The recent incident, with the two Romanian workers arrested by the US military in Iraq on allegations of spying, is a carbon-copy case for the incident two years ago, when three Romanian journalists were kidnapped in the same country. The mastermind behind both events was the presidential office of Traian Basescu.
Like not so very resourceful American screenwriters, who always go on to make less successful sequels of a mildly successful movie, this last doctored incident was less well performed than the first one.
The first thing making the two situations look-alike is the way both the journalists and the workers behaved upon their return home, in front of the media.
The two workers, who spent three months in prison, at the hands of the Americans, for taking photos inside the military base they were working in, should have felt free to make whatever statements they wanted.
And yet, in their case, as in the one of the journalists kidnapped in Iraq two years ago, authorities could not help but coach them into what to speak and how. Even so, the two men gave away a few pieces of information which contradict the official version sold to the public.
The story goes like this: two Romanian citizens, on a contract with an American base in Iraq, decided after several months of stay to take photos, not inside their own base, where civilians and military often did that, but in a strictly forbidden area.
When stopped by the military patrolling the area, they first denied any wrongdoing, and then hid their camera. When searched and found with the incriminating material upon them, they were clear candidates for a thorough investigation and search of their rooms.
This search showed they had on their laptop downloads of movies showing the atrocities in Iraq, and email addresses for people outside the military base. Clear signs of the links t