Pete suggests there's little more to say about the Sunday Times story on the UK government's attitude towards the release of the Abdelbaset ali al-Megrahi. The suggestion given by the paper - and increasingly assumed to be true by everyone else - is that Megrahi was freed for fear that keeping him in prison in Scotland would jeopardise potentially £15bn worth of business for BP in Libya.
The implication is that, like the war in Iraq, it's all about the oil. Well, we had to reach this point eventually, I guess. Nonetheless, though it's written by my old friend Jason Allardyce, there's a little less to the Sunday Times's story than first appears. That's because the letters the paper has obtained have nothing to do with the decision to actually release Megrahi.
The clue is in the first paragraph:
Emphasis added. In other words, this has almost nothing to do with the actual decision to release Megrahi. Rather London agreed to Libyan demands that Megrahi, then the only Libyan serving time in a British prison, be included in a Prisoner Transfer Agreement between the two countries. But including Megrahi in the PTA - which displeased the Scottish authorities - is not the same as releasing him. Note too how the newspaper carefully talks about a "return to Libya", not release. That's because the PTA, like other agreements of this sort, provides for returning prisoners to serve out the rest of their terms in their own country. It says nothing about releasing them.The British government decided it was “in the overwhelming interests of the United Kingdom” to make Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi, the Lockerbie bomber, eligible for return to Libya, leaked ministerial letters reveal.
Granted, the Americans believe they had an understanding that Megrahi would serve his entire sentence in Scotland. I suspect the Americans are correct to believe there was such an understanding but it's also interesting that they sought it since this suggests that there always existed the possibility, long before any PTA was actually signed, that Megrahi might be sent to a Libyan jail.
Nonetheless, once the PTA was signed - and that caused some contoversy and ill-feeling in Scotland - Labour's ability to control the process ended. Because, PTA or no PTA, the final decision on Megrahi's fate was and always had been in the hands of the Scottish Justice Secretary.
Anyone with any understanding of Scottish politics - and granted, this excludes many London-based pundits - knows how unlikely it is that Alex Salmond and Kenny MacAskill listened to representations from Gordon Brown and Jack Straw and then thought to themselves, Well, we're Little League politicians, why don't we listen to what the Big Boys in London have to say and then do exactly what they want?
As Tom Harris says, we're supposed to believe that Wee Eck and Kenny took a wildly unpopular decision to protect their bitterest enemies? Come off it. The alternative view that London wanted Megrahi to be released so asked Edinburgh not to release him, confident that the uppity Jocks would, out of spite, do the opposite of what London wanted seems a) too clever by half, b) too clever for this government and c) daft.
Look too, at what actually happened. Libya petitioned Scotland to transfer - no release - Megrahi under the terms of the PTA and MacAskill rejected that application. Would he have done so if he had not also been able to free Megrahi on compassionate grounds? We cannot know but I suspect the answer would be yes.
Because the policy of successive ministries in Edinburgh had been that Megrahi should, as the Americans desired, serve his sentence in Scotland and Scotland alone. Transferring him to Libya would have been the mother of all U-turns. Doing so as a result of pressure from London would have ended Kenny MacAskill's career, destroying whatever credibility you're inclined to grant him.
Equally, supposing that the SNP would accede to such pressure* rather than use it for its own political advantage is utterly implausible. When was the last time the SNP declined an opportunity to be seen to be "Standing up for Scotland"? That, in this case, they'd have been standing up for the independence of the legal system would have won them support from across the political spectrum. It's not a tricky argument: Look, London want to release the man convicted of the owrst terrorist atrocity in British history but we insist that since he was convicted in a Scottish court he serve his full sentence in a Scottish prison. And we'll brook no interference from London on this matter.
Generally speaking, when a politician does something unpopular it's because he or she thinks it's the right thing to do. They're not in the business of courting unpopularity. The most obvious reason for Megrahi's release - accepting that it may well have been in everyone's interests that he be sent home - remains the most persuasive. The matter may have been handled poorly - though doesn't this also actually weaken the conspiracy theory? - but Megrahi was released because MacAskill considered it decent to let a relatively minor functionary (in the scheme of things) and symbolic prisoner die at home.
There may well be an intimate connection between the signing of the PTA and BP's deal with the Libyan government going through and I've no doubt that Tripoli expected that Megrahi would one day be transferred to a Libyan prison. But little of that actually changes very much: the decision to free him was taken in Edinburgh, not London. The Sunday Times scoop is interesting but less than it seems.
I know this is disappointing since people desperately do want there to be some shenanigans and few people are prepared to grant this government anything, but both Jack straw and Alex Salmond are making sense here.
*But if you were to build a conspiracy theory you'd want to know what representations BP made to Holyrood and impact the Megrahi decision might have on their North Sea operations.
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alex buchan
August 30th, 2009 2:03pm Report this commentYes but it's not good politics to confuse issues, which is precisely what the SNP are doing. MacAskill's decision was quasi-judicial which means it had to be within the letter of the law. There was no exemption for Scotland or for Megrahi from the terms of the PTA.
Even if the decision was Scotland's to make, it still had to be made within those perameters of the legislation. MacAskill's decision can be seen as a rearguard measure to render the PTA application in front of him redundant.
He was put in an impossible position, but I would rather the SNP came clean about that and we could have a proper debate, not just about the merits of this case but also about the limitations of any devolution settlement. As Enoch Powell said 'Devolution is power retained' and this is certainly the case here.
Ben
August 30th, 2009 3:32pm Report this commentHo ho ho. You backed the wrong horse here Alex, and all these posts later, you still can't admit it. Everyone with half a brain can work out the realpolitik gong on, albeit we're not talking world peace, rather a seedy oil deal that would probably have gone through anyway. Just out of interest, in order to justify "compassionate" release, how long do you think Megrahi should live for? I mean, if he survives a year, rather than the tree months, was it still a fine and noble move by plucky Kenny and Eck? We need a figure!
Craig Strachan
August 30th, 2009 5:00pm Report this commentAlex: "Megrahi was released because MacAskill considered it decent to let a relatively minor functionary (in the scheme of things) and symbolic prisoner die at home"
And to live at home until he dies - maybe for a good bit longer than we have been led to believe.
porkbelly
August 30th, 2009 6:48pm Report this comment"Generally speaking, when a politician does something unpopular it's because he or she thinks it's the right thing to do." No. When a politician does something unpopular it's because he or she decides that public opinion be damned, there is an opportunity to line their pockets/damage their enemies/increase their power/aid their friends. Your last paragraph, I predict, will prove the missing piece to this sordid puzzle.
ndm
August 30th, 2009 7:31pm Report this commentYet another sane post on the issue. Indeed, just the latest in a chain of what are probably the only sane posts I've seeen on the issue on either side of the Atlantic.
Anyway, Jason Allardyce writes:
-- The exploration deal for oil and gas, potentially worth up to £15 billion, was announced in May 2007.
Let's get some perspective on this number. In 2008, BPs operating revenue was £361B or about £1B a day. Over an unspecified period of time the Libyan deal would have represented just over two weeks of revenue to BP. In 2007, BPs operating revenue was £284B so in just one year the companies operating revenue increased by four to five times the lifetime value of the Libya deal.
The upshot is that this deal doesn't seem to represent a huge deal for BP but it probably does represent a huge deal for the BP executives responsible for it and whose annual bonuses would presumably be impacted by its success.
Olaf Rye
August 30th, 2009 9:49pm Report this commentI must confess that I find the prospect of a conspiracy difficult to entertain--the politicians in both London and Edinburgh are so bloody stupid, venal and incompetent that I cannot imagine that they could come up with anything more sophisticated than attempting to smear people in the public eye that have criticised them. This is just the cocktail party mob in Edinburgh wanting to look ever so cool and morally sophisticated by showing 'compassion'. I am sure they will be the popular figures in the next series of dinner-parties given by their left-of-centre friends on the Continent, in between moments of sad reminiscing over the lovely days when the USSR was still about.
Gabriel
August 30th, 2009 10:46pm Report this commentA perfectly plausible narrative would run thus:
1) Westminster wanted to release Megrahi, but didn't want to take the flack for it, either at home or abroad.
2) So Holyrood release him whilst pretending to be cocking a snook at Westminster, safe in the knowledge that there would be no actual retribution. Labour allow the SNP to blither on about 'unique Socttish values' knowing that they won't lose any popularity among the English electorate.
It's perfectly possible that MacCaskill simply miscalculated the reaction to the release. However, from what I can see the move is actually quite popular among the sort of people who vote SNP, but think they're going a bit soft. So perhaps he didn't miscalculate so much anyway, after all, what's Obama going to do, invade?
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