http://www.thenation.com/article/168271/obamas-kill-list-silence-not-option
 
Obama's Kill List
The Nation's Editors: June 25, 2012 Issue
 
The “war on terror” has its own corrupting logic, leading otherwise morally
responsible leaders to do unspeakable things. Such is the case with the
Obama administration’s descent into the world of kill lists and drone
assassinations.
The image of President Obama poring over baseball-card profiles of terror
suspects in Jo Becker and Scott Shane’s now famous New York Times “kill
list” exposé probably pleased the administration officials whose cooperation
made the story possible, wrapping the president in glinting “warrior in
chief” election year packaging. For those concerned about the constitutional
protection of civil liberties and the rule of law, however, that image, and
the extraordinary practices it represents, was profoundly disturbing. The
drone policy the president has developed not only infringes on the
sovereignty of other nations, but the assassinations violate laws put in
place in the 1970s after scandals enveloped an earlier era of CIA
criminality. The new details about Obama’s assassination program also remind
us how the 2001 Congressional Authorization of the Use of Military Force
established a disastrous policy of “borderless and open-ended war that
threatens to indefinitely extend US military engagement around the world,”
in the words of the only member of the House to vote against it, Barbara
Lee.

The kill list makes a mockery of due process by circumventing judicial
review, and turning the executive into judge, jury and executioner. Even
worse, the “signature” strikes described in the Times article, in which
nameless individuals are assassinated based merely on patterns of behavior,
dispense with any semblance of habeas corpus altogether. According to the
Center for Constitutional Rights, signature strikes account for most of the
attacks in Pakistan today, and they were recently approved for use in Yemen.

One of the darkest aspects of this story involves the administration’s
method of counting civilian casualties: The CIA simply assumes that any
military-age male in the vicinity of a terror suspect must be a militant
too. Thus, counterterrorism chief John Brennan was able to state with a
straight face in August 2011 that not one civilian had perished from US
strikes outside Afghanistan and Iraq in more than a year—a declaration that
was greeted with incredulity and outrage in Pakistan, where witnesses have
attested to hundreds of civilian deaths.

The drone strikes are inciting even more anti-American hatred in troubled
places like Yemen as well as Pakistan (see Jeremy Scahill, “Target: Yemen,”
March 5/12). It is hard to argue that they are making us safer when, for
every suspect killed, one or more newly embittered militants emerge to take
his place. This is not a prescription for American security but for an
endless war that will sap our moral core and put in jeopardy our most
cherished freedoms at home.

The new revelations also highlight the dangers of official secrecy, as we
now glimpse some of what the administration was hiding through its
invocation of the state secrets privilege in court proceedings. But as
urgent as the demand for transparency remains, we know more than enough to
conclude that President Obama’s continuation and expansion of George W.
Bush’s “war on terror” has further eroded legal barriers built over decades
to limit executive power. For those who believed Obama would restore the
rule of law after Bush’s imperial overreach, learning the details of these
operations has been troubling. Liberals raised a ruckus about Bush’s abuses.
Silence now is not an option.

 <http://www.thenation.com/article/168297/asesinatos-la-carta> Read this
editorial in Spanish.

 <http://www.thenation.com/blog/168234/kill-kill-list>  TAKE ACTION: Kill
the 'Kill List' 
  _____  

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