Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 22 – In 1931, the US
government charged mobster Al Capone for tax evasion, far from the most heinous
of his crimes but one for which it could most easily get a conviction in
court. That indirect judgment had the
effect of ending Capone’s rule of the Chicago underworld.
Now, almost a century later,
something analogous appears to be happening with Vladimir Putin who may find
himself more isolated for his organization of a state system of doping by
Russian athletes than he has been for his other, more serious crimes, including
political murders and the invasions of Georgia and Ukraine.
This possibility is suggested by the
confluence of two events this week. In the first, British Foreign Minister Boris
Johnson said he agreed with that “Putin will use the World Cup 2018 just as
Hitler used the 1936 Olympics” in Berlin (mk.ru/politics/2018/03/21/zakharova-otvetila-dzhonsonu-za-sravnenie-chm2018-s-olimpiadoy1936.html).
And in the second, officials at the
World Anti-Doping Agency said that they were taking additional steps to deprive
Russia of the right to host future competitions, although the officials
indicated that they will not seek to take away any events, including this year’s
World Cup, that Moscow has already been awarded (lenta.ru/news/2018/03/21/wada_rus/).
That would seem to limit the
appropriateness of the Al Capone analogy to Putin, but there is reason to think
that is not the case because the doping scandal coming on top of the Kremlin’s efforts
to kill its opponents in Russia and abroad and its invasion of neighboring
countries is leading ever more governments to think about various forms of
boycotting the World Cup.
Britain, Denmark, Spain, Poland,
Ukraine and Sweden are actively considering boycotts at least by officials; and
even the governments in Italy, Spain, France and Germany have been discussing
that possibility, although few think they will follow through (rusmonitor.com/budut-li-evropejjskie-strany-budut-bojjkotirovat-chm-2018-v-rossii-i-esli-budut-to-kakie.html).
Such boycotts send
the kind of message that even Putin will understand, yet another indication
that anyone who violates the rules of the game as often and as cavalierly as he
does will not be accepted as a member of the international community in good
standing however many nuclear weapons he has and however willing he is to use violence.
And it is
worth remembering that Al Capone’s income tax conviction not only cost him his
leadership of the American mob: it represented a major step toward the
beginning of the end of that criminal conspiracy.
No comments:
Post a Comment