PARDON US.The Clintons & the FALN FALN - Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional (Armed Forces of National Liberation, Puerto Rico)` How could two brilliant politicians like Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham Clinton create the fiasco surrounding the clemency decision for twelve Puerto Rican nationalists who were serving sentences up to ninety years for "terrorist" crimes in the 1970s and '80s in which no one was injured, no shots were fired, and no bombs went off? The Puerto Rican FALN members were convicted of having unlicensed firearms, transporting stolen vehicles across state lines, and conspiring to commit sedition sedition n. the Federal crime of advocacy of insurrection against the government or support for an enemy of the nation during time of war, by speeches, publications and organization. Sedition usually involves actually conspiring to disrupt the legal operation of the government and beyond expression of an opinion or protesting government policy. Sedition is a lesser crime than "treason," which requires actual betrayal of the government or "espionage.; certainly not acts deserving suspended sentences but not, in effect, life sentences either. Their continued imprisonment generated a lot of sympathy in Puerto Rico, but this was not an issue that would send its citizens to the barricades. President Clinton said the sole reason for his clemency offer (if they forswore violence) was the harshness of the sentences. That makes sense. The Puerto Rican nationalists convicted of storming the U.S. House of Representatives in the 1950s and wounding many legislators had received similar sentences for far more terrible crimes. With Hillary Clinton about to make history by becoming the first First Lady to run for office, pundits claimed the clemency offer was to keep Puerto Rican voters in her camp. That's far fetched. The release of the FALN twelve is not the single issue on Puerto Ricans' agenda that would make them turn to New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, Mrs. Clinton's anticipated opponent. In fact, it has become a major embarrassment in New York with many Puerto Ricans on talk shows lamenting their image of being bomb throwers and fanatics. Perhaps requests of Puerto Rican leaders, such as, Congressman Jose Serrano (D-N.Y.), and appeals from former president Jimmy Carter were enough to sway Mr. Clinton, who, in a recent years has freed only three convicts out of more than three thousand requests. Was Vieques Vieques, commonly called Isabel Segunda, was founded in 1843 and is the main population center. The island has gained popularity as a resort. Most of Vieques was within U.S. military installations from the 1940s. The facilities included a live-ammunition training area for the U.S. navy, a use that was the subject of protests by many Puerto Ricans., the small island off Puerto Rico's coast used by the U.S. Navy for practice bombing runs and a real bone of contention, involved? Gary Tuominen, the news director for the English-language radio WOSO WOSO - Women of Spanish Origin (Broward County, Florida) in San Juan, suspects that the president is preparing to turn down Puerto Rico's request to end the bombing and gave them the FALN releases as a sop. Whatever the reasons, it certainly turned into a mess, and an almost laughable one at that as Mrs. Clinton first applauded the clemency offer then turned and ran as the firestorm threatened to engulf her. She says she and her husband never discussed the issue-though she didn't wag her finger at the television camera and say, "I never spoke with that man about freeing Puerto Rican terrorists." Incredible. The issue certainly put a crimp in Mrs. Clinton's noncampaign (she has not officially announced) and removed some of the gloss from her. But it is a long way to election day and voters can be counted on to do two things: Forget quickly and love celebrity. In delivering clemency, President Clinton, who is often pictured as a patsy, has once again shown he is as tough as any street fighter. He'll need that armor soon when he does something that will really aid Mrs. Clinton's campaign in New York: Release Jonathan Pollard, an act Israeli prime ministers and many influential members of the American Jewish community have sought. Joseph Policano's "Puerto Rico: Will It Be the Fifty-first State?" appeared in the February 27, 1998 issue of Commonweal. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion