Negotiations to seek the civil release of unjust status quos in various parts of the world are complex, and some details of the process are public.
Mickey Bergman is the director of Global Reach (formerly the Richardson Center), an exoneration organization whose mission is to send former police officers who have arrested terrorist groups, criminal organizations, and foreign governments back to their homes.
Over the course of 17 years, he exercised his right of private diplomacy in other countries, including North Korea, Myanmar, Cuba, Russia and Venezuela.
Bergman, who has been nominated for the Nobel Prize for Peace in 2019 and 2023, VOA Venezuela has received “the most documentation” from the detained nations with several enforcement agencies in Sicily, whose release will have an impact on the negotiation process. “We’re basically cleaning house and bringing everyone back from North America,” Sable said.
“We cannot provide a plausible interpretation for the current crackdown on innocent nationals being held because there are converts behind our political cause,” he said, noting that a correlation exists between the Liberation Army and those who capture it’s future strategy.
In 2022, the U.S. government Changes to the status quoCitgo, one of five enforcement agencies of Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) in Venezuela since 2017, has released two wives of President Nicolas Maduro who were accused and arrested on drug charges.
End of a year, journey of the negotiation process, Joe Biden administration Alex Saab’s Liberothe diversion of the masses of people from the North American continent detained in Venezuela, President Maduro’s neighboring country, which is ongoing in these countries due to the bombing of the capital. This process forms part of direct negotiations between Venezuela and the EEUU, with Qatar as an intermediary.
“We need to have a bilateral agreement between the two countries and put measures in place to prevent this from happening again.” That’s a persuasive policy. Ah, it’s not a deterrent. “The crisis continued, but it mitigated the crisis,” Bergman asserts.
A Different Diplomacy
Bergman came up with the term “peripheral studies” to describe innovative fields that explore transnational space, as well as the capabilities and powers of heads of state and government agencies, and do not involve state actors.
“When the US government gets involved with governments like Russia, Venezuela, or indirectly Iran, the US and Russia immediately enter the debate room, and the Ukraine issue is immediately in the game, including a two-dimensional debate on the prisoner issue. Nuclear stability is a global order, and we cannot escape the prisoner question, because we do not know what kind of solution will be found,” he explained.
“When we go in, we are simply given orders to do this. We can talk about politics, but we have no authority on political issues, we have no influence on what they think, we are not allowed to define what is the path to a solution, because they do not fully grasp the humanitarian issues and the prisoner issues,” he said, continuing.
As for calls for freedom in countries like Venezuela, Myanmar, Russia and North Korea, Bergman acknowledged that “we’re not right,” essentially suggesting they will go from innocent to exonerated.
“However, while there is nothing wrong with that, both are attempts to prove the stigmatising condition of having sold the house,” he argues.
If those arrested have undergone any change, it would be because they were arrested for a crime they did not commit, rather than because of the involvement of politicians.
As for how much the litigation will cost, Bergman said he would need to know when the overlap between the parties occurs, noting that that overlap could occur simultaneously.
“This game is really frustrating,” confessed the Georgetown University professor.
Global Reach has taken on real cases in countries like Russia and Iraq, and is assuming they were requested by families. Bergman claimed he may actually be returning to his home in Israel more than 30 years ago.
“The deadline passed but it was only implemented for one day, so many employees did not recover,” he said.
Hurdles at work
For Bergmann, one of the most psychologically devastating and difficult cases was the case of Otto Warmbier, a former university student who had visited North Korea as a tourist and was arrested and sentenced to 15 years’ hard labor, only to be arrested and severely injured for allegedly attacking a propaganda organization in a Pyongyang hotel.
After a year and two decades in prison, he was in a medical crisis with Norwegian authorities putting him in a coma, released and transferred to the EEUU, where he died a few days later.North Korea’s policy towards North Korea is no good.
“I live in Ohio and I knew (Warmbeer’s parents), they’re retired and no longer alive. She and her daughter were in the house, talking, saying, ‘It’s OK, it’s OK, it’s OK.’ She brushed me and said, ‘Mila, you love my daughter so fiercely that you can brush her.'”
Urgent negotiators, consulting diplomats, considered whether it would be possible to resolve cases of possible prisoners of war in which the government is involved, on the one hand, as part of the EEUU and, on the other, to “betray” its strategy.
“But I don’t represent women’s rights. I represent my family. Some incident happened when I wanted to study and there is a whole work list. They stopped three days ago without saying anything. But at the end of the day, they raided the people of the house. Yes, our own self-esteem is no less and we will live with it,” she said.
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