Girl Troubles

By M. Giant

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Kevin is still leaning on Dana to pay attention to him instead of the international crisis she's working on. Worse, he's blackmailing her into using her CTU access to help him pull off a big score. He promises he'll leave her alone after this, but I think we all know better.

In the wake of Farhad's attempted coup against Hassan, the president is ordering nationwide crackdowns back home. Taylor worries that this might threaten her peace process, but Hassan won't budge. And nor will his wife in her insistence on leaving him.

Bazhaev's son Josef insists on taking his brother -- the one dying of radiation sickness -- to a clinic in defiance of their father's orders. And he short-circuits a whole national debate by showing that health care is easy to get if you're willing to point a gun at a doctor and threaten his family.

But enough of the B, C and D plots. Kiefer decides to go along with Walker, even though she's now demonstrated herself to be a witness-mutilating psycho. And said mutilee is willing to take her to Vladimir, with Kiefer following behind and using her hidden earpiece to feed her the info she needs for their cover story. Vladimir turns out to be a pretty dangerous guy who has a violent history with Walker. Her first contact with him goes okay, until she and Ziya are stuffed in the trunk of a car, cutting her off from Kiefer. He thinks it's all over and has Hastings get ready to call in the cavalry on the car he's following, only to learn it's a decoy. Vladimir's just about ready to execute Walker, but doesn't -- because she tells him to. Chalk up one more failed suicide attempt for Renee Walker. But at least the con is still on, and Kiefer still has a chance to find the uranium in the four hours before Farhad gets his hands on it.

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Tonight's previouslies focus on Farhad Hassan, President Omar Hassan, Sergei Bazhaev, Renee Walker, and Jack Bauer. Some of those people might even get more than five minutes of screen time tonight.

Hey, it's daytime, even though the following takes place between 8:00 PM and 9:00 PM! Maybe the medieval domes and minarets and the subtitle reading "Islamic Republic of Kamistan" might have something to do with that. And with the exotic Arabian Nights music on the soundtrack. This isn't the first time the name Kamistan has appeared onscreen -- it showed up in a episode on a TV news channel's subtitle -- but this is the first time it's been so clearly communicated. And is it a coincidence that the initials of Hassan's fractious home country are IRK?

In an apartment somewhere, some dude in a well-worn military uniform is watching Not Al Jazeera, which is reporting in subtitled Arabic that "forces loyal to President Hassan initiated a series of arrests against traitors attempting to overthrow the government. Suspects have been identified in all branches of the government." Someone's been a busy boy, from halfway around the world, no less. An underling brings the watcher a satellite phone. It's Farhad on the other end, saying he's still a free man and with Bazhaev. But the general -- I can tell he's a general by the insignia on his uniform and because Farhad addresses him as "general" -- says Bazhaev ruined everything, and their guys are getting rounded up all over the country. Farhad assures the general that the Americans will put a stop to that, for the sake of the peace talks. What are they going to do, invade? Anything for peace, I guess. "Once we have the uranium, my brother will become irrelevant anyway," he adds, which sounds like kind of a leap. He says he needs the money wired to Bazhaev's account.

Bazhaev and his elder son Josef are currently ministering to the youngest Bazhaev, who you'll recall is busy dying of radiation poisoning in the pantry of the restaurant. They feed him some water and leave him to get back to it. But out in the dining room, Josef floats the idea of bringing his younger brother, Oleg, to a doctor he found in Mount Vernon. Josef says he knows the doctor's family and where they live, so they can keep him quiet. Bazhaev says it's too risky; with the Americans looking for weapons-grade uranium, the last thing they need is for a Bazhaev to turn up at a hospital with signs of exposure to just that. In short, Bazhaev's prepared to let his youngest die. Josef protests the conditions under which Oleg is currently doing that, and after staring stone-faced into Josef's big puppy-dog eyes for a long moment, Bazhaev agrees to let him take Oleg to the country house. He doesn't need Josef for anything else right now? Because these hours usually seem pretty busy for everyone. Josef turns gratefully to comply, just as one of Bazhaev's goons reports that Farhad wants to talk to him now.

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2010-01-29
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recap (100%)
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