TheWhite House is “Judge, Jury and Executioner” of Both Drone and Cyber-Attacks
Posted on February 6, 2013 by WashingtonsBlog 
 
Bush and Obama Have Set Us Back 800 Years
NBC News reports:
Legal experts expressed grave reservations Tuesday about 
an Obama administration memo concluding that the United States can order the 
killing of American citizens believed to be affiliated with 
al-Qaida — with one saying the White House was acting as “judge, jury and 
executioner.”
>“Anyone should be concerned when the president and his lawyers make up their 
>own interpretation of the law or their own rules,” said Mary Ellen O’Connell, 
>a law professor at the University of Notre 
Dame and an authority on international law and the use of force.
>“This is a very, very dangerous thing that the president has done,” she added.
>***
>Glenn Greenwald, a constitutional lawyer who writes about security 
and liberty for the British newspaper The Guardian, described the memo 
as “fundamentally misleading,” with a clinical tone that disguises “the 
radical and dangerous power it purports to authorize.”
>“If you believe the president has the power to order U.S. citizens 
executed far from any battlefield with no charges or trial, then it’s 
truly hard to conceive of any asserted power you would find 
objectionable,” he wrote.
Senator Wyden said:
Every American has the right to know when their government believes that it is 
allowed to kill them.
Top constitutional law expert Jonathan Turley notes:
In plain language, [the Obama administration memo]  means that [any Americans 
can be assassinated if] the President considers the citizens to be a threat in 
the future. Moreover, the memo allows killings when an attempt to capture the 
person would pose an “undue risk” to U.S. personnel. That undue risk is 
left undefined.
I think I’ve seen that movie before …
Given that drones are being deployed in the American homeland, some fear that 
the war is coming home.
Indeed, the military now considers the U.S. homeland to be a battlefield.  The 
U.S. is already allowing military operations within the United States.    The 
Army is already being deployed on U.S. soil, and the military is conducting 
numerous training exercises on American streets.  (For more background, see 
this, this, this, this, and this.)
Similarly, the White House has claimed the unilateral power to launch 
pre-emptive cyber-strikes against foreign nations.  As FireDogLake notes:
Like with the drone program, President Barack Obama is 
presiding over the creation and development of a power that previous 
presidents never imagined having. The national security state is effectively 
appointing him and all future presidents the proverbial judge, jury and 
executioner when it comes to cyber warfare.
As Greenwald makes clear, virtually all of the U.S. efforts regarding so-called 
“cyber-security” are actually efforts to create offensive attack capabilities.
And given that the government may consider normal Americans who criticize any 
government policy to be terrorists – and that the military is fighting against 
dissent on the Internet  – it is obvious that the cyber-attack capabilities are 
coming home to roost.
Of course, indiscriminate drone strikes are war crimes (and here and here) , 
and cyber-attacks are a form of terrorism. But that won’t stop the U.S. … 
because it’s only terrorism when other people do what we do.
As Greenwald noted last year:
We supposedly learned important lessons from the abuses 
of power of the Nixon administration, and then of the Bush 
administration: namely, that we don’t trust government officials to 
exercise power in the dark, with no judicial oversight, with no 
obligation to prove their accusations. Yet now we hear exactly this same 
mentality issuing from Obama, his officials and defenders to justify a 
far more extreme power than either Nixon or Bush dreamed of asserting: he’s 
only killing The Bad Citizens, so there’s no reason to object!
Greenwald notes in an article today:
The core distortion of the War on Terror under both Bush and Obama is the 
Orwellian practice of equating government accusations of terrorism with proof 
of guilt. One constantly hears US government 
defenders referring to “terrorists” when what they actually mean is: 
those accused by the government of terrorism. This entire memo is 
grounded in this deceit.
>Time and again, it emphasizes that the authorized assassinations are 
carried out “against a senior operational leader of al-Qaida or its 
associated forces who poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the 
United States.” Undoubtedly fearing that this document would one 
day be public, Obama lawyers made certain to incorporate this deceit 
into the title itself: “Lawfulness of a Lethal Operation Directed 
Against a US Citizen Who is a Senior Operational Leader of al-Qaida or 
An Associated Force.”
>This ensures that huge numbers of citizens – those who spend little 
time thinking about such things and/or authoritarians who assume all 
government claims are true – will instinctively justify what is being 
done here on the ground that we must kill the Terrorists or joining al-Qaida 
means you should be killed. That’s the “reasoning” process that has driven the 
War on Terror since 
it commenced: if the US government simply asserts without evidence or 
trial that someone is a terrorist, then they are assumed to be, and they can 
then be punished as such – with indefinite imprisonment or death.
>But of course, when this memo refers to “a Senior Operational Leader 
of al-Qaida”, what it actually means is this: someone whom the President – in 
total secrecy and with no due process – has accused of being that. Indeed, the 
memo itself makes this clear, as it baldly 
states that presidential assassinations are justified when “an informed, 
high-level official of the US government has determined that the targeted 
individual poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the US”.
>This is the crucial point: the memo isn’t justifying the 
due-process-free execution of senior al-Qaida leaders who pose an 
imminent threat to the US. It is justifying the due-process-free 
execution of peoplesecretly accused by the president and his underlings, with 
no due process, of being that. The distinction between (a) government 
accusations and (b) proof of 
guilt is central to every free society, by definition, yet this memo – 
and those who defend Obama’s assassination power – willfully ignore it.
>Those who justify all of this by arguing that Obama can and should 
kill al-Qaida leaders who are trying to kill Americans are engaged in 
supreme question-begging. Without any due process, transparency or 
oversight, there is no way to know who is a “senior al-Qaida leader” and who is 
posing an “imminent threat” to Americans. All that can be known 
is who Obama, in total secrecy, accuses of this.
>(Indeed, membership in al-Qaida is not even required to be 
assassinated, as one can be a member of a group deemed to be an 
“associated force” of al-Qaida, whatever that might mean: a formulation 
so broad and ill-defined that, as Law Professor Kevin Jon Heller argues, it 
means the memo “authorizes the use of lethal force against 
individuals whose targeting is, without more, prohibited by 
international law”.)
>The definition of an extreme authoritarian is one who is willing 
blindly to assume that government accusations are true without any 
evidence presented or opportunity to contest those accusations. This 
memo – and the entire theory justifying Obama’s kill list – centrally 
relies on this authoritarian conflation of government accusations and 
valid proof of guilt.
>They are not the same and never have been. Political leaders who 
decree guilt in secret and with no oversight inevitably succumb to error and/or 
abuse of power. Such unchecked accusatory decrees are inherently untrustworthy 
(indeed, Yemen experts have vehemently contested the claim that Awlaki himself 
was a senior al-Qaida leader posing an imminent threat to the US). That’s why 
due process is guaranteed in the Constitution 
and why judicial review of government accusations has been a staple of 
western justice since the Magna Carta: because leaders can’t be trusted 
to decree guilt and punish citizens without evidence and an adversarial 
process. That is the age-old basic right on which this memo, and the 
Obama presidency, is waging war.
We’ve previously pointed out the absurdity of the government’s circular 
reasoning in the context of indefinite detention:
The government’s indefinite detention policy – stripped 
of it’s spin – is literally insane, and based on circular reasoning. 
Stripped of p.r., this is the actual policy:
>       * If you are an enemy combatant or a threat to national security, we 
> will detain you indefinitely until the war is over
>       * It is a perpetual war, which will never be over
>       * Neither you or your lawyers have a right to see the evidence against 
> you, nor to face your accusers
>       * But trust us, we know you are an enemy combatant and a threat to 
> national security
>       * We may torture you (and try to cover up the fact that you were 
> tortured), because you are an enemy combatant, and so basic rights of a 
> prisoner guaranteed by the Geneva Convention don’t apply to you
>       * Since you admitted that you’re a bad guy (while trying to tell us 
> whatever you think we want to hear to make the torture stop), it proves that 
> we should hold you in indefinite detention
>See how that works?
The Founding Fathers are rolling in their graves, as the separation 
of powers they fought and died for is being destroyed.  We’ve gone from a 
nation of laws to a nation of powerful men making laws in secret, where 
Congressional leaders themselves aren’t even allowed to see the laws, or to 
learn about covert programs.  A nation where Congressmen are threatened with 
martial law if they don’t approve radical programs.
Indeed, Bush and Obama have literally set the clock back 800 years … to before 
the signing of the Magna Carta.

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



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