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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/25/AR2010092500560.html

Obama invokes 'state secrets' claim to dismiss suit against targeting of 
U.S. citizen al-Aulaqi

By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 25, 2010; 1:49 AM

The Obama administration urged a federal judge early Saturday to dismiss 
a lawsuit over its targeting of a U.S. citizen for killing overseas, 
saying that the case would reveal state secrets.

The U.S.-born citizen, Anwar al-Aulaqi, is a cleric now believed to be 
in Yemen. Federal authorities allege that he is leading a branch of 
al-Qaeda there.

Government lawyers called the state-secrets argument a last resort to 
toss out the case, and it seems likely to revive a debate over the reach 
of a president's powers in the global war against al-Qaeda.

Civil liberties groups sued the U.S. government on behalf of Aulaqi's 
father, arguing that the CIA and the Joint Special Operations Command's 
placement of Aulaqi on a capture-or-kill list of suspected terrorists - 
outside a war zone and absent an imminent threat - amounted to an 
extrajudicial execution order against a U.S. citizen. They asked a U.S. 
district court in Washington to block the targeting.

In response, Justice Department spokesman Matthew Miller said that the 
groups are asking "a court to take the unprecedented step of intervening 
in an ongoing military action to direct the President how to manage that 
action - all on behalf of a leader of a foreign terrorist organization."

Miller added, "If al-Aulaqi wishes to access our legal system, he should 
surrender to American authorities and return to the United States, where 
he will be held accountable for his actions."

In a statement, lawyers for Nasser al-Aulaqi condemned the government's 
request to dismiss the case without debating its merits, saying that 
judicial review of the pursuit of targets far from the battlefield of 
Afghanistan is vital.

"The idea that courts should have no role whatsoever in determining the 
criteria by which the executive branch can kill its own citizens is 
unacceptable in a democracy," the American Civil Liberties Union and 
Center for Constitutional Rights said.

"In matters of life and death, no executive should have a blank check," 
they said.

The government filed its brief to U.S. District Judge Robert Bates just 
after a midnight Friday deadline, blaming technical problems, and the 
late-night maneuvering underscored the political and diplomatic stakes 
for President Obama. His administration announced last year that it 
would set a higher bar when hiding details of controversial national 
security policies.

Justice Department officials said they invoked the controversial legal 
argument reluctantly, mindful that domestic and international critics 
attacked former president George W. Bush for waging the fight against 
terrorism with excessive secrecy and unchecked claims of executive power.

The Obama administration has cited the state-secrets argument in at 
least three cases since taking office - in defense of Bush-era 
warrantless wiretapping, surveillance of an Islamic charity, and the 
torture and rendition of CIA prisoners. It prevailed in the last case 
last week, on a 6 to 5 vote by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th 
Circuit.

A senior Justice official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the 
administration is engaging in "a much narrower use of state secrets" 
than did its predecessor, which cited the argument dozens of times - 
often, the official said, to "shut down inquiries into wrongdoing."

In its 60-page filing, the Justice Department cites state secrets as the 
last of four arguments, objecting first that Aulaqi's father lacks 
standing, that courts cannot lawfully bind future presidents' actions in 
as-yet undefined conflicts, and that in war the targeting of adversaries 
is inherently a "political question."

Robert M. Chesney, a national security law specialist at the University 
of Texas School of Law, said that Obama lawyers would undoubtedly prefer 
not to stoke the state-secrets debate, or to risk judicial review of its 
claim to a borderless battlefield.

"The real big issue here is . . . are we only at war in Afghanistan, or 
can the U.S. government lawfully use war powers in other cases, at least 
where the host nation consents or there is no host government?" Chesney 
said.

"You're trying to avoid a judicial ruling on the merits of the whole 
issue," Chesney said, adding, "But at the end of the day, if it's your 
best argument in a case you want to win, you're going to make that 
argument."

Staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.

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