Collaborating With the Enemy in the War on Terror

Posted By Rich Trzupek On November 17, 2010 

The American Civil Liberties Union <http://www.aclu.org/our-work>  [1]
(ACLU) and the Center for Constitutional Rights
<http://ccrjustice.org/newsroom/press-releases/obama-administration-claims-u
nchecked-authority-kill-americans-outside-comba>  [2] (CCR) have injected
themselves into the war on terror as never before, leaping to the defense
<http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/11/defending-an-a
ctive-terrorist.html>  [3] of the man often described as the spiritual
leader of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian peninsula: Anwar Al-Awlaki. There’s little
doubt that Al-Awlaki provided aid and inspiration to Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian “underpants bomber,” and to the Times Square
bomber, Faisal Shahzad. He has also called for the murder of civilians like
Salman Rushdie and the young Seattle cartoonist who initiated “Everybody
Draw Muhammad Day.” Yet, despite the danger that Al-Awlaki continues to
represent to the free world, the ACLU and the CCR filed suit in federal
court to protect the radical cleric’s “rights.”

Al-Awlaki’s father, Nasser Al-Awlaki, asked the two groups for help after he
learned that the Obama administration has targeted his son for
assassination. Because the cleric was born in New Mexico, the ACLU and CCR
maintain that he is entitled to due process in America’s legal system.
Defending his organization’s decision to defend Al-Awlaki, Vincent Warren,
the executive director of the CCR, said:

That’s what we do. We file lawsuits. …[W]e don’t believe the US should be
wreaking violence for political reasons. It should be up to a court, not
just the US government, to decide whether al-Awlaki poses a threat. The US
should not be conducting the killing of US citizens outside the legal
process, far away from any battlefield.

The proposition that the US is “wreaking violence for political reasons” is
patently ludicrous. The United States is at war with a determined enemy and
the fact that this particular conflict involves asymmetrical warfare does
not relieve the president of the United States from his duties as commander
in chief. Al-Awlaki isn’t “far away from any battlefield” because he and his
fellow terrorists have defined the battlefield as the whole planet earth.
Furthermore, the congressional war resolution passed on September 14, 2001
remains in force. That resolution authorizes the president to use “all
necessary and appropriate force” against nations, organizations or persons
that he deems to have helped bring about the 9-11 attacks and to use such
measures to prevent future acts of international terrorism. Thus, when
Al-Awlaki decided to join forces with al-Qaeda, he not only became an enemy
of America, he forfeited his rights as an American. He’s a combatant.

Al-Awlaki is no more entitled to legal protections in a time of war than a
Confederate soldier was in 1863. What the ACLU and the CCR are suggesting is
the equivalent of requiring Union soldiers to obtain writs from a judge
approving each and every target wearing a grey uniform before pulling a
trigger at Gettysburg. In time of war, it is both the president’s right and
his duty to decide how to prosecute that war and where to attack the enemy. 

At least one CCR board member has gone public with her misgivings over the
organization’s decision to take this case. Karima Bennoune, a law professor
at Rutgers School of Law who is of Algerian descent, broke with the CCR on
this issue. It should be noted that Bennoune leans far to the Left when it
comes to prosecuting this war. She has supported CCR’s efforts to oppose
both enhanced interrogation methods and rendition. Nevertheless, Bennoune
had this to say
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/01/al-qaida-online-inspire-magazin
e>  [4] about her organization’s efforts to defend Al-Awlaki: “Anwar
al-Awlaki is not a detainee; he is still at liberty and able to gravely harm
others by inciting and advocating murder,” she said. Bennoune continued:

  _____  

  _____  

Since the inception of the case there has been increased mystification of
who Anwar al-Awlaki is in liberal and human rights circles in the United
States. This may in part have resulted from the fact that a highly reputable
organization like CCR was willing to represent his interests, and described
him only as “a Muslim cleric” or “an American citizen,” and repeatedly
suggested that the government did not possess evidence against Awlaki.

Both the CCR and the ACLU have drifted well beyond their stated purpose over
the years and their defense of Al-Awlaki is the latest example of this
trend. Rather than defending the rights of all American citizens, both
organizations now act as advocates for their preferred causes. For example,
the ACLU uses some of its considerable resources to oppose the rights
<http://www.aclu.org/map-nationwide-anti-mosque-activity>  [5] of ordinary
Americans to protest against mosques being built in their communities and to
speak the truth about Islam. A statement by the ACLU asserts in part:

The Constitution guarantees the right of private citizens to protest, and
the ACLU would vigorously defend that right if infringed by the government.
But making Muslims – or any other religious group – feel unwelcome in local
communities conflicts with our Founders’ vision of religious liberty and
tolerance.

Yet the ACLU’s outrage here is clearly selective. Citizens stand up to make
the reprehensible Westboro Baptist Church feel “unwelcome” all of the time.
These Americans aren’t in conflict with the “Founders’ vision of religious
liberty and tolerance.” Rather, they are standing up to a group of hateful
bigots who are making a mockery of religious liberty and tolerance. Many
Americans oppose the construction of mosques in their communities for the
same reason. It is more and more apparent that Islam, even when presenting
itself as “moderate,” is all too often a front for the Islamist program,
which is fundamentally inconsistent with religious liberty and tolerance.
Yet the ACLU seeks to deprive concerned Americans of the right to say so.

This is the very brand of Islam that Anwar Al-Awlaki believes in. He speaks
for that portion of the worldwide Muslim community which believes that Islam
and Islamic law must be the dominant forces in the world. Toward that end,
Al-Awlaki, like all of his fellow true-believers, stands ready to lie,
cheat, steal and murder to defeat anyone who gets in the way of his mission.
At the top of that list stands a powerful and determined nation: the United
States of America. When an individual is part of an organization that has
publicly avowed its willingness to do anything in order to take down a
nation, most reasonable people would conclude that such an organization is
at war with that nation. When a top lieutenant in such an organization has
planned attacks against that nation and has repeatedly called for even more
attacks, most reasonable people would conclude that such a fellow is in fact
an enemy soldier. It’s disturbing and sad that the ACLU and CCR have drifted
so far to the Left that they are incapable of understanding this obvious
truth. We can only hope that the courts, like Barack Obama and Karima
Bennoune, recognize just how foolish and naïve efforts to defend an enemy
like Anwar Al-Awlaki truly are.

  _____  

  _____  

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Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2010/11/17/collaborating-with-the-enemy-in-the-war-o
n-terror/

URLs in this post: 

[1] American Civil Liberties Union: http://www.aclu.org/our-work

[2] Center for Constitutional Rights:
http://ccrjustice.org/newsroom/press-releases/obama-administration-claims-un
checked-authority-kill-americans-outside-comba

[3] leaping to the defense:
http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/11/defending-an-ac
tive-terrorist.html

[4] had this to say:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/01/al-qaida-online-inspire-magazine

[5] oppose the rights:
http://www.aclu.org/map-nationwide-anti-mosque-activity

 



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