If the plane is not flying under diplomatic recognization - then the plane must comply with the regulations and the laws of the nation in which it is overflying and/or landing in. If the plane is flying on a diplomatic mission it falls in a different catergory, not sure of all the rules in that regardsOriginally Posted by Kaiser of Arabia
If they are using planes under the guise of diplomatic couriers - then maybe your comments here would be correct - but I am willing to wager that the planes are flying under a different guise then diplomatic.
If the nation where the plane plans to stop does not want the activities on their terrorities or the individuals - that nation can refuse them permission to land. If the nation allows the plane to stop but suspects actions that violate their laws - they then have two choices - arrest all involved and take ownership of situation - or allow the aircraft to depart. Most nations will ignore the situation while its own their soil - but complain after the fact. To bad they don't have the backbone to attempt to arrest the CIA agents and take the plane when its on their soil.
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