I'm not addressing the idea she was targeted because she was an American, which I don't believe, but rather that if as you put forward the Italians "feared" Edda's arrival in part because they "feared" the power of the US they would have picked someone else to frame.
Frame is such a strong word Grinder. I DON'T think they set out to "frame" Amanda. I think for very stupid reasons, they thought or at least some of the cops thought she was guilty and the interrogation methods were SOP. They were doing what in their minds was their job get the bad guys, or in this case the bad girl. They did what they thought was necessary to get that job done. This isn't the first or the last PD to resort to marginally ethical methods to secure an incriminating statement.
They wouldn't be the first or last cops that lied to a suspect in an interview. The Italians didn't invent the Reid interrogation technique. The one person I blame above all else for what happened to Amandatory and Raffaele is Stefanoni. I'm convinced that she fabricated some of the lab results.
I also don't think they feared the US embassy. But I believe they thought they could be troublesome.
I agree, Stefanoni belongs in jail!
As an American, I also agree that they didn’t directly frame Amanda just because she was an American; HOWEVER, the fact that KILLER-Amanda was an American would (perhaps subconsciously) take the pressure off of that Italian college town since the Italian authorities could blame Kercher’s murder as an aberration committed by non-Italians (Amanda + Lumumba), and perhaps they subconsciously ran with that?
If Amanda was just Meredith’s hapless roommate with a weak alibi, then why didn’t they take Filomena’s DNA to test, and check out Filomena’s alibi?
Filomena and Amanda had the exact same alibis (they both spent the night with their respective boyfriends 10 minutes from their cottage), but Filomena got a big investigative pass, while Amanda was put thru the reamer.
Of course, while Amanda and Filomena both emotionally cried, Amanda cried at the wrong times, and Filomena cried at appropriate times (according to Italian standards, of course).
While Raffaele was Italian, his part was to play the duped boyfriend of a fiendish American witch. Even Guede’s involvement would be downplayed.
As an American, I see rampant anti-Americanism in play here, not only by the Italians, but also (amazingly) by many Brits.
The Italians may be pissed after CIA agents hustled a suspect out of Italy, and also there’s the gondola incident where an American jet clipped its wires causing skiers to die. I can understand anger over that.
America also defeated Italy in WWII, but we also defeated Germany and Japan in WWII, but I don’t sense the same anti-American hostility from those other former Axis powers today?
As for the UK, amazingly many Brits today seemingly harbor more hostility towards Americans than Germans or Japanese do, which is amazing since America saved England from certain defeat in WWII. My own dad served in the US Army Air Force back then, thank you very much.
I realize that America has abused its super-powers over the years – e.g., I grudgingly served in Vietnam in the 1960s. At the time I thought Vietnam was a stupid war, but I was too young to even vote when I was sent over there, so over I went.
Ironically, today I feel the Vietnamese people hold Americans in higher esteem than do the British. After what we did over there in the 1960s, I personally feel that the Vietnamese people are amazing in their forgiveness. Today, as an American, I would feel safer visiting Vietnam than I would Italy, that’s for sure!