|
Obama's Secret Court for Killing
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Obama
Gives Himself Permission To Kill
President Obama
willingly admits he dispatched CIA agents to kill an American and
his teenage son and the son's American friend while they were in
a desert in Yemen in 2011. He says he did so because the adult had
encouraged folks to wage war on the United States and the children
were just "collateral damage." He says further that he'll do this
again when he is convinced that killing Americans will keep America
safe. He says he knows the adult encouraged evil, and his encouragement
caused the deaths of innocents. The adult was never charged with
a crime or indicted by a grand jury; he was just targeted for death
by the president himself and executed by a CIA drone.
International
law and the law of war, to both of which the U.S. is bound by treaty,
as well as federal law and the Judeo-Christian values that underlie
the Declaration of Independence (which guarantees the right to live)
and the Constitution (which permits governmental interference with
that right only after a congressional declaration of war or individual
due process) all provide that the certainty of the identity of a
human target, the sincerity of the wish for his death, the perception
of his guilt and imminent danger are insufficient to justify the
government's use of lethal force against him. The president may
only lawfully kill after due process, in self-defense or under a
declaration of war.
The reasons
for the constitutional requirement of a congressional declaration
of war are to provide a check on the president's lust for war by
forcing him to obtain formal congressional approval, to isolate
and identify the object of war so the president cannot kill whomever
he pleases, to confine the warfare to the places where the object's
military forces are located so the president cannot invade wherever
he wishes, and to assure termination of the hostilities when the
object of the war surrenders so the president cannot wage war without
end.
But when war
is waged, only belligerents may be targeted, and advocating violence
against the U.S. is not an act of wartime violence and does not
make one a belligerent. Were this not so, then nothing would lawfully
prevent the U.S. from killing Americans who spoke out in favor of
al-Qaida, and then killing Americans who spoke out against war and
killing, and then killing Americans whose words became an obstacle
to killing.
That's the
reason the enabling federal legislation enacted in support of the
2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force specifically exempts
expressive conduct from the ambit of prohibited criminal or warlike
behavior that can provide the basis for any government prosecution
or military belligerence. So, the feds can shoot at a guy with a
bomb in his hands when he is about to explode it, but not at a guy
with a megaphone in his hands when he is about to speak through
it.
Thus, if New
Mexico-born Anwar al-Awlaki had been shooting at American troops
at the time the government took aim at him, naturally, the troops
can shoot back. But when he merely encourages others to shoot, his
behavior is protected by the natural law, the First Amendment and
numerous federal statutes. As well, he was 10,000 miles from the
U.S., never known to have engaged in violent acts, and having a
private conversation at a roadside cafe in a desert when he was
killed. No law or legal principle justifies the U.S. government
killing him then and there; in fact, numerous laws prohibit it.
The president's
use of the CIA for offensive killing also violates federal law.
Intelligence agents may only lawfully kill in self-defense, not
offensively. Only the military may lawfully kill offensively. In
the al-Awlaki case, intelligence sources have confirmed to Fox News
that a team of American and Yemeni intelligence agents had followed
al-Awlaki and had him under continuous observation at the time of
his killing and for the preceding 48 hours. They easily could have
arrested him – had he been charged with a civilian crime or a war
crime, which he wasn't.
Of course,
the murder of his Colorado-born son and the son's American friend
are not even arguably defensible, and the president's spokesman
who suggested that the young al-Awlaki should have "chosen a different
father" shows a seriously defective thought process and an utter
antipathy for the rule of law in places of power.
We now confront
the truly unthinkable: a proposal to establish yet another secret
court, this one with the authority to authorize the president and
his designees to kill Americans. This proposal has come from Congress,
which seems more interested in getting in on the killing than in
upholding the Constitution. The federal government only has the
lawful powers the states delegated to it. As the states cannot kill
Americans without due process, neither can the feds. Congress cannot
create this killing court, and no judge on such a Stalinesque court
can authorize the president to kill.
The president
has made a political calculation that it will be easier for him
to justify killing folks he can demonize than it will be to afford
them due process, by capturing, housing and trying them. Now, he
has come to believe that it will be easier still if unnamed federal
judges meeting in secret take the heat. Politically, the president
may be correct. But he has taken an oath to uphold the Constitution,
and he lacks the moral and legal basis to reject that in favor of
killing.
When he kills
without due process, he disobeys the laws he has sworn to uphold,
no matter who agrees with him. When we talk about killing as if
it were golf, we debase ourselves. And when the government kills
and we put our heads in the sand, woe to us when there is no place
to hide.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
February 14, 2013
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is Theodore
and Woodrow: How Two American Presidents Destroyed Constitutional
Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano and to read
features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit
creators.com.
Copyright
© 2013 Andrew P. Napolitano
The
Best of Andrew Napolitano
|