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Obama Gives Himself Permission To Kill
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Immigration
and Freedom
After stonewalling
for more than a year federal judges and ordinary citizens who sought
the revelation of its secret legal research justifying the presidential
use of drones to kill persons overseas – even Americans – claiming
the research was so sensitive and so secret that it could not be
revealed without serious consequences, the government sent a summary
of its legal memos to an NBC newsroom earlier this week.
This revelation
will come as a great surprise, and not a little annoyance, to U.S.
District Court Judge Colleen McMahon, who heard many hours of oral
argument during which the government predicted gloom and doom if
its legal research were subjected to public scrutiny. She very reluctantly
agreed with the feds, but told them she felt caught in "a veritable
Catch-22," because the feds have created "a thicket of
laws and precedents that effectively allow the executive branch
of our government to proclaim as perfectly lawful certain actions
that seem on their face incompatible with our Constitution and laws,
while keeping the reasons for their conclusion a secret."
She was writing
about President Obama killing Americans and refusing to divulge
the legal basis for claiming the right to do so. Now we know that
basis.
The undated
and unsigned 16-page document leaked to NBC refers to itself as
a Department of Justice white paper. Its logic is flawed, its premises
are bereft of any appreciation for the values of the Declaration
of Independence and the supremacy of the Constitution, and its rationale
could be used to justify any breaking of any law by any "informed,
high-level official of the U.S. government."
The quoted
phrase is extracted from the memo, which claims that the law reposes
into the hands of any unnamed "high-level official," not
necessarily the president, the lawful power to decide when to suspend
constitutional protections guaranteed to all persons and kill them
without any due process whatsoever. This is the power claimed by
kings and tyrants. It is the power most repugnant to American values.
It is the power we have arguably fought countless wars to prevent
from arriving here. Now, under Obama, it is here.
This came to
a boiling point when Obama dispatched CIA drones to kill New Mexico-born
and al-Qaida-affiliated Anwar al-Awlaki while he was riding in a
car in a desert in Yemen in September 2011. A follow-up drone, also
dispatched by Obama, killed Awlaki’s 16-year-old Colorado-born son
and his American friend. Awlaki’s American father sued the president
in federal court in Washington, D.C., trying to prevent the killing.
Justice Department lawyers persuaded a judge that the president
always follows the law, and besides, without any evidence of presidential
law breaking, the elder Awlaki had no case against the president.
Within three months of that ruling, the president dispatched his
drones and the Awlakis were dead. This spawned follow-up lawsuits,
in one of which McMahon gave her reluctant ruling.
Then the white
paper appeared. It claims that if an American is likely to trigger
the use of force 10,000 miles from here, and he can’t easily be
arrested, he can be murdered with impunity. This notwithstanding
state and federal laws that expressly prohibit non-judicial killing,
an executive order signed by every president from Gerald Ford to
Obama prohibiting American officials from participating in assassinations,
the absence of a declaration of war against Yemen, treaties expressly
prohibiting this type of killing, and the language of the Declaration,
which guarantees the right to live, and the Constitution, which
requires a jury trial before the government can deny that right.
The president
cannot lawfully order the killing of anyone, except according to
the Constitution and federal law. Under the Constitution, he can
only order killing using the military when the U.S. has been attacked
or when an attack is so imminent that delay would cost innocent
lives. He can also order killing using the military in pursuit of
a declaration of war enacted by Congress.
Unless Obama
knows that an attack from Yemen on our shores is imminent, he’d
be hard-pressed to argue that a guy in a car in the desert 10,000
miles from here – no matter his intentions – poses a threat so imminent
to the U.S. that he needs to be killed on the spot in order to save
the lives of Americans who would surely die during the time it would
take to declare war on the country that harbors him, or during the
time it would take to arrest him. Under no lawful circumstances
may he use CIA agents for killing. Surely, CIA agents can use deadly
force defensively to protect themselves and their assets, but they
may not use it offensively. Federal laws against murder apply to
the president and to all federal agents and personnel in their official
capacities, wherever they go on the planet.
Obama has argued
that he can kill Americans whose deaths he believes will keep us
all safer, without any due process whatsoever. No law authorizes
that. His attorney general has argued that the president’s careful
consideration of each target and the narrow use of deadly force
are an adequate and constitutional substitute for due process. No
court has ever approved that. And his national security adviser
has argued that the use of drones is humane since they are "surgical"
and only kill their targets. We know that is incorrect, as the folks
who monitor all this say that 11 percent to 17 percent of the 2,300
drone-caused deaths have been those of innocent bystanders.
Did you consent
to a government that can kill whom it wishes? How about one that
plays tricks on federal judges? How long will it be before the presidential
killing comes home?
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
February 7, 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
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