Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
The CIA Plan to Kill Al Qaeda Leaders:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_12-2009_07_18.shtml#1247583710


   I see that I'm quoted by Mark Mazetti and Scott Shane in their New
   York Times article today, [1]CIA Had Plan to Assassinate Qaeda Leaders
   (July 13, 2009). I'm trying hard to maintain radio silence and not
   blog to let my shoulder heal up, but let me say something very brief
   about this.

   First, I'm delighted, of course, that the CIA post 9-11 was
   formulating plans to try and kill Al Qaeda leaders wherever they might
   be; if they weren't, I would certainly have a big question about what
   exactly the CIA value-added to national security is. Why would you
   have a CIA if they weren't trying to figure out covert ops to kill Al
   Qaeda leaders after 9-11? As for the distinction between inserting
   small teams or using Predators, recall that the US only began using
   Predators as a weapons platform in a semi-improvised way after 9-11.
   The obvious tactic was small team insertion, and only when it became
   clear that Predators could work, did the US move to that strategy.

   Second, as to the international law issues involved in targeting Al
   Qaeda leaders, I will simply refer you over to a new paper, soon to
   appear as a book chapter in a volume edited by Benjamin Wittes on
   reforming counterterrorism policy, on targeted killing. That paper has
   a particular point, however. It says that of course the US targeted
   killings of Al Qaeda terrorists is a legal act of self defense under
   international law. (You can get a free pdf download, here, at SSRN,
   "[2]Targeted Killing in US Counterterrorism and Law.")

   The longer term question to which the paper mostly addresses itself is
   whether, in the face of withering international legal criticism, from
   UN special rapporteurs, human rights groups, academics, etc. - what we
   might call the international "soft law" crowd - the US, and
   specifically the Obama administration, will insist on the traditional
   doctrines of self defense, including against terrorists who find safe
   haven in states that are unwilling or unable to deal with them. The
   problem specifically for the Obama administration is that on the one
   hand it has - correctly in my view, for strategic, legal, and
   humanitarian reasons - embraced targeted killings via Predator
   strikes.

   On the other hand, a lot of the administration's international legal
   apparatus is highly sympathetic to the "soft law" position, and in
   other circumstances would like to embrace positions that, however
   noble in the abstract, would effectively rule out targeted killing as
   the US pursues them. And particularly rule them out in future
   situations in which Al Qaeda is not involved, in which there is no
   AUMF, no Security Council resolutions, etc., to point to. It is
   important for the administration to keep in mind that the US will
   eventually face different terrorist enemies - there is, so to speak,
   life - and death - after Al Qaeda.

   The paper is concerned with defending the US legal space for targeted
   killing undertaken as self defense, but not within the context of an
   armed conflict as defined under international humanitarian law. If
   that seems like a mouthful, I'll just refer you to the paper.

   Finally, the US domestic law question of assassination. The title of
   the article uses the word assassination. This is unfortunate, not
   because it is not accurate in the sense we ordinarily use the term,
   but because US law and regulation contains a ban on "assassination."
   Assassination in that specific legal sense is prohibited - but also
   not defined in US law or regulation. However, successive
   administrations dating from the 1980s have taken the position - e.g.,
   the speech in 1989 to which the article refers - that a targeted
   killing is not (prohibited) "assassination" if it meets the
   requirements for self-defense under international law, including self
   defense against terrorists. As then-Dept of State legal advisor
   Abraham Sofaer put it, the assassination ban does not apply to
   otherwise "lawful killings undertaken in self defense against
   terrorists." I don't know if this is open access online; it was issued
   in the Military Law Review in 1989, and Judge Sofaer and others have
   told me that it was vetted with DOD and the White House as being US
   policy and interpretations of law. I am not aware of anything that has
   overturned it as US interpretation of the US assassination ban.

   Okay, I'm trying very hard not to blog at the moment and give my
   should some time to heal, so I am going to post this up and ... Exeunt
   Left. Or possibly exit right.

References

   1. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/14/us/14intel.html?_r=1&hp
   2. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1415070

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