Sisko was an accessory to MURDER, he knew about it and didn't report it to anybody. He in a manner of speaking set it up himself.
Actually, the episode indicates that Starfleet Command knew all about it, and this is confirmed in
Hollow Men.
Even had the outcome not been the death of the Praetor (or was it a senator? I don't recall) he actively involved himself in a VERY massive and detrimental act of War with the Romulan Star Empire in order to lure them into a war that they had no (from their perspective) reason to enter.
Actually, "In the Pale Moonlight" makes it very clear that the Romulan Senate was almost evenly divided between those in favor of war against the Dominion and those in favor of continued neutrality.
He framed an entire government, effectively putting them at war with another government for the sole purpose of relieving his own government from the effects of war with the government that he framed.
No. Let's get very exact here. He did not frame an entire government in order to relieve his government from the effects of war. He framed a foreign government
to save his entire society from destruction. The stakes that motivated him were
much higher than you're making it sound here.
He then went on to say in that episode that he'd do it all again! This is a thing that is so bad that even given the "good" outcome of the actions, and the nobility behind the reasoning of them even hindsight can not justify completely those actions.
Really? Saving billions upon billions of lives from death or enslavement -- and doing so within the framework of accountability to a liberal democratic government -- doesn't constitute justification?
If/when that comes out I fully expect (if Sisko is alive) him to be thrown in jail -- to which I'd expect him to go with his head held high for the good that ultimately resulted from the evil he did.
This I agree with. Benjamin Sisko would not seek to evade responsibility for his actions, and that's a very important mitigating factor. Benjamin Sisko -- unlike, say, John Yoo or Donald Rumsfeld or David Addington or George W. Bush and their desire to evade responsibility for their crimes -- would take responsibility for his actions within the framework of liberal democracy, and would only seek to avoid such responsibility if not doing so were to be a provocation to war.
I'd also expect the Romulan Star Empire to either fully wage war on the Federation, or at least demand ludicrous amounts of reparations from them.
Well, the Romulans aren't really in a position to be demanding much of anything as of 2380...
And in Hollow Men, his role in the event *is* revealed, to senior members of Starfleet Command. And they don't do anything.
Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges
Which would make them the biggest hypocrites ever, in my book. Clearly the Federation stands for exactly nothing... and that's a problem given the alleged high ideals they purport to stand for.
Really? Are you
really going to indict an entire society on the basis of the criminal actions of a small number of its military service members? Are you
really going to say that the Federation -- by all means a successful multinational state dedicated to universal liberty, sentient rights, equality, diplomacy, exploration, scientific development, trade, and peace; a society that's created peace and political unity from a collection of over one hundred fifty separate societies, many of whom were almost constantly at war with one-another before the UFP came along; a society that's consistently avoided war whenever possible, that did not start the Dominion War, and which constantly sought to preserve the rights of foreign states with whom it was not at peace.... Are you
really going to claim that the Federation stands for nothing just because some admirals at Starfleet didn't report Sisko and Garak?
That's not to say that your argument that that choice is immoral and illegal is invalid. It's not to say that the argument that those admirals were being hypocrites and not living up to the principles of the Federation is invalid. But to claim that an entire state is rendered invalid because of the criminal actions of a few of its service members is just irrational and ridiculously two-dimensional thinking. You might as well argue that the Federal Republic of Germany doesn't have a right to exist because a few German soldiers in Afghanistan recently took commemorative photos in front of a collection of skulls, or that the United States doesn't stand for anything because of the criminal actions of its current president.