cyphercide
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Yes, India wanted a lot of things and he wouldn't budge.
So the State dept. pulled the rug out from under him and let his target escape.
He can hold on to the case for dear life, but it ain't going anywhere.
That's exactly the point. It ain't going anywhere. How does that translate into a failure for Preet? He held his ground and refused any and all of India's conditions. India was forced to acknowledge him and finally had to bow out on his terms.
You wrote that this case would help his career and I wrote that it wouldn't. He didn't get a conviction. That's what matters and it doesn't help that the State dept. denied him that possibility.
Where did I say that? I remember defending Preet when some guy implied that he was doing it for his career.
Once again, her UN credentials and Indian application are only a request to the US. If some country presents a convicted murderer as a diplomat and applies for his diplomatic visa, do you think the host country is obligated to accept him as such?
Given the ongoing legal proceedings against her in the US itself, it is significant that the State dept. granted her immunity. It was, quite literally, a "get out of jail" card.
But we aren't discussing a convicted felon, are we? The State Department was under no obligations to dish out such high handed measures once Devyani flew out. In fact, how does a lookout notice and an arrest warrant even make sense if they were keen to bury this issue? All they granted her was a plane ticket out, which was the bare minimum they could do given India's huffing and puffing. Nobody got thrown under the bus and certainly nobody is kissing and making up anytime soon.
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