USA Russophobes Trap, Harass, Demonize,
Solitary Confine, Expel
Maria Butina sits for post-USA-prison interview (excerpts)
“… Today…, if you are Russian and you are in the US, there is reason to
be worried. I am living proof.”
U.S.
Officials’, Media
Slander,
False (or Miscarriage Of) Justice, Other Cruelties
alse image, False allegations
Mainstream media along with U.S. Attorney General’s office painted a
picture of her in a familiar movie theme and image (later issued apology) of “spies
who are ready to use sex for promotions, new contacts and a chance to reach
high-profile US officials”
Maria Butina Responds
They should be embarrassed. The US positions itself as a country that
protects women’s rights. They should be ashamed of their behavior. They just
made the allegations based on my looks. I have a great family. I am proud of
it. Both of my grandmothers are teachers. We share the same name. I have
nothing to do with these sex stories. What about my life? How do I live on?
Yes, they apologized.
But what about me now?
I was extremely surprised and saddened that the judge did not do
anything about it. The only statement by the judge was, ‘It took me five
minutes to realize that the communications you have submitted as proof are
messages between friends’ – back in Russia. It had nothing to do with the US.
It was completely absurd.
I thought she would defend me, defend my honor and my dignity, because
she was also a woman.
They could have accused me of being anybody – a foreign agent or
whatever… but those allegations …
As if they didn’t know they were lying.
They knew it. They saw the messages. They realized it was a deliberate
lie to keep me detained without any chance of bail.
What do I do now with my reputation?
alse espionage stories
Maria Butina Responds
I was never charged with espionage; that was simply speculation.
The media blew it all out of proportion in their stories, perhaps
because of how I looked and some fantasy they made up.
Maybe they’ve seen too many Hollywood movies and thought this is how a
spy should look. I don’t know, maybe they were just too thick.
rrest
Maria Butina Responds
I opened it [the door] to see some 12 FBI agents in full gear, with
assault rifles. They told me to step out from the apartment and handcuffed me,
asking whether I had anything I could use to hurt them. What? A copybook maybe?
That’s how I was arrested….
…After my home was searched, I didn’t change any passwords on my
computer, didn’t delete any files. That’s because, again, I had done nothing
wrong.
I handed over all the documents voluntarily.
So, I really don’t know why they needed to arrest me. If it was just
because I didn’t register, then they could have simply fined me for that and
that’s it. Why such cruelty, for what?
olitary confinement
Maria Butina Responds
… It is “not standard procedure.
I don’t know why they had to be so cruel. I tend to think – this is
just conjecture – that maybe they were trying to break my will or something
like that, learn some secrets. But I didn’t have any secrets.
I think that when we started those briefings, as they call them, with
the prosecutors, they understood everything after the first or second talks.
They had all my computers, which they still do, and all of my papers. I
hadn’t deleted anything, and they searched through everything.
There was nothing there. But they couldn’t admit there was nothing.
They had to justify why the US tax payers paid for this show. So they did.
Plea bargain” and “guilty” plea—WHY?
Maria Butina Responds: I saw with my own eyes that there is no justice in the US.
More than 90 percent of defendants plead guilty to avoid a jury,
because they know they will be convicted. What kind of justice are we talking
about?
…Imagine you are in a foreign country, away from your parents… you have
no contact with your family. You are locked up in solitary confinement. It’s
very cold and you sit on the floor. You might be facing a 15-year sentence. I
thought about how old I was going to be and whether my parents were going to be
alive when that day came.
And then you find out, that according to statistics, in the US about
98% of defendants who face a jury get convicted.
So the chance of you losing is, well, quite high.
Besides, who would have been judging me? I would have faced a jury in
Washington – the people who watch CNN, the people who have already been fed
this narrative, and with those people, it wouldn’t have mattered what I was
being accused of.
I would have been on trial for being Russian. I would have been
sentenced to 15 years. So I believe I made the only right decision. There was
no other way.
Reflection,
Conditions, Conclusions
.S. Russia Phobia and Domestic Power Plays
Maria Butina
I think that what happened to me, and how Russia is generally depicted
in the US, has really nothing to do with Russia per se. They just picked a
scapegoat.
Especially now with all those petty games the Republicans and Democrats
are playing for power.
The establishment has nothing to do with people or with democracy, the
politicians are just fighting for power and that’s why they need a foreign
threat, an enemy. Who could make an ideal enemy? So, they picked Russia and now
Russia is blamed for everything, even though there are no grounds for any of
the accusations.
And then they thought, let’s take some student – like myself – and put
her behind bars, and say she is responsible for everything.
That is just absurd.
If I were a US national, I would be offended to hear something like
that, that my own government treats me like that. Do they think I really don’t
understand anything? That I cannot choose a candidate on my own, and I need
Russian interference to help me make a choice? It’s just ridiculous.
… Today…, if you are Russian and you are in the US, there is reason to
be worried. And I am living proof.
tudying abroad, political activism
United States-Russian relations
Peace
Maria Butina
…These two things do not contradict each other. …. When you come to
study international relations, it’s only natural to do something practical in
this area too.
I always had a lot of respect for the US, and I still have. And
I also love my home country dearly. So, I thought it only reasonable to do
something for the sake of friendship between the two countries, to try to
improve relations and engage in civic diplomacy.
… I still want to do that. There are good and bad people, it’s the same
everywhere.
I believe that the American people should really start paying
attention to what is happening in their country.There are good people there; I know this, so I think that good
relations between Russia and the US will eventually be built on the foundation
of friendship between people, between students – thanks to student exchange
programs and religious affinity, too.
That’s exactly what I was basically doing, building bridges between the
countries though shared interests in gun rights, and I thought that everything
would be OK. Unfortunately, the US authorities had been busy disrupting such
activities, probably they don’t want peace.
eginning, Ending
Maria Butina
I wanted to see this American
dream…; I was like a moth to a flame, attracted to all these great things. And
unfortunately, now I don’t know the answer – where is life great for people? It
seems to me America is not the answer.…
Until yesterday I was behind bars [in America]. Today [October, 26] was
my first sunrise in a free world.
ussian national Mariia Valeryevna Butina (transliterated as Maria
Butina or Mariya Butina) born November 10, 1988 (Barnaul, Altai Krai, USSR), a
graduate of Altai State University (a coeducational and public research
university in Barnaul, Russia) and the American University (a private research
university in Washington, D.C.), was sentenced by a federal judge (April 26,
2019) “to 18 months in prison.” After subjecting her to various forms of mistreatment
and imprisoning her for “more than 15 months” in the Tallahassee Federal
Correctional Institution (where she suffered more mistreatment), U.S.
authorities on October 25, 2019, released Maria Butina from prison and expelled
her to her homeland.
Worth
repeating
“the
American people should really start
paying
attention to what is happening in their country.”
Sources
ull interview transcript worth reading, video worth hearing
RT [RT video link and image] “‘My hair color was proof of guilt’: Maria
Butina talks about her arrest, the NRA, and Senate testimony” (FULL INTERVIEW
with RT’s Dmitry Leontiev) October 27, 2019: “Accused of spying and jailed in
the US, Russian student and gun rights activist Maria Butina has told RT about
her ordeal, from staring down a dozen armed FBI agents at her door to how
Hollywood clichés served as proof of guilt.” She was “arrested in July 2018 (and)
spent eight months in custody, most of it in solitary confinement, before
eventually pleading guilty in December.” The US media told “juicy stories about
her that later proved false.”
Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Butina
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_University
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altai_State_University
Russo phobe: Anti-Russian sentiment (or Russophobia): “a fear and/or dislike
for Russia, Russians and/or Russian culture.
A variety of mass culture clichés about Russia and Russians exist. Many
of these stereotypes were originally developed in the Western world during the
Cold War and were primarily used as elements of political war against the
Soviet Union.
Some of these prejudices are still observed in the discussions of the
relations with Russia.
In modern popular culture, negative representation of Russia and
Russians is also often described as functional because the use of such stereotypes
can be used to frame reality such as “creating an image of an ‘enemy’”; or for purported
reasons of counterweight, proffering certain excuses or an explanations.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Russian_sentiment
Further Notes on U.S. imprisoning
of foreign nationals
Press TV October 18, 2019
Iranian scientist Masoud Soleimani was travelling to the United States
last year on “a visa issued upon an invitation by the Minnesota-based medical
center Mayo Clinic to lead a research program on the treatment of stroke
patients” when he was detained by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Since that time he has languished in prison, his mother has died; and he is
“reportedly suffering from several health problems which have been aggravated
during his incarceration.” [Sounds like part of another pattern repeated by
U.S. personnel and “allies” against selected foreign nationals] Press TV
reporting October 18, 2019: “US detention of Iranian scientist ‘very disturbing’”
https://www.presstv.com/Detail/2019/10/18/608952/Iran-US-politics-sceince-Masoud-Soleimani
FARS News Agency October 15, 2019
“Iranian Scientist Kept in US Jail without Trial for over 1 Year: TEHRAN
(FNA)- Over one year has passed since the FBI jailed renowned Iranian stem cell
scientist Professor Massoud Soleimani in a US prison but no trial has yet been
held for him.”
“Almost 50 Iranian nationals are currently imprisoned in the United
States under various pretexts, mainly bypassing the US sanctions. Even American
citizens working for Iranian entities are not immune from US government’s
hostile policies.
“Back in January, the FBI took Muslim journalist Marzieh Hashemi, who
works for Iran’s English-language Press TV television, from St. Louis Lambert
International Airport to a detention center in Washington DC without placing
any charges against her, forcing her to eat pork and remove her Islamic hijab.”
Soleimani has been imprisoned in the US without trial since October 07,
2018. Last October, Soleimani, a professor and biomedical researcher at the
Tarbiat Modares University (TMU) in Tehran, was arrested by the FBI upon his
arrival in the US. According to his Atlanta attorney, Leonard Franco, he has
since been held behind bars in a jail in Atlanta without bond.
https://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13980723000332
Wikipedia
Category: Extrajudicial prisoners of the United States by nationality
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Extrajudicial_prisoners_of_the_United_States_by_nationality
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Russian_extrajudicial_prisoners_of_the_United_States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Iranian_extrajudicial_prisoners_of_the_United_States
“The United States Department of Defense acknowledges holding 3 Iranian
captives in Guantanamo. A total of 779
captives have been held in extrajudicial detention in the Guantanamo Bay
detention camps, in Cuba since the camps opened on January 11, 2002.
“The camp population peaked in 2004 at approximately 660.” Since the
United States Supreme Court’s ruling in Rasul v. Bush, 19 “new captives… have
been transferred” to Guantanamo Bay. As of July 2012, the camp reportedly had a
population of “approximately 168.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iranian_detainees_at_Guantanamo_Bay
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