Critic: Sweeping New State Department Hostage Policy Will ‘Encourage More Kidnapping’

By Published on June 24, 2015

The federal government will stop threatening families with criminal prosecution for attempting to pay ransom for loved ones taken hostage by terrorist groups, President Barack Obama will announce Wednesday in an executive order clarifying and changing the way the government handles hostage situations.

The sweeping new policy is due to “an idiot” at the Department of State, an official close to the review process told The Daily Caller News Foundation, and “it’s going to encourage more kidnappings of U.S. service members and U.S. diplomats stationed abroad, and it’s going to make Americans targets.”

“All this because an idiot opened her mouth out of place and someone told the media,” the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak with the press, told The DCNF. ”It’s going to encourage more kidnappings of U.S. service members and U.S. diplomats stationed abroad, and it’s going to make Americans targets.”

By law, the government cannot make concessions to terrorist groups, but the executive order will clarify that federal agents can communicate and negotiate with captors on a family’s behalf and that families who try to ransom a loved one will not be punished, The New York Times says the report will decide.

The Department of Justice “does not intend to add to the families’ pain in such cases by suggesting they could face criminal prosecution,” an official told the Times.

The changes are the result of an extensive review of federal policy regarding hostages abroad. Obama ordered the review in December after frustrated family members of current and former hostages complained about the process, and in light of changing national security realities, such as the rise of ISIS, since the policy was written in 2000.

The official told The DCNF that the Justice Department has not wanted to issue blanket immunity because there are times when a duress defense would not hold up in court, such as if the a family crowd-sourced for ransom money. That, the officials said, is because providing material support to terrorists is a blatant violation of U.S. law. Other agencies also opposed the change.

It’s long been an unofficial policy to turn the other way if a family tries to pay a ransom, but making that policy official could prove problematic if non-family members try to get financially involved or if family members try to solicit the public for the money they need to pay a ransom.

“This is really media-driven,” the official told The DCNF. “The White House wants this issue to go away.”

Other families had expressed frustration with the old process, but Nancy Curtis, the mother of a former al-Qaeda hostage released last summer, garnered media attention when she said in November that the Department of State had threatened to prosecute her if she tried to pay a ransom for her son’s release.

“Neither the FBI nor the Justice Department would have ever made that statement” threatening to prosecute, the official told The DCNF, blaming “an idiot” at the State Department for messing up the communication with Curtis that caused the media hype and review process.

“She was not an FBI or Justice Department person,” the official said. “She was a State Department person who overstepped her bounds, and that is probably what led to the president’s statement.”

“All of this because an idiot opened her mouth out of place and someone told the media,” the official added. ”It’s going to encourage more kidnappings of U.S. service members and U.S. diplomats stationed abroad, and it’s going to make Americans targets.”

The order also creates an interagency “fusion cell” at the FBI — a White House team that oversees hostage policy and a special State Department envoy to communicate with other countries regarding hostage situations.

“Whenever possible, families will receive more information faster on their loved ones and the efforts to recover them,” the report will say, according to the Times.

A new “issue manager” will coordinate intelligence between agencies and work to declassify relevant information about a given hostage on behalf of family members. And one coordinator will serve as a point of contact between relatives and the fusion cell, and will also belong to the White House hostage policy team.

 

Follow Rachel on Twitter.

Copyright 2015 The Daily Caller News Foundation

Like the article? Share it with your friends! And use our social media pages to join or start the conversation! Find us on Facebook, X, Instagram, MeWe and Gab.

Inspiration
The Good Life
Katherine Wolf
More from The Stream
Connect with Us