Why are authorities, from China to Russia to Iran, imprisoning more and more foreign citizens? Jason Rezaian on the spread of political hostage taking? Brought to you by [Meco]( Recently at The Signal: Hussein Solomon on [why South Africaâs post-apartheid leadership finally lost its majority](. ⦠Today: Why are authorities, from China to Russia to Iran, imprisoning more and more foreign citizens? Jason Rezaian on the spread of political hostage taking. (From May 11, 2023.) ⦠Also: Gustav Jönsson on Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, and how Bill Clintonâs former chief speechwriter David Kusnet interprets the styles of populism in American politics today. Subscribe to The Signal? Share with a friend. ⦠Sent to you? Sign up [here](. Wrong Time, Wrong Place Ian No American had been arrested on charges of espionage in Russia since the Cold Warâuntil Evan Gershkovich, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, was in March 2023. The charges against him are baseless. (In fact, they have nothing to do with Gershkovich, apart from him being a high-profile American reporting from Russia in the middle of its indirect standoff with the United States over the war in Ukraine.) But theyâre not unusual. In recent years, itâs become increasingly common for autocratic governments to use arbitrary detentionâeffectively, hostage takingâas a way to exert pressure on rival governments. Itâs a tactic once associated almost exclusively with terrorists. A decade ago, only China and Iran had started appropriating it. But by last year, some 15 states were using it against the U.S. alone. Whatâs going on? Jason Rezaian is a columnist for The Washington Post. In 2014, while working as the Postâs bureau chief in Tehran, Rezaian and his wife, Yeganeh Salehi, were arrested by Iranian police. Salehi was later freed, while Rezaian was indicted on charges of spying, collaborating with hostile governments, and propaganda against the Iranian establishment. He was released in January 2016, after 544 days in prison. For Rezaian, the events that led from his initial detention to his ultimate use as a hostage were in some ways peculiar to the internal dynamics of the Iranian regime at the time. But the tactic has proven effective enough that autocrats around the world are now using it more and more. As the incentives to do this get stronger, Rezaian says, they put the U.S. and other affected countries in an accelerating race to counter them ⦠[Read on]( Join The Signal for full access. Advertisement From Jason Rezaian at The Signal: âPeople ask me all the time, donât these kinds of deals just incentivize more hostage taking? My answer is, noâand that this is actually the wrong question. The answer is no, because the reason why China or Russia or Iran keep taking hostages is that thereâs nothing deterring them. So the real question is, what can we do to deter autocratic governments from pulling stunts like this in the first place? Because as of now, thereâs literally nothing standing in the wayânothing to make the Chinese Communist Party or Putinâs apparatus, or the intelligence services of Iranâs Revolutionary Guard, think twice.â âWhen I think back to my interrogators, I remember how they knew they were pulling a fast one and getting away with it. They knew that, because the rule of law is so normal in a country like the U.S., when people here read headlines about an American being accused of something there, they read it with a sort of tacit assumption that there must be something to the chargeâeven if itâs not clear what that would be.â âI think the U.S. is getting wiser and more street-smart about these cases, and itâs better that it does now rather than later, because the number of cases is rising. There are 50-something of them right now. When I was jailed in Iran, there were four or five of us around the world. Other countries werenât doing this. Now itâs spreading like a virus.â [Read on]( Become a member to unlock the full conversation and explore the archive. Advertisement Managing email newsletters shouldnât be so tough. What if you had a distraction-free space, outside your inbox, for discovering and reading them? [Learn more]( NOTES Two Concepts of Populism Christopher Burns With U.S. President Joe Biden announcing he wonât seek reelection in November, the American news media hasâunsurprisingly, if not naturallyâkicked off intensive coverage of his presumptive successor as the Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, and her chances of winning in his place. How much money is she raising? What are her poll numbers like? Who will she pick as her running mate? Fair enough. But the question for American voters, whoâll determine the outcome of the election, isnât whether Harris will win but how the Democrats would govern under her leadership if she does. For many, that question has already been answered by partisan messaging or media narratives. But for the rest, itâll be answered by the substance of the policy agenda she advancesâand, not least, the style of the political rhetoric she advances it in. Her opponent, Donald Trump, has his own policy prioritiesâfrom ending illegal immigration to dismantling the existing federal bureaucracyâbut they all belong to a signature style, a form of populism that pits his supporters against his opponents, often foreigners, and sometimes the U.S. government itself. The style is central to what makes Trump feel as clear and compelling to his supporters as he does. As David Kusnet, President Bill Clintonâs former chief speechwriter, [noted during the first year of the current presidency](, Trump won in 2016 because he spoke to âAmericans who might have voted for Clinton and Obama but felt let down by the political and economic system.â Vastly outspent by Hillary Clinton, Trump did what she couldnâtâcapitalize on broad and deep feelings of disaffection and dislocation in America. It was apparent to Kusnet then that this style wouldnât be Trumpâs alone but ascendant in the Republican Party as a whole. Several Republican lawmakers, including one J.D. Vance, were already experimenting with variations on the theme. But as Kusnet also pointed out, Biden adopted a populist style of his own, throughout his 2020 campaign and from the outset of his presidencyâa âprogressive populismâ that emphasizes the economy and its bearing on everyday people. The two styles represent two traditions in American politics. To Kusnet, the underlying idea of the cultural tradition Trump represents is, âThey think theyâre better than you are,â whereas the underlying idea of the economic tradition Biden has represented is, âTheyâre robbing you blind.â Biden may not have condemned âmillionaires and billionairesâ with the same frequency or force as the Democratic senator and self-identifying socialist Bernie Sanders has. Still, Biden has repeatedly framed aspects of his policy agenda as responses to âcorporate greedâ on behalf of the American working and middle classes. Itâs been a relatively forbearing mode of economic populism, Kusnet says, âbecause it doesnât attack the wealthy, as such; it just attacks policies that favor the wealthy.â But itâs an idiom that can speak powerfully to millions of undecided voters. âGustav Jönsson [Explore Notes]( Want more? Join The Signal to unlock full conversations with hundreds of contributors, explore the archive, and support our independent current-affairs coverage. 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