The taliban protected and aided binladen and would not co operate at all when asked to turn him over
for 'arrest' for the 911 attacks.
Binladen is not an afghan he is an arab, and several of the 911 attackers were arab, there was no
brotherly reason for taliban to protect binladen.
Taliban and binladen were thick as thieves at that time, and taliban were killing and destroying families
within that country.
They are not true afghans, they are intruders who were interferring with the afghan citizens.
The taliban made a 'huge' error in judgement by siding with 'him', and could have prevented
much bloodshedand had they turned him over to the u.s., they could have resumed
their mean and nasty ways they had with the citizens, so their poor judgement
hurt them, and prevented them from pushing their way into the leadership of the
country.
I'm not sure what you mean by "The taliban protected and aided binladen". There is no evidence that the Taliban had any involvement in the events of 9/11. It doesn't matter whether or not the people the US wanted the Taliban hand over were Afghan citizens or not. The Taliban were responsible for the safety and security of everyone under their jurisdiction, including people accused by a foreign power of a heinous crime. Therefore the US had to make a formal extradition
request and the Taliban could legally attach conditions for complying with that request.
Extradition is the official process whereby one nation or state surrenders a suspected or convicted criminal to another nation or state. Between nation states, extradition is regulated by treaties. Where extradition is compelled by laws, such as among sub-national jurisdictions, the concept may be known more generally as rendition.
President Bush’s unconditional
demand for bin Laden’s extradition or face war violated international laws and treaties. The Taliban responded to President Bush’s extradition demand by asking to see the evidence linking bin Laden and others to the 9/11 attacks. The US refused.
The Taliban then offered a compromise. They offered to deliver bin Laden to an independent third party for trial. Again the Bush administration refused and re-stated their demand for bin Laden’s extradition was unconditional: Give us bin Laden or else face war.
The US demands were not only arrogant and a violation of international laws and treaties... they were also a double standard.
Consider the case of Jose Posada Carriles. He’s widely suspected of planning the bombing of a Cuban airliner over Venezuelan skies killing 73 people on board. Among the dead were 24 members of Cuba’s national youth fencing team.
Cubana Flight 455 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In other words, Carriles is a terrorist just like Bin Laden.
Venezuela has repeatedly sought the extradition of Posada to stand trial for this heinous crime. The U.S. government has repeatedly refused to comply with Venzyuela's extradition request claiming that they fear Posada will be tortured if he is returned to Venezuela.
BBC NEWS | Americas | No deportation for Cuban militant
Sure that's possible and a good reason to refuse an extradition request.
What are the odds that if the Taliban handed Bin Laden over to the Bush regime, he'd also face torture and the death penalty?
BTW, Venezuela and the United States have a formal extradition treaty that the US has chosen to violate. The US had no extradition treaty with Taliban government in Afghanistan.
The Taliban’s refusal to comply with Bush’s unconditional extradition request was no different in principle than the U.S. government’s refusal to comply with Venezuela’s extradition request. According to international law,
a refusal to comply with an extradition request is not a legally recognized justification for starting a war
The American attack against the Taliban is yet another example of the Bush regime's international lawlessness.
BTW, I do not support the Taliban. I support observing international laws and treaties and holding all nations to the same standard. In this case, if the US had acted legally and accepted the Taliban's compromise offer to hand him over to an independent third party for trial, bin Laden would probably be serving life in prison somewhere, a pointless war in Afghanistan could have been avoided, and Don Cherry would be just talking about hockey every Saturday night on Coach's Corner rather than paying his respects to yet another fallen Canadian soldier.