The ones in Canada, France, Germany, and Russia, for example. Have those embassies now been closed? If not, what government do their ambassadors represent, and how does that work? If so, at what point were they closed, under what authority or precedent, and by whom?
I imagine the landlord will find a new tenant when the rent isn’t paid…
The US has requested that they are all closed until new authorities are in power. So I assume they will all be converted to Halliburton offices and Starbucks cafes.
Anyone?
I know you were kidding and all, but I heard that this really is a problem, such that diplomatic missions who fail to pay their rent (or more likely, fail to have their governments pay the rent) are difficult, if not impossible, to evict!!
They will either change duties to fit into the new power structure back home, or they will return to Iraq or go to jail
Oh, come one, people this is GQ!
Canada:
According to this news story:
Strangely enough, I couldn’t find anything on France. Last week, a news story reported that large quantities of shredded paper were put out to garbage by the Iraqi embassy in Tokyo. That’s all I could find.
Most of them seem to be hunkering down, shredding anything incriminating, and waiting to welcome their new bosses with open arms:
The ambassador to the UN had the most abrupt and well-publicized about-face:
Other ambassadors and dimplomatic staffs are in various postures.
Some are doing some spring cleaning:
As far as the embassies in the other countries in the OP, the Moscow embassy is still partially active, mostly at denying reports of contact between Russian and Iraqi intelligence services:
The Paris contingent of diplomats is still there:
At what, he doesn’t say.
The Iraqi representation Ottawa is only one person, and the Canadian government has no plans to force him out.
I think that’s everyone you asked about.