Terror Tuesdays, Kill Lists and Drones: Has the President Become
a Law Unto Himself?
by John W. Whitehead
Recently
by John W. Whitehead: Whatever
Happened to Justice? Supreme Court OKs Police Tasering Pregnant
Women
What
lies at the nexus of Obamas targeted drone killings, his self-serving
leaks, and his aggressive prosecution of whistleblowers is a president
who believes himself above the law, and seems convinced that he
alone has a preternatural ability to determine right from wrong.
~
Peter Van Buren, a 24-year veteran Foreign Service Officer at the
State Department
Since the early
days of our republic, we have operated under the principle that
no one is above the law. As Thomas Paine observed in Common
Sense, in America, the law is king. For as in absolute
governments the King is law, so in free countries the law ought
to be king; and there ought to be no other. Several years
later, John Adams, seeking to reinforce this important principle,
declared in the Massachusetts Constitution that they were seeking
to establish a government of laws and not of men.
The history
of our nation over the past 200 years has been the history of a
people engaged in a constant struggle to maintain that tenuous balance
between the rule of law in our case, the United States Constitution and
the government leaders entrusted with protecting it, upholding it
and abiding by it. At various junctures, when that necessary balance
has been thrown off by overreaching government bodies or overly
ambitious individuals, we have found ourselves faced with a crisis
of constitutional proportions. Each time, we have taken the painful
steps needed to restore our constitutional equilibrium.
Now, once again,
we find ourselves skating dangerously close to becoming a nation
ruled not by laws but by men and fallible, imperfect men,
at that. Yet this latest crisis did not happen overnight. Its seeds
were sown in the wake of the 9/11 terror attacks, when fear-addled
Americans started selling their freedoms cheaply, bit by bit, for
phantom promises of security. From torture at CIA black site prisons
and Abu Ghraib abuses to extraordinary renditions, from TSA body
scanners and warrantless wiretaps to the PATRIOT Act, Americans
have failed to be outraged by the governments repeated violations
of the rule of law. In this way, as the war on terror
has unfolded beyond our wildest imaginings from the barbaric
treatment of foreign detainees at American-run prisons to the technological
arsenal being used by the U.S. government to monitor and control
its citizens our rights have taken a meteoric nosedive in
inverse proportion to the governments rapidly expanding powers.
The New
York Times recent revelation that President Obama, operating
off a government kill list, has been personally directing
who should be targeted for death by military drones (unmanned aerial
assault vehicles) merely pushes us that much closer to that precipitous
drop-off to authoritarianism. Should we fail to recognize and rectify
the danger in allowing a single individual to declare himself the
exception to the rule of law and assume the role of judge, jury,
and executioner, we will have no one else to blame when we plunge
once and for all into the abyss that is tyranny.
Declaring Obamas
actions without precedent in presidential history, the
New York Times describes a process whereby every few weeks,
Obama and approximately a hundred members of his national security
team gather for their Terror Tuesday meetings in which
they hand pick the next so-called national security threat
to die by way of the American military/CIA drone program. Obama
signs off personally on about a third of the drone strikes: all
of the ones in Yemen and Somalia, and the risky ones in Pakistan.
These Terror
Tuesday sessions run counter to every constitutional and moral
principle that has guided America since its inception. Its
not only suspected terrorists whose death warrants are being personally
signed by the president but innocent civilians geographically situated
near a strike zone, as well, whether or not they have any ties to
a suspected terrorist. As an anonymous government official on Obamas
drone campaign observed, They count the corpses and theyre
not really sure who they are. Indeed, Obamas first authorized
drone attack in Yemen led to the deaths of 14 women and 21 children,
and only one al-Qaeda affiliate. Incredibly, the government actually
justifies these civilian deaths by suggesting that the individuals
must be militants or combatants simply because
of their proximity to the target.
No matter what
is said to the contrary, the Constitution does not in any way provide
for the president to engage in such acts, even under the auspices
of his role as Commander in Chief. In fact, the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments guarantees of due process, intended to protect
citizens in the event that the government attempts to overreach
its authority, assure every American citizen that before the government
can imprison them or put them to death, they have a right to hear
the charges being levied against them, review the evidence, and
be treated to a fair and impartial trial by a judge or jury.
Thus, perhaps
hoping to distract and divert the publics attention from the
core issue at hand namely, the fact that the president has
become a law unto himself the Obama administration has launched
an investigation to discover who leaked the information about the
kill list. The media, in typical fashion, have taken the bait. However,
no amount of obfuscation can alter the fact that Obama, by his actions,
is circumventing the Constitution, especially as it pertains to
the rights of American citizens. Indeed, in a decision he claims
was an easy one, Obama has already killed two American
citizens in this fashion: Anwar al-Awlaki, an American cleric living
in Yemen who served as a propagandist for Al-Qaeda, and his 16-year-old
son.
Yet with every
passing day, the casualties are mounting not just the innocent
women and children abroad blown to smithereens by American missiles,
but our Constitution, our increasingly fragile republic and our
ability to trust that our government leaders will be accountable
to abiding by the rule of law.
June
20, 2012
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead [send
him mail] is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. He is the author of The
Change Manifesto (Sourcebooks).
Copyright
© 2012 The Rutherford Institute
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