Obama moves to make the War on Terror 
permanent
Complete with a newly 
coined, creepy Orwellian euphemism – 'disposition matrix' – the administration 
institutionalizes the most extremist powers a government can claim
 
The National Counterterrorism Center, the 
site of a new bureaucracy to institutionalize the 'kill list'. Photograph: 
FBI
(updated below - Update II - Update III)
A primary reason for opposing the acquisition of abusive powers and civil 
liberties erosions is that they virtually always become permanent, vested not 
only in current leaders one may love and trust but also future officials who 
seem more menacing and less benign. 
The Washington Post has a crucial 
and disturbing story this morning by Greg Miller about the concerted efforts 
by the Obama 
administration to fully institutionalize – to make officially permanent – 
the most extremist powers it has exercised in the name of the war on terror. 
Based on interviews with 
"current and former officials from the White House and the Pentagon, as well as 
intelligence and counterterrorism agencies", Miller reports that as "the United 
States' conventional wars 
are winding down", the Obama administration "expects to continue adding names 
to 
kill or capture lists for years" (the "capture" part of that list is little 
more 
than symbolic, as the US focus is overwhelmingly on the 
"kill" part). Specifically, "among senior Obama administration officials, 
there is broad consensus that such operations are likely to be extended at 
least 
another decade." As Miller puts it: "That timeline suggests that the United 
States has reached only the midpoint of what was once known as the global war 
on 
terrorism."
In pursuit of this goal, "White House counterterrorism adviser John O Brennan 
is seeking to codify the administration's approach to generating capture/kill 
lists, part of a broader effort to guide future administrations through the 
counterterrorism processes that Obama has embraced." All of this, writes 
Miller, 
demonstrates "the extent to which Obama has institutionalized the highly 
classified practice of targeted killing, transforming ad-hoc elements into a 
counterterrorism infrastructure capable of sustaining a seemingly permanent 
war." 
The Post article cites numerous recent developments reflecting this Obama 
effort, including the fact that "CIA Director David H Petraeus is pushing for 
an 
expansion of the agency's fleet of armed drones", which "reflects the agency's 
transformation into a paramilitary force, and makes clear that it does not 
intend to dismantle its drone program and return to its pre-September 11 focus 
on gathering intelligence." The article also describes rapid expansion of 
commando operations by the US Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) and, 
perhaps most disturbingly, the creation of a permanent bureaucratic 
infrastructure to allow the president to assassinate at will:
"JSOC also has established a secret targeting center across the Potomac  River 
from Washington, current and former U.S. officials said. The elite  command's 
targeting cells have traditionally been located near the front lines  of its 
missions, including in Iraq and Afghanistan. But JSOC created a  'national 
capital region' task force that is a 15-minute commute from the  White House so 
it could be more directly involved in deliberations about  al-Qaeda lists."
The creepiest aspect of this development is the christening of a new 
Orwellian euphemism for due-process-free presidential assassinations: 
"disposition matrix". Writes Miller:
"Over the past two years, the Obama administration has been secretly  
developing a new blueprint for pursuing terrorists, a next-generation  
targeting list called the 'disposition matrix'.
>"The matrix contains the names of terrorism suspects arrayed against an  
>accounting of the resources being marshaled to track them down, including  
>sealed indictments and clandestine operations. US officials said the database  
>is designed to go beyond existing kill lists, mapping plans for the  
>'disposition' of suspects beyond the reach of American drones."
The "disposition matrix" 
has been developed and will be overseen by the National Counterterrorism Center 
(NCTC). One of its purposes is "to augment" the "separate but overlapping kill 
lists" maintained by the CIA and the Pentagon: to serve, in other words, as the 
centralized clearinghouse for determining who will be executed without due 
process based upon how one fits into the executive branch's "matrix". As Miller 
describes it, it is "a single, continually evolving database" which includes 
"biographies, locations, known associates and affiliated organizations" as well 
as "strategies for taking targets down, including extradition requests, capture 
operations and drone patrols". This analytical system that determines people's 
"disposition" will undoubtedly be kept completely secret; Marcy Wheeler 
sardonically 
said that she was "looking forward to the government's arguments explaining 
why it won't release the disposition matrix to ACLU under FOIA".
This was all motivated by Obama's refusal to arrest or detain terrorist 
suspects, and his resulting commitment simply to killing them at will (his 
will). Miller quotes "a former US counterterrorism official involved in 
developing the matrix" as explaining the impetus behind the program this way: 
"We had a disposition problem."
The central role played by 
the NCTC in determining who should be killed – "It is the keeper of the 
criteria," says one official to the Post – is, by itself, rather odious. As 
Kade 
Crockford of the ACLU of Massachusetts noted in response to this story, the 
ACLU has 
long warned that the real purpose of the NCTC – despite its nominal focus on 
terrorism - is the "massive, secretive data collection and mining of trillions 
of points of data about most people in the United States". 
In particular, the NCTC operates a gigantic data-mining operation, in which 
all sorts of information about innocent Americans is systematically monitored, 
stored, and analyzed. This includes "records from law enforcement 
investigations, health information, employment history, travel and student 
records" – "literally anything the government collects would be fair game". In 
other words, the NCTC - now vested with the power to determine the proper 
"disposition" of terrorist suspects - is the same agency that is at the center 
of the ubiquitous, unaccountable surveillance state aimed at American 
citizens.
Worse still, as the ACLU's 
legislative counsel Chris Calabrese documented back in July in 
a must-read analysis, Obama officials very recently abolished safeguards on 
how this information can be used. Whereas the agency, during the Bush years, 
was 
barred from storing non-terrorist-related information about innocent Americans 
for more than 180 days – a limit which "meant that NCTC was dissuaded from 
collecting large databases filled with information on innocent Americans" – it 
is now free to do so. Obama officials eliminated this constraint by authorizing 
the NCTC "to collect and 'continually assess' information on innocent Americans 
for up to five years". 
And, as usual, this agency engages in these incredibly powerful and invasive 
processes with virtually no democratic accountability:
"All of this is happening with very little oversight. Controls over the  NCTC 
are mostly internal to the DNI's office, and important oversight bodies  such 
as Congress and the President's Intelligence Oversight Board aren't  notified 
even of 'significant' failures to comply with the Guidelines.  Fundamental 
legal protections are being sidestepped. For example, under the  new 
guidelines, Privacy Act notices (legal requirements to describe how  databases 
are used) must be completed by the agency that collected the  information. This 
is in spite of the fact that those agencies have no idea  what NCTC is actually 
doing with the information once it collects it.
>"All of this amounts to a reboot of the Total Information Awareness Program  
>that Americans rejected so vigorously right after 9/11."
It doesn't require any conspiracy theorizing to see what's happening here. 
Indeed, it takes extreme naiveté, or willful blindness, not to see it.
What has been created here - permanently institutionalized - is a highly 
secretive executive branch agency that simultaneously engages in two functions: 
(1) it collects and analyzes massive amounts of surveillance data about all 
Americans without any judicial review let alone search warrants, and (2) 
creates 
and implements a "matrix" that determines the "disposition" of suspects, up to 
and including execution, without a whiff of due process or oversight. It is 
simultaneously a surveillance state and a secretive, unaccountable judicial 
body 
that analyzes who you are and then decrees what should be done with you, how 
you 
should be "disposed" of, beyond the reach of any minimal accountability or 
transparency. 
The Post's Miller recognizes the watershed moment this represents: "The 
creation of the matrix and the institutionalization of kill/capture lists 
reflect a shift that is as psychological as it is strategic." As he explains, 
extra-judicial assassination was once deemed so extremist that very extensive 
deliberations were required before Bill Clinton could target even Osama bin 
Laden for death by lobbing cruise missiles in East Africa. But:
Targeted killing is now so routine that the Obama administration has spent  
much of the past year codifying and streamlining the processes that sustain  it.
To understand the Obama 
legacy, please re-read that sentence. As Murtaza Hussain put it when 
reacting to the Post story: "The US agonized over the targeted killing Bin 
Laden 
at Tarnak Farms in 1998; now it kills people it barely suspects of anything on 
a 
regular basis."
The pragmatic inanity of 
the mentality driving this is self-evident: as I discussed 
yesterday (and many other times), continuous killing does not eliminate 
violence aimed at the US but rather guarantees its permanent expansion. As a 
result, wrote Miller, "officials said no clear end is in sight" when it comes 
to 
the war against "terrorists" because, said one official, "we can't possibly 
kill 
everyone who wants to harm us" but trying is "a necessary part of what we do". 
Of course, the more the US kills and kills and kills, the more people there are 
who "want to harm us". That's the logic that has resulted in a permanent war on 
terror.
But even more significant 
is the truly radical vision of government in which this is all grounded. The 
core guarantee of western justice since the Magna Carta was codified in the US 
by the fifth amendment 
to the constitution: "No person shall . . . be deprived of life, liberty, or 
property, without due process of law." You simply cannot have a free society, a 
worthwhile political system, without that guarantee, that constraint on the 
ultimate abusive state power, being honored.
And yet what the Post is 
describing, what we have had for years, is a system of government that – 
without 
hyperbole – is the very antithesis of that liberty. It is literally impossible 
to imagine a more violent repudiation of the basic blueprint of the republic 
than the development of a secretive, totally unaccountable executive branch 
agency that simultaneously collects information about all citizens and then 
applies a "disposition matrix" to determine what punishment should be meted 
out. 
This is classic political dystopia brought to reality (despite how compelled 
such a conclusion is by these indisputable facts, many Americans will view such 
a claim as an exaggeration, paranoia, or worse because of this 
psychological dynamic I described here which leads many good passive 
westerners to believe that true oppression, by definition, is something that 
happens only elsewhere).
In response to the Post 
story, Chris Hayes asked: "If 
you have a 'kill list', but the list keeps growing, are you succeeding?" The 
answer all depends upon what the objective is.
As the Founders all 
recognized, nothing vests elites with power – and profit – more than a state of 
war. That is why there were supposed to be substantial barriers to having them 
start and continue - the need for a Congressional declaration, the 
constitutional bar on funding the military for more than two years at a time, 
the prohibition on 
standing armies, etc. Here is how John Jay put it in Federalist No 
4:
"It is too true, however disgraceful it may be to human nature, that  nations 
in general will make war whenever they have a prospect of getting  anything by 
it; nay, absolute monarchs will often make war when their nations  are to get 
nothing by it, but for the purposes and objects merely personal,  such as 
thirst for military glory, revenge for personal affronts, ambition, or  private 
compacts to aggrandize or support their particular families or  partisans. 
These and a variety of other motives, which affect only the mind of  the 
sovereign, often lead him to engage in wars not sanctified by justice or  the 
voice and interests of his people."
In sum, there are factions in many governments that crave a state of endless 
war because that is when power is least constrained and profit most abundant. 
What the Post is reporting is yet another significant step toward that state, 
and it is undoubtedly driven, at least on the part of some, by a 
self-interested 
desire to ensure the continuation of endless war and the powers and benefits it 
vests. So to answer Hayes' question: the endless expansion of a kill list and 
the unaccountable, always-expanding powers needed to implement it does indeed 
represent a great success for many. Read what John Jay wrote in the above 
passage to see why that is, and why few, if any, political developments should 
be regarded as more pernicious.
Detention policies
Assuming the Post's estimates are correct – that "among senior Obama 
administration officials, there is broad consensus that such operations are 
likely to be extended at least another decade" – this means that the war on 
terror will last for more than 20 years, far longer than any other American 
war. 
This is what has always made the rationale for indefinite detention – that it 
is 
permissible to detain people without due process until the "end of hostilities" 
– so warped in this context. Those who are advocating that are endorsing 
nothing 
less than life imprisonment - permanent incarceration – without any charges or 
opportunities to contest the accusations.
That people are now 
dying at Guantanamo after almost a decade in a cage with no charges 
highlights just how repressive that power is. Extend that mentality to secret, 
due-process-free assassinations – something the US government clearly intends 
to 
convert into a permanent fixture of American political life – and it is not 
difficult to see just how truly extremist and anti-democratic "war on terror" 
proponents in both political parties have become.
UPDATE
As I noted yesterday, 
Afghan officials reported 
that three Afghan children were killed on Saturday by NATO operations. 
Today, reports 
CNN, "missiles blew up part of a compound Wednesday in northwest Pakistan, 
killing three people - including one woman" and added: "the latest suspected 
U.S. drone strike also injured two children." Meanwhile, former Obama press 
secretary and current campaign adviser Robert Gibbs this 
week justified the US 
killing of 16-year-old American Abdulrahaman Awlaki, killed by a US drone in 
Yemen two weeks after his father was, on the ground that he "should have a far 
more responsible father".
Also yesterday, CNN 
profiled Abu Sufyan Said al-Shihri, alleged to be a top al-Qaida official in 
Yemen. He pointed out "that U.S. drone strikes are helping al-Qaida in Yemen 
because of the number of civilian deaths they cause." Ample 
evidence supports his observation.
To summarize all this: the US does not interfere in the Muslim world and 
maintain an endless war on terror because of the terrorist threat. It has a 
terrorist threat because of its interference in the Muslim world and its 
endless 
war on terror.
UPDATE II
The Council on Foreign 
Relations' Micah Zenko, writing today about the Post article, reports:
"Recently, I spoke to a military official with extensive and wide-ranging  
experience in the special operations world, and who has had direct exposure to  
the targeted killing program. To emphasize how easy targeted killings by  
special operations forces or drones has become, this official flicked his hand  
back over and over, stating: 'It really is like swatting flies. We can do it  
forever easily and you feel nothing. But how often do you really think about  
killing a fly?'"
That is disturbingly 
consistent with prior 
reports that the military's term for drone victims is "bug splat". This - 
this warped power and the accompanying dehumanizing mindset - is what is being 
institutionalized as a permanent fixture in American political life by the 
current president.
UPDATE III
At Wired, Spencer Ackerman 
reacts to the Post article with an 
analysis entitled "President Romney Can Thank Obama for His Permanent 
Robotic Death List". Here is his concluding paragraph:
"Obama did not run for president to preside over the codification of a  global 
war fought in secret. But that's his legacy. . . . Micah Zenko at the  Council 
on Foreign Relations writes that Obama's predecessors in the Bush  
administration 'were actually much more conscious and thoughtful about the  
long-term implications of targeted killings', because they feared the  
political consequences that might come when the U.S. embraces something at  
least superficially similar to assassination. Whoever follows Obama in the  
Oval Office can thank him for proving those consequences don't meaningfully  
exist — as he or she reviews the backlog of names on the Disposition  Matrix."
It's worth devoting a moment to letting that sink in.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/oct/24/obama-terrorism-kill-list

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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