Do they ever say who the perp was - particularly if an immigrant or terror suspect. Wouldnt want to call them out of anything ;p<<<
Not that I heard.
I would think that being a cop today is a job rather like walking a tight rope, for no matter who gets named, someone is going to be upset and want to kill the cop and riot to kill a few others.
Snipped/is end of an interesting training article for the ‘o’.
my opinion....granny
What is really interesting about this “spy swap” is the haste in which
Moscow approached Washington offering a bargain. The Kremlin evidently
wanted to get its agents back before they started talking. What was it
trying to hide? The schemes of money laundering involving top Russian
officials? The names of other “sleepers” still living in the West? This is
something we shall hardly ever find out.
Why did the Obama administration act so quickly in returning the spies? It
evidently was not under pressure and could have huckstered over the price.
There are internationally recognised political prisoners in Russia and the
United States could at least have demanded an exchange of one for one, not
one for two and a half.
This was certainly a bad bargain for America.
Natalya Hmelik is a Russian journalist living in Israel.
_____
Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com
URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2010/07/13/a-troubling-%e2%80%9cspy%e2%80%9d-swap/