paid to the families of the two Pakistani men he shot and killed and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said repeatedly on Wednesday that the United States had not paid any "blood money" to win his release.

But that's not the whole story. The truth is that the Pakistani government paid the victims' families the $2.3 million and the U.S. promised to reimburse them in the future, according to a senior Pakistani official.

Clinton's interview with NPR's Steve Inskeep was only one of many where Clinton refused to say how the money got into the hands of the Pakistani victims' families.

-- snp --

In several other interviews, Clinton told reporters to ask the families -- or anyone else other than the U.S. government -- how the reported $2.3 million appeared. Obama administration officials want to focus on the fact that Davis is now returning home, not the quid pro quo that made it happen.


"Quid pro quo." I like that Latin phrase. I also like this one: cui bono?

There is no big mystery here. I think we can figure out what party, or parties, had an interest in making the payments. Likewise, we can figure out who brought the families to the courthouse, isolated them from their - suddenly former - lawyer, and then relocated them immediately after they accepted the payment.

Considering that the USG provides Pakistan around $3.5 billion a year in civilian and military aid, a mere two or three million amounts to lunch money for either country.

The deal was cut, and all parties to it must have felt they benefited. Trying to tease out an admission from U.S. officials serves no purpose, and might just further rile up the already riled up Pakistani masses.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great reporting since the beginning TSB!

Anonymous said...

If you google "Hillary Clinton denies" you get 23 million hits. I challenge anyone to beat that! This is one of my favorites.. but someone should rank them. GWB

http://directorblue.blogspot.com/2007/06/hillary-clinton-and-largest-election.html

TSB said...

Twenty-three million hits? Twenty million of them might have come from her First Lady years. I remember there were a great many occasions for her to deny something or other back then.

Anonymous said...

That is absolutely correct TSB: for instance;

Bill Clinton denies = 17,100,000
Sylvio Berlusconi = 6,840,000
George Bush denies = 37,300,000
(mostly denies media access or
public access to his events)
Obama = 5,320,000
Jay Carney = 223,000
So Obama has his people do the
denying.
NO WONDER GOOD PEOPLE DON'T WANT TO BE POLITICIANS ANYMORE.. WHO LIKES DENYING STUFF ALL DAY? MY FAVORITE: DENIES WIKILEAKS: 21 MILLION 500 THOUSAND!! lilGWB

Anonymous said...

TSB: THERE IS BIG TROUBLE IN PAKISTAN! WITH ONLY 3 HRS TO GO TIL THE BIG CRICKET MATCH (PENRA) IS SHUTTING DOWN THE BROADCAST ON ORDERS FROM THE SUPREME COURT! FORGETTING AFPAK..COULD THIS BRING DOWN THE GOVERNMENT?? AND..could it happen here?
http://www.dawn.com/2011/03/19/cable-operators-warn-of-world-cup-match-blackout.html gwb

TSB said...

They take their cricket very, very, seriously over there. My personal opinion: it is an act of mercy to block a cricket broadcast. In fact, we should do it ourselves with military jammers as a humanitarian intervention. The longest and most snore-mongeringly boring game ever conceived.

Anonymous said...

I am for blocking the audio on Atlanta Braves baseball games. Maybe
we could export those Braves announcers to Pakistan to bore the
Taliban. GWB