Monday, November 18, 2019

Has The Washington Institute lost its moral compass?

Source: Washington Institute website
It was difficult not to choke upon reading the announcement of this year's Washington Institute honoree ["17-Nov-19: Jordan's king to be honored for profound commitment to peace and moderation"]

Joining a list of truly distinguished and deserving past recipients of its Statesman-Scholar Award is a dictator and terror-abettor. A man who has given refuge to Ahlam Tamimi, confessed murderer of my precious daughter Malki, and of seven other children and eight adults.

The members of the esteemed Institute have selected as its 2019 recipient a man who has steadfastly refused to extradite Tamimi to stand trial in the US. Two of her victims, including Malki, were Americans. 

In doing so, King Abdullah is defying a 2013 indictment and demand for extradition by the US Department of Justice ["13-Nov-19: Thank you, Mr Foreign Minister"].

As the US State Department reiterated incontrovertably earlier this month in an annual report ["03-Nov-19: In Washington, a step towards bringing the Sbarro bomber to justice"], the US recognizes as valid and binding the extradititon treaty signed and ratified with Jordan in 1995. 

Jordan has in the past extradited several of its citizens to the US in accordance with that treaty. 

But now, Jordan - which as we know is an absolute monarchy - has declared that treaty void ["23-Mar-17: Looking for justice in Jordan, Jerusalem and Washington"]. That's a convenient excuse for protecting this evil woman who has boasted of her "achievement" repeatedly on TV. 

But we are not obliged to buy that excuse. In fact, as moral, rational humans, we are obliged to fight it because it is nothing short of a brazen travesty of justice.

Yet instead the moral, rational humans at the Washington Institute are rewarding that travesty and lauding the king for his "profound commitment to peace and moderation" and for opposing his region's "violence and extremism".

On the right, Malki at the center of my family at a celebration
just weeks before her life was stolen from us by the woman in the
State Department reward poster on the left
I would presume that masterminding a terror bombing in Jerusalem's Sbarro pizzeria when it is filled with mothers and children on a summer's afternoon qualifies as "extremism". And I also presume that refusing to allow the trial of that mastermind would not qualify as a "profound commitment to peace and moderation."

Which leaves me curious as to what rationalization the esteemed members of this institute can offer me for the infuriating decision to "celebrate as outstanding leader" this opponent of the most basic tenets of justice and morality.

My child was a kind, loving, generous talented girl who volunteered with children with disabilitites, played the classical flute, sang beautifully and was a loving daughter. She deserves for her murderer to be behind bars. Nothing more, nothing less.

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