Why Isn’t the Murder of an American Boy an Impeachable Offense?
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
Future
of Freedom Foundation
Recently
by Jacob G. Hornberger: The
Ongoing Kennedy Casket Mystery
Article 2,
Section 4, of the U.S. Constitution reads as follows: The President,
Vice President and all civil officers of the United States, shall
be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason,
bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.”
In 1998, President
Bill Clinton was impeached for perjury and obstruction of justice
for matters arising out of the Monica Lewinsky sex scandal.
If perjury
and obstruction of justice constitute high crimes or misdemeanors,
then doesn’t it seem rather obvious that the murder of an American
citizen by the president would also constitute a high crime or misdemeanor,
especially if the citizen is a child?
That’s precisely
what President Obama, acting through U.S. national-security state
agents, did on October 14, 2011. He murdered a 16-year-old American
boy who was traveling in Yemen. The boy was Abdulrahman
al-Awlaki, who was the son of accused terrorist Anwar al-Awlaki,
who the CIA had assassinated two weeks before.
Why did President
Obama and the CIA or the military kill Abdulrahman? The president,
the CIA, and the Pentagon have all chosen to remain silent on the
matter, refusing to even acknowledge that they killed the boy. But
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs implicitly provided
the justification: “I would suggest that you should have a far
more responsible father if they are truly concerned about the well
being of their children. I don’t think becoming an al Qaeda jihadist
terrorist is the best way to go about doing your business.”
So, there you
have it: the boy was apparently killed because he was considered
to have the wrong father.
But if that’s
a legitimate justification for killing a child, there are obviously
a lot more children at risk in this country.
Proponents
of the war on terrorism argue that the killing of the teenager wasn’t
really a murder but rather an assassination. But isn’t that a distinction
without a difference?
After all,
compare Obama’s killing of Abdulrahman with Chilean Gen. Augusto
Pinochet’s killing of Orlando
Letelier. Pinochet took power in 1973, during the time that
the Cold War and the war on communism were being waged. Pinochet,
who the U.S. national-security state had helped install into power,
not only began rounding up, incarcerating, torturing, abusing, and
executing suspected communists without any judicial process, he
also embarked on an program to assassinate Chilean communists found
overseas.
Agents of Pinochet’s
counterpart to the CIA, a secret police force called DINA,
planned and orchestrated the killing of Orlando Letelier on the
streets of Washington, D.C. Why was Letelier targeted for death?
He was a socialist, a Chilean citizen who had served in the administration
of President Salvador Allende, the democratically elected Marxist
president whom Pinochet, President Richard Nixon, the CIA, and the
U.S. military ousted from power and replaced with Pinochet’s military
dictatorship. Therefore, as part of the war on communism, Letelier
was considered to be a legitimate target for assassination.
On September
21, 1976, an assassination team headed by a man named Michael
Townley exploded a bomb that the team had planted under Letelier’s
car. Letelier was killed, along with his American assistant who
was also in the car, 25-year-old Ronni
Moffitt.
Interestingly,
the U.S. Justice Department did not consider the assassination to
be legitimate under the concept of war and enemy combatants, notwithstanding
the fact that the Cold War and global war on communism were still
being waged. The Justice Department treated the killings of Letelier
and Moffitt as murders. Townley and his team were indicted and prosecuted
for the murders of Letelier and Moffitt.
How is Obama’s
killing of Abdulrahman any different from Pinochet’s murder of Orlando
Letelier and Ronni Moffitt? In the one case, a 16-year-old boy has
had his life snuffed out because he had the wrong father. In the
other case, a man had his life snuffed out because he had the wrong
philosophical beliefs. Given that the Letelier and Moffitt killings
were treated as murders, why shouldn’t the Abdulraham killing be
treated as murder too?
An interesting
twist to these killings is a common denominator the CIA.
It turned out that Townley was an agent of the CIA. He claimed that
at the time he set off the bomb he was no longer working for the
CIA, which, not surprisingly, is what the CIA claimed also. But
the problem, of course, is that they would say that even if he was
still employed by the CIA. And, in fact, the CIA was supporting
and working closely with DINA after Pinochet came to power. It says
a lot that for the pre-meditated, cold-blooded murder of Letelier
and Moffitt, Townley served a grand total of about five years in
jail before being released get this into the federal
witness protection program, where he remains safely ensconced and
anonymous today.
We also shouldn’t
forget that the U.S. national-security state also participated in
the execution of 31-year-old American journalist Charles Horman
during the Pinochet coup, a crime that U.S. officials have never
investigated or prosecuted CIA officials or U.S. military officials
for. What was the justification for murdering Horman? We can’t
know for sure because U.S. military and CIA officials have never
provided it, but most likely it was because Horman had acquired
secret information about U.S. involvement in the coup and because
Horman was a socialist who supported the Allende regime. (See here
and here.)
In an interesting twist, just recently Chilean officials charged
a U.S. military officer with conspiracy to murder Horman during
the coup.
What remedy
do the family members of an American who has been murdered by the
president and the national-security state have?
They obviously
can’t look to the Justice Department, which answers to the president
and which isn’t ever going to take on the CIA with a criminal prosecution
for a crime that was ordered by the president.
They also can’t
look to the federal courts, which display the same deference and
submissiveness to the military and the CIA that Chilean courts displayed
toward the Pinochet’s military and DINA. In any wrongful death action
brought by the victim’s family, all the military and CIA have to
do is announce to the presiding judge the same sorts of things that
Pinochet’s people would announce to Chilean federal judges: “National
security, war on terrorism, and state secrets, your honor,” and
every federal judge in the land will quickly slam down his gavel
and declare, “Case dismissed.”
That leaves
the families of the victim with only one course of action: impeachment
and removal from office by Congress. It’s not only the right thing
to do, it’s also the only practical way to induce President Obama
to explain why a child’s father provides the justification for murdering
his child.
Reprinted
from The Future of Freedom Foundation.
February
23, 2013
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2013 Future of Freedom Foundation
The
Best of Jacob Hornberger
|