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30 January 2010 By Glenn Greenwald
The Washington Post's
Dana Priest today reports that "U.S. military teams
and intelligence agencies are deeply involved in
secret joint operations with Yemeni troops who in the
past six weeks have killed scores of people." That's
no surprise, of course, as Yemen is now another
predominantly Muslim country (along with Somalia and
Pakistan) in which our military is secretly involved
to some unknown degree in combat operations without
any declaration of war, without any public debate, and
arguably (though not clearly) without any
Congressional authorization. The exact role played by
the U.S. in the late-December missile attacks in
Yemen, which killed numerous civilians, is still
unknown. But buried in Priest's
article is her revelation that American citizens are
now being placed on a secret "hit list" of people whom
the President has personally authorized to be killed:
After the Sept. 11
attacks, Bush gave the CIA, and later the military,
authority to kill U.S. citizens abroad if
strong evidence existed that an American was
involved in organizing or carrying out terrorist
actions against the United States or U.S. interests,
military and intelligence officials said. . . . The Obama
administration has adopted the same stance. If a
U.S. citizen joins al-Qaeda, "it doesn't really
change anything from the standpoint of whether we
can target them," a senior administration official
said. "They are then part of the enemy." Both the CIA and the
JSOC maintain lists of individuals, called "High
Value Targets" and "High Value Individuals," whom
they seek to kill or capture. The JSOC list
includes three Americans, including [New Mexico-born
Islamic cleric Anwar] Aulaqi, whose name was added
late last year. As of several months ago, the CIA
list included three U.S. citizens, and an
intelligence official said that Aulaqi's name has
now been added. Indeed, Aulaqi was
clearly one of the prime targets of the late-December
missile strikes in Yemen, as anonymous officials
excitedly announced -- falsely, as it turns out --
that he was killed in one of those strikes. Just think about this
for a minute. Barack Obama, like George Bush before
him, has claimed the authority to order American
citizens murdered based solely on the unverified,
uncharged, unchecked claim that they are associated
with Terrorism and pose "a continuing and imminent
threat to U.S. persons and interests." They're
entitled to no charges, no trial, no ability to
contest the accusations. Amazingly, the Bush
administration's policy of merely imprisoning foreign
nationals (along with a couple of American
citizens) without charges -- based solely on
the President's claim that they were Terrorists --
produced intense controversy for years. That, one
will recall, was a grave assault on the Constitution.
Shouldn't Obama's policy of ordering American citizens
assassinated without any due process or checks of any
kind -- not imprisoned, but killed -- produce at least
as much controversy? Obviously, if U.S.
forces are fighting on an actual battlefield, then
they (like everyone else) have the right to kill
combatants actively fighting against them, including
American citizens. That's just the essence of war.
That's why it's permissible to kill a combatant
engaged on a real battlefield in a war zone but not,
say, torture them once they're captured and helplessly
detained. But combat is not what we're talking about
here. The people on this "hit list" are likely to be
killed while at home, sleeping in their bed, driving
in a car with friends or family, or engaged in a whole
array of other activities. More critically still, the
Obama administration -- like the Bush administration
before it -- defines the "battlefield" as the entire
world. So the President claims the power to order
U.S. citizens killed anywhere in the world, while
engaged even in the most benign activities carried out
far away from any actual battlefield, based solely on
his say-so and with no judicial oversight or other
checks. That's quite a power for an American
President to claim for himself. As we well know from
the last eight years, the authoritarians among us in
both parties will, by definition, reflexively justify
this conduct by insisting that the assassination
targets are Terrorists and therefore deserve death.
What they actually mean, however, is that
the U.S. Government has accused them of
being Terrorists, which (except in
the mind of an authoritarian) is not the same thing as
being a Terrorist. Numerous Guantanamo
detainees accused by the U.S. Government of being
Terrorists have turned out to be completely innocent,
and the vast majority of federal judges who provided
habeas review to detainees have found an almost
complete lack of evidence to justify the accusations
against them, and thus ordered them released. That
includes scores of detainees held while the U.S.
Government insisted that only the "Worst of the
Worst" remained at the camp. His anguish
apparent, the father of Anwar al-Awlaki told CNN
that his son is not a member of al Qaeda and is not
hiding out with terrorists in southern Yemen. "I am now afraid of
what they will do with my son, he's not Osama Bin
Laden, they want to make something out of him that
he's not," said Dr. Nasser al-Awlaki, the father of
American-born Islamic cleric Anwar al-Awlaki. . . . "I will do my best
to convince my son to do this (surrender), to come
back but they are not giving me time, they want to
kill my son. How can the American government
kill one of their own citizens? This is a legal
issue that needs to be answered," he said. "If they give me
time I can have some contact with my son but the
problem is they are not giving me time," he said. Who knows what the
truth is here? That's why we have what are
called "trials" -- or at least some process -- before
we assume that government accusations are true and
then mete out punishment accordingly. As Marcy
Wheeler notes, the U.S. Government has not only
repeatedly made false accusations of Terrorism against
foreign nationals in the past, but against U.S.
citizens as well. She observes: "I guess the
tenuousness of those ties don't really matter, when
the President can dial up the assassination of an
American citizen." The law of war does
not allow proclaiming either an individual belonging
to the hostile army, or a citizen, or a subject of
the hostile government, an outlaw, who may be
slain without trial by any captor, any more than
the modern law of peace allows such intentional
outlawry; on the contrary, it abhors such outrage.
The sternest retaliation should follow the murder
committed in consequence of such proclamation, made
by whatever authority. Civilized nations look
with horror upon offers of rewards for the
assassination of enemies as relapses into barbarism. Can anyone remotely
reconcile that righteous proclamation what the Obama
administraiton is doing? And more generally, what
legal basis exists for the President to unilaterally
compile hit lists of American citizens he wants to be
killed? What's most striking
of all is that it was recently revealed that, in
Afghanistan, the U.S. had compiled a "hit list" of
Afghan citizens it suspects of being drug traffickers
or somehow associated with the Taliban, in order to
target them for assassination. When that hit list was
revealed, Afghan officials "fiercely" objected on the
ground that it violates due process and undermines the
rule of law to murder people without trials:
Gen. Mohammad Daud
Daud, Afghanistan's deputy interior minister for
counternarcotics efforts, praised U.S. and British
special forces for their help recently in destroying
drug labs and stashes of opium. But he said he
worried that foreign troops would now act on their
own to kill suspected drug lords, based on secret
evidence, instead of handing them over for trial. "They should
respect our law, our constitution and our legal
codes," Daud said. "We have a commitment to
arrest these people on our own" . . . . Ali Ahmad Jalali, a
former Afghan interior minister, said that he had
long urged the Pentagon and its NATO allies to crack
down on drug smugglers and suppliers, and that he
was glad that the military alliance had finally
agreed to provide operational support for Afghan
counternarcotics agents. But he said foreign troops
needed to avoid the temptation to hunt down and kill
traffickers on their own. "There is a
constitutional problem here. A person is innocent
unless proven guilty," he said. "If you go off to
kill or capture them, how do you prove that they are
really guilty in terms of legal process?" . . .
So we're in
Afghanistan to teach them about democracy, the rule of
law, and basic precepts of Western justice.
Meanwhile, Afghan officials vehemently object to the
lawless, due-process-free assassination "hit list" of
their citizens based on the unchecked say-so of
the U.S. Government, and have to lecture us on the
rule of law and Constitutional constraints. By stark
contrast, our own Government, our media and our
citizenry appear to find nothing wrong whatsoever with
lawless assassinations aimed at our own citizens. And
the most glaring question for those who critized
Bush/Cheney detention policies but want to defend
this: how could anyone possibly object to imprisoning
foreign nationals without charges or due process at
Guantanamo while approving of the assassination of
U.S. citizens without any charges or due process?
Glenn
Greenwald: I was
previously a constitutional law and civil rights
litigator in New York. I am the author of two New York
Times Bestselling books:
"How Would a Patriot Act?" (May, 2006), a critique
of the Bush administration's use of executive power,
and
"A Tragic Legacy" (June, 2007), which examines the
Bush legacy. My most recent book,
"Great American Hypocrites", examines the
manipulative electoral tactics used by the GOP and
propagated by the establishment press, and was
released in April, 2008, by Random House/Crown. |