U.S. Senator Chis Murphy plans to travel to Europe on an
apology tour, according to a brief notice in a Hartford paper.
Mrs. Pesci and I just returned from France, whose socialist president, more unpopular in his own county than president Barack Obama is at home, still feels the whip and lash of an out of control American spy agency.
“Over the last several months,” Mr. Murphy wrote in a media
release, “our European allies have raised legitimate concerns about the nature
and scope of U.S. intelligence programs, and I agree that at times, U.S.
surveillance programs have not been conducted with the appropriate restraint
and security, both in the United States and in Europe. While foreign
citizens do not enjoy the same constitutional protections as American citizens,
the United States should have processes in place that assure non-U.S. citizens
that all possible steps are being taken to limit the scope of our surveillance
programs so that we are targeting only the information absolutely necessary to
find and catch individuals who pose a security threat to the United States and
our allies. My goal for these meetings will be to help cement the overall
relationship between the United States and Europe and discuss surveillance
programs in our countries.”
The brief news account does not mention where Mr. Murphy
plans to travel in Europe -- Germany, France, Spain, England or the Vatican.
Mrs. Pesci and I just returned from France, whose socialist president, more unpopular in his own county than president Barack Obama is at home, still feels the whip and lash of an out of control American spy agency.
Germany’s head of state, Chancellor Angela Merkel, heatedly
objected when she discovered -- thanks to Edward Snowden and his patron,
Russian President Vladimir Putin -- that the Americans had tapped her private
cell phone.
That item made the news four days running before we boarded
the plane for home.
Presidential flack catcher Jay Carney’s various attempts to
explain away the obvious have made him a laughing stock throughout
Europe. In a first response to European unease, Mr. Carney assured Ms.
Merkel on behalf of the president that the United States is
not nor would in the future tap the cell phone line
of Germany’s head of state. It took news broadcasters about one hour to note
that Mr. Carney had agilely danced around the question: Has the Obama
administration in the past tapped the private phone lines of Ms. Merkel? It has been reported that Ms.
Merkle’s phone lines have been under siege for more than ten years.
European grown-ups understand that nations do spy
on each other – but tapping the private line of a European head of state
suggested to them that a time honored line had been crossed.
Just before boarding an airline for home, we found that the
Obama administration had tapped the Pope’s phone lines. Someone in the airport
joked that the Obama administration was perhaps seeking how best to obtain an indulgence for its
many secular sins.
The second most prominent story during the weeks we were in
Europe concerned the spectacular failure of the launch of Obamacare.
A stevedore who tied our boat to a pier in Arles joked,
“Here come the Americans. They are all FBI agents.” He was joking of course,
but clearly there was a scorpion’s sting in his remark.
If Mr. Murphy does alight in Germany during his apology tour,
it is possible he may bump into Mr. Snowden who, according to a recent news report, has expressed interest in testifying in a German inquiry into U.S.
spying.
The Washington Post has reported that Snowden’s appearance in
Germany would be contingent upon a pledge that Germany would not shuttle the accused felon to
the United States. The possible testimony of Mr. Snowden in Germany, the paper
reported, “puts Merkel into a tight spot. German voters are furious with
the U.S. government over the spying revelations, and allowing Snowden into Germany would be a popular move. But the Obama administration has
made clear that it is willing to go to great lengths to retrieve Snowden —
including, said Bolivian President Evo Morales this summer, forcing the leader
of a sovereign country to make an emergency landing because of suspicions that
Snowden was on his jet.”
“If there were the possibility to hear Snowden as a witness,” said Thomas Oppermann, a Social Democrat who heads Germany’s parliamentary
intelligence oversight committee, “without bringing him into danger and
completely ruining the German-USA relationship, we should use it.”
Unless Mr. Murphy is willing to travel through Europe on his
knees, begging pardon of every European he meets, he will not be warmly
received. It may be more useful for him to stay home, iron the wrinkles out
of Obamacare, work to construct a passable budget – Mr. Obama’s first since
achieving office -- and apologize to the Europeans from afar, where he will be
safe from the taunts of stevedores and European schoolchildren.
Comments
Well, at least our junior Senator can now have the European vacation he couldn't otherwise afford.
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Right. But, will the German Bundeskanzlerin be able to keep her health insurance policy? Or will she get to enjoy shopping around in that excellent Stralsund – Nordvorpommern – Rügen Obamacare Exchange?
Funny.
The last story that crossed the airwaves as we were leaving France for home concerned a review of British hospitals that found one fourth of hospitals in Britain failed standard measurements of care. Huge.