Too Much Power for a President
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.        
 
 
7 comments:
Hey would you mind letting me know which web host you're using? I've loaded your blog in 3 different web browsers
and I must say this blog loads a lot quicker then most.
Can you suggest a good hosting provider at a honest price?
Cheers, I appreciate it!
Here is my web-site: Stay At Home Jobs Uk
Someone necessarily help to make significantly posts I might state.
That is the very first time I frequented your website page
and up to now? I surprised with the research you made to create this
actual post incredible. Wonderful task!
Feel free to visit my page; work at home websites
Excellent, what a blog it is! This webpage provides valuable data to us, keep
it up.
Also visit my blog how to make fast money
I've been browsing on-line more than 3 hours lately, yet I never discovered any fascinating article like yours. It's
beautiful value sufficient for me. In my view, if all webmasters and bloggers made just right content material
as you did, the internet will be a lot more useful than ever before.
Review my site - http://Creativestudios.com/wiki/index.php?title=User:CelesteDD
I do not even know how I ended up here, but I thought this post was good.
I don't know who you are but certainly you're going to a famous blogger if you are not already ;) Cheers!
Here is my homepage ... akribos xxiv watches for women
I have read so many content concerning the blogger lovers except this piece of writing is in fact a good article, keep it up.
Also visit my webpage: armitron
Hello, just wanted to tell you, I liked this article.
It was helpful. Keep on posting!
Feel free to visit my website: rc hobbies
Post a Comment