Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The issues the white paper does and doesn't raise (updated)

NBC reporter Michael Isikoff got access to a Justice Department white paper on targeted drone killing by the Obama administration. I haven't read the whole 16 page report mostly because NBC made that difficult by stamping the whole thing in order to ensure that no one misses that this is an "exclusive." But I did read Isikoff's report and watched Rachel Maddow's segment on it - including an interview with Isikoff.

One of the big errors Maddow made in her reporting - which was then corrected by Isikoff - is that she wanted to make a big deal out of the idea that the administration has never publicly defended their legal case for targeted killing. She totally ignored the speech Attorney General Eric Holder gave last March on exactly that topic. In that speech, Holder identified a three-part test for when targeted killing is legal:
  1. The target poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the U.S.
  2. Capture is not feasible, and
  3. Killing would be consistent with the law of war
Holder (and the recently released memo) also make it clear that the basis for all this is what President Obama has called "the war on al Qaeda" (refocused from the Bush's "global war on terror") that was approved by Congress' 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force.
That the President is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons.
Equating the Bush administration's use of torture - which was clearly NOT consistent with the "law of war" - with these principles is nonsense. You can make a moral argument that killing someone is worse than torturing them. But that's the kind of challenge one undertakes when trying to make a moral case for war - which is ultimately about killing people.

Apparently the white paper expands the idea of "imminent threat" in Holder's first test and also the circumstances he described under which "capture is not feasible." In the paper, the latter condition is met if capture poses an undue threat to U.S. military personnel and/or if the home country would not approve of such an operation. Those qualifications seem consistent to me with the way similar matters are handled in domestic law enforcement and don't seriously trouble me in the context of "war." Let's remember that Bush/Cheney avoided all of these dilemmas by simply invading whole countries and killing hundreds of thousands of people.

That leaves me with two serious concerns. First of all, the expansion of the idea of "imminent threat" is troubling. From Isikoff's article:
“The condition that an operational leader present an ‘imminent’ threat of violent attack against the United States does not require the United States to have clear evidence that a specific attack on U.S. persons and interests will take place in the immediate future,” the memo states.

Instead, it says, an “informed, high-level” official of the U.S. government may determine that the targeted American has been “recently” involved in “activities” posing a threat of a violent attack and “there is no evidence suggesting that he has renounced or abandoned such activities.”
That leaves the barn door too wide open in my opinion - especially regarding the lack of exculpatory evidence given some of both the limitations and ineptness we've seen from our intelligence community in the not-to-distant past.

My second concern is the one I've always had...the open endedness of the 2001 AUMF that provides the legal framework for this kind of thing.  As I've always said, too many progressives focus on this as a domestic civil liberties issue when that is not the case the administration is making. The laws of war are very different than those that protect our domestic civil liberties. Representative Barbara Lee - the only member of Congress to vote against the AUMF - understands that. She has introduced legislation to repeal it. If progressives wanted to be effective in ending this practice, they'd support her in those efforts.

One final thought. Does anyone think that the release of this white paper was done without approval from the highest echelons of the Obama administration - probably the President himself? We know that they have been signaling the need to codify this policy for themselves and future administrations. I expect that this will spark just the kind of public conversation that they had in mind.

UPDATE: Of course Glenn Greenwald has written about this. He makes his usual bombastic points that we've been reading from him for years now. But he also makes one point that I think is important to consider about the "global battlefield."
That theory is both radical and dangerous because a president's powers are basically omnipotent on a "battlefield". There, state power is shielded from law, from courts, from constitutional guarantees, from all forms of accountability: anyone on a battlefield can be killed or imprisoned without charges. Thus, to posit the world as a battlefield is, by definition, to create an imperial, omnipotent presidency.
With that Greenwald is giving the very argument the Obama administration is making...that the relevant rules are those of war, not domestic civil liberties.

But he's right that opening up a global battlefield is a dangerous proposition. And yet, if we are going to have any coherent response to terrorism - which is very different from conventional war carried out on a "battlefield" - we need to struggle with this question in a way we haven't had to in the past. The kind of "war" Greenwald envisions is not likely to be the kind of war we face now or in the future. That's exactly why this conversation is so important.

6 comments:

  1. It's worth noting that this was released three days before the sure-to-be controversial hearing of John Brennan. No doubt this will come up before the committee, where Brennan will get the chance to clarify and set the record straight on the Administration's viewpoint.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "But he's right that opening up a global battlefield is a dangerous proposition."

    Thanks for your thoughts on this - and the other thought experiment post. Meaty stuff.

    Maybe I'm overly pessimistic on this, but I don't think there are any good short-term decisions available on national security. There is only the ability to choose which bad (read, morally stinking) course to follow in the short term, and try to lay the ground for better options in tbe long term).

    And I don't think there's any way to do that without reshaping the makeup of Congress such that it takes responsibility for stuff. Whether that's stopping it from either blocking domestic issues for which it faces no consequences for doing so, or from granting too much leeway on foreign issues so it can keep its hands clean and gripe about it later.

    In both cases, Congress is abdicating its proper role. And pressure on the Executive branch won't magically resolve that. It's pushing on a string.

    Hindsight being wonderful, of course, the AUMF should have been time-limited. Or something. I think the classic comparison - if my recollection is accurate - is of the pirate threat the Roman republic faced in c. 60BC. Pompey was given very broad military authority to respond to what was essentially terrorism. But it was strongly time-limited.

    And Pompey took that authority, wiped out the pirates, and had to cede that authority back to the Senate, where it belonged.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks sib.

      I'm going to use this as an opportunity to vent some of my frustrations about this topic.

      It seems to me that there are two camps about this on the left. In one are the people who are screaming about civil liberties and - to my mind - are missing the point.

      In the other are the Obama supporters who fear that a discussion about this will undermine the President.

      The result is that NO ONE is having the conversation we need to have about this. That drives me a bit batty sometimes.

      Delete
  3. SP I don't fear any discussion on this I want folks that go on about drones to do is give me an credible, realistic alternative to deal with folks who declare war on the US and plot attacks on US citizens and allies. That is all I want.

    ebogan63

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  4. Question 1) how is sending in a company of troops (Fallujah) different than using a drone?

    Question 2) Was the Alabama kidnapper assassinated? It was clearly a pre-emptive attack, and he did not have due process

    Question 3) In the Civil War, everyone in the South was an American Citizen, were they all subject to Due Process?

    Question 4) Did German Americans who defected to NAZI Germany have rights of Due Process?

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    Replies
    1. All excellent points snkscoyote!!!!!

      The frustration I often feel in reading progressives on this is that it feels like they pump up their moral outrage with absolutely zero context.

      Its easy to pump up outrage about war - something that is inherently immoral. I can take that from a pacifist. But too many of the folks engaged in that kind of thing today are not and simply exploit that inherent immorality.

      Delete

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