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View Full Version : Obama's antiterrorism campaign: kill all the suspects



Chris Knipp
05-29-2012, 11:35 PM
Tailored kills, signed off on by Obama

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A bold New York Times article today, "Secret 'Kill List' Proves a Test of Obama's Principles and Will (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/29/world/obamas-leadership-in-war-on-al-qaeda.html?pagewanted=all)," deals with the President's gradually emerging role as a one-man kill machine. It was said earlier in Obama's presidency that he was responsible for a lot of deaths, of Americans as well as others. By October 2011 his three years of policies were responsible for more US troop deaths (http://www.justforeignpolicy.org/node/1043)in Afghanistan than occurred under Bush in the pervious decade But he has taken on a further function usually reserved for military dictators: ordering up a long list of specific assassinations. It goes without saying that, "precision," "highly safe" or whatever, the drone attacks normally kill a few extra "civilians." But now this is an elaborate game of picking names and faces from charts that look, the Times article says, "like a high school yearbook."

And this is a game in which the President gets to make all the final moves. He likes to earmark each targeted assassination personally. "Mr. Obama has placed himself at the helm of a top secret 'nominations' process to designate terrorists for kill or capture, of which the capture part has become largely theoretical," the Times says in the opening section of this lengthy article.

Despite his early promises to do so, Obama could not close Guantanamo. Or under pressure decided he didn't want to. And one of his main ways of avoiding the opprobrium of sending more prisoners there, is simply to kill people. Why are civil liberties organizations so upset with Obama? The treatment of suspected "terrorists" is one cluster of reasons. But there are others. In another arena, we have the Administration's unusually brutal crackdowns on whistleblowers -- much more so than under the previous administration -- highlighted by the long holding of Pvt. Bradley Manning in solitary confinement without charges or trial.

That is a new wrinkle. But the old Bush policies too turn out to have also survived. As the Times "Kill List" piece points on, Obama's "pragmatism over ideology" rule led to some jaw-dropping corner-cutting on morality that links him with the neo-cons of the previous administration, while providing a soothing "soft" image suitable to his "minority" status and "liberal" campaign for President that led to such an outpouring of gratitude among progressives and minorities when he was first elected.

"A few sharp-eyed observers inside and outside the government understood what the public did not," the Times story says. "Without showing his hand, Mr. Obama had preserved three major policies — rendition, military commissions and indefinite detention — that have been targets of human rights groups since the 2001 terrorist attacks." To these three extra-legal, war-justified actions was added the avoidance of visible prisoners: just kill them.

Another observation in the Times is that Obama has found ways to dodge legal and moral obligations. He has invoked a case, New York vs. Quarles, where the Supreme Court ruled that in cases involving "urgent public safety" a suspect could be questioned without advising him of his Miranda rights. The President wanted to see how far Quarles could be pushed. "Maintain my options," the article says is Obama's rule. He is also maintaining his direct connections along the line with the previous administration, while maintaining the appearance of a different outward style.

Obama has also encouraged a reinterpretation of data so the numbers of "civilians" involved can be reduced in deaths as a result of targeted killings, to make government d assassinations look cleaner and neater. "Mr. Obama embraced a disputed method for counting civilian casualties that did little to box him in," the Times article says. "It in effect counts all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants, according to several administration officials, unless there is explicit intelligence posthumously proving them innocent." The President was concerned about the killing of the innocent. His solution was to make sure everyone in a kill zone is by definition guilty. Innocent people don't hitchhike rides on a truck driven by members of Al-Qaida -- do they? Opposition to the Brave New World of remote drone killings is growing.

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Partly these are the actions of a man who needed to prove he was not soft, but who wasn't willing or able to spar and make deals with the legislative branch as, most notably, Lyndon Johnson did. This is why he couldn't close Guantanamo. There was strong opposition, but Obama wasn't willing to combat it. "It was not only Mr. Obama’s distaste for legislative backslapping and arm-twisting, but also part of a deeper pattern, said an administration official who has watched him closely: "The president seemed" (an official said) " to have 'a sense that if he sketches a vision, it will happen — without his really having thought through the mechanism by which it will happen.'" And so where it was necessary to fight opposition to closing Guantanamo, Obama just let it go. This weakness fits in logically with drones and targeted killings -- actions Obama can carry out unilaterally, bypassing the need to twist arms in Congress.

The Times "Kill List" piece features a big photo of the President in the Oval Office flanked by his two inside men, Thomas E. Donilon, his national security advisor, and John O. Brennan, his top counterterrorism advisor. Brennan is additionally represented as being like a priest whose moral precision in deciding who is to get offed adds moral, even spiritual, imprimatur to targeted killings. (Brennan can seem a counterweight to the trigger-happy Obama, but he still is part of the killings program.)

The Times article's bombshell image is of how the kills are worked out. "It is the strangest of bureaucratic rituals: Every week or so, more than 100 members of the government’s sprawling national security apparatus gather, by secure video teleconference, to pore over terrorist suspects’ biographies and recommend to the president who should be the next to die." This is a "secret nominations process" -- not so secret after this article -- conducted by "a grim debating society that vets the PowerPoint slides bearing the names, aliases and life stories" of potential "terrorist" (mostly Al Qaida) victims. Then the list goes to Obama and Brennan. Obama insists on signing off on every one personally -- deaths in Yemen, Somalia, and Pakistan. Do Americans know we are at war in these three countries, unilaterally?

All this is emblematic of a gradual development begun in earlier administrations and continued under Obama: an increased granting of powers to the President beyond what the Constitution or practice previously allowed. And yet under Obama this excess of strength is combined with an excess of weakness -- because the combination of the current dysfunctionality of Congress and the President's inexperience and unwillingness to make deals, mean the executive has less direct influence over the legislative branch than it has had in other administrations.

There are those of us who did not rejoice at the targeted assassination of Osama bin Laden -- though at least he was likely guilty of crimes, indeed most heinous ones. In the day-to-day or week-to-week "high school yearbook" killings constantly earmarked by the president, with their covered-up "collateral damage," there is even less to rejoice at. But while that Osama bin Laden exploit, not just signed off on but closely followed, of course, by Obama, might have originally seemed a bold and unusual exploit on the President's part, it now emerges as his quintessential style -- quite different from George W.Bush's, while still continuing post-9/11 policies.

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Photo from a Salon.com (http://www.salon.com/2011/08/18/obama_bush_presidency/)article by David Bronwych, "Inside the Bush-Obama administration," August 18, 2011.

Johann
06-01-2012, 08:03 AM
Pretty devastating stuff.

The one part of his Presidency that I will never understand is Afghanistan.
I thought he was a "human" President, unlike his predecessors.
I believe he will win handily in November because the alternative is so much worse than Bush II was.

America is fucked. Sorry to say it, but it's truer than true.
Canada at least has a budget to work with. America has nothing to work with except extreme debt and extreme operating costs.
Borrowing from Peter to pay Paul isn't even in the equasion.
Americans' great-great-grand-children are saddled with debts.
You really love your families, huh?
You're leaving them with America the Broke.
America the debt-ridden.
Hard to claim to be the best Nation in the world when you don't even have a budget.
Hard to claim the high ground when you are dancing with debt defaults worse than Greece.

How many years will that debt ceiling be raised by a fucked-up Congress?
Obama is smart and I feel pretty strong about him winning in November, but it does seem like he is incapable of Leading the nation to prosperity.
And if he can't do it, then Mitt Romney DEFINITELY has no chance in hell. Because Romney has no brain whatsoever.

You elect him, you might as well elect a bowling ball.

Chris Knipp
06-01-2012, 09:12 AM
The New York Times has followed up its big article about Obama's hands-on program of systematic assassinations with a lead editorial yesterday, May 31, 2012, formally opposing this policy as illegal and immoral:


It has been clear for years that the Obama administration believes the shadow war on terrorism gives it the power to choose targets for assassination, including Americans, without any oversight. On Tuesday, The New York Times revealed who was actually making the final decision on the biggest killings and drone strikes: President Obama himself. And that is very troubling.

Mr. Obama has demonstrated that he can be thoughtful and farsighted, but, like all occupants of the Oval Office, he is a politician, subject to the pressures of re-election. No one in that position should be able to unilaterally order the killing of American citizens or foreigners located far from a battlefield — depriving Americans of their due-process rights — without the consent of someone outside his political inner circle.

How can the world know whether the targets chosen by this president or his successors are truly dangerous terrorists and not just people with the wrong associations? (It is clear, for instance, that many of those rounded up after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks weren’t terrorists.) How can the world know whether this president or a successor truly pursued all methods short of assassination, or instead — to avoid a political charge of weakness — built up a tough-sounding list of kills?

It is too easy to say that this is a natural power of a commander in chief. The United States cannot be in a perpetual war on terror that allows lethal force against anyone, anywhere, for any perceived threat. That power is too great, and too easily abused, as those who lived through the George W. Bush administration will remember.

Mr. Obama, who campaigned against some of those abuses in 2008, should remember. But the Times article, written by Jo Becker and Scott Shane, depicts him as personally choosing every target, approving every major drone strike in Yemen and Somalia and the riskiest ones in Pakistan, assisted only by his own aides and a group of national security operatives. Mr. Obama relies primarily on his counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan.

To his credit, Mr. Obama believes he should take moral responsibility for these decisions, and he has read the just-war theories of Augustine and Thomas Aquinas.

The Times article points out, however, that the Defense Department is currently killing suspects in Yemen without knowing their names, using criteria that have never been made public. The administration is counting all military-age males killed by drone fire as combatants without knowing that for certain, assuming they are up to no good if they are in the area. That has allowed Mr. Brennan to claim an extraordinarily low civilian death rate that smells more of expediency than morality.

In a recent speech, Mr. Brennan said the administration chooses only those who pose a real threat, not simply because they are members of Al Qaeda, and prefers to capture suspects alive. Those assurances are hardly binding, and even under Mr. Obama, scores of suspects have been killed but only one taken into American custody. The precedents now being set will be carried on by successors who may have far lower standards. Without written guidelines, they can be freely reinterpreted.

A unilateral campaign of death is untenable. To provide real assurance, President Obama should publish clear guidelines for targeting to be carried out by nonpoliticians, making assassination truly a last resort, and allow an outside court to review the evidence before placing Americans on a kill list. And it should release the legal briefs upon which the targeted killing was based.--NYTIMES MAY 30, 2012 (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/01/opinion/krugman-the-austerity-agenda.html?_r=1&ref=opinion)

P.s. True, Johann, Canada's financial situation has been solider than the US's all along, but the debt is not the issue right now. Read Paul Krugma's columns in the TIMES, including today's, here: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/01/opinion/krugman-the-austerity-agenda.html?_r=1&ref=opinion. The economy needs stimulating now. "The boom, not the slump, is the time for austerity." So the US gov't is not doing the wrong thing for the economy now, just not stimulting it enough. The debt ceiling is not going to kill us. And that the gov't is like the family is a bad metaphor. See Krugman's simply explanation. And anyway, this was not what I'm talking about--though Charles (Inside Job) Ferguson's new book about the financial sector's criminalities is called Predator Nation, and Obama is a Predator President, so there's an analogy there.