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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11180519/site/newsweek

"Exclusive: Can the President Order a Killing on U.S. Soil?"

'Newsweek'

by Mark Hosenball

Feb. 13, 2006 issue

In the latest twist in the debate over presidential powers, a Justice
Department official suggested that in certain circumstances, the president
might have the power to order the killing of terrorist suspects inside the
United States. Steven Bradbury, acting head of the department's Office of
Legal Counsel, went to a closed-door Senate intelligence committee meeting
last week to defend President George W. Bush's surveillance program. During
the briefing, said administration and Capitol Hill officials (who declined
to be identified because the session was private), California Democratic
Sen. Dianne Feinstein asked Bradbury questions about the extent of
presidential powers to fight Al Qaeda; could Bush, for instance, order the
killing of a Qaeda suspect known to be on U.S. soil? Bradbury replied that
he believed Bush could indeed do this, at least in certain circumstances.

Current and former government officials said they could think of several
scenarios in which a president might consider ordering the killing of a
terror suspect inside the United States. One former official noted that
before Flight 93 crashed in Pennsylvania, top administration officials
weighed shooting down the aircraft if it got too close to Washington, D.C.
What if the president had strong evidence that a Qaeda suspect was holed up
with a dirty bomb and was about to attack? University of Chicago law
professor Cass Sunstein says the post-9/11 congressional resolution
authorizing the use of military force against Al Qaeda empowered the
president to kill 9/11 perpetrators, or people who assisted their plot,
whether they were overseas or inside the United States. On the other hand,
Sunstein says, the president would be on less solid legal ground were he to
order the killing of a terror suspect in the United States who was not
actively preparing an attack.

A Justice Department official, who asked not to be ID'd because of the
sensitive subject, said Bradbury's remarks were made during an "academic
discussion" of theoretical contingencies. In real life, the official said,
the highest priority of those hunting a terrorist on U.S. soil would be to
capture that person alive and interrogate him. At a public intel-committee
hearing, Feinstein was told by intel czar John Negroponte and FBI chief
Robert Mueller that they were unaware of any case in which a U.S. agency was
authorized to kill a Qaeda-linked person on U.S. soil. Tasia Scolinos, a
Justice Department spokeswoman, told NEWSWEEK: "Mr. Bradbury's meeting was
an informal, off-the-record briefing about the legal analysis behind the
president's terrorist-surveillance program. He was not presenting the legal
views of the Justice Department on hypothetical scenarios outside of the
terrorist-surveillance program."





King Daevid MacKenzie, WLSU-FM 88.9 La Crosse, Wisconsin, USA
heard occasionally at http://www.radio4all.net
http://myspace/kingdaevid
"You can live in your dreams, but only if you are worthy of them." HARLAN 
ELLISON 

  

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