White House wins fight to keep drone killings of Americans secret
RT,
3
January, 2013
A
federal judge issued a 75-page ruling on Wednesday that declares that
the US Justice Department does not have a legal obligation to explain
the rationale behind killing Americans with targeted drone strikes.
United
States District Court Judge Colleen McMahon wrote in her finding this
week that the Obama administration was largely in the right by
rejecting Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests filed by the
American Civil Liberties Union and The New York Times for materials
pertaining to the use of unmanned aerial vehicles to execute three US
citizens abroad in late 2011 [pdf].
Anwar
al-Awlaki and Samir Khan, both US nationals with alleged ties to
al-Qaeda, were killed on September 30 of that year using drone
aircraft; days later, al-Awlaki’s teenage son, Abdulrahman
al-Awlaki, was executed in the same manner. Although the Obama
administration has remained largely quiet about the killings in the
year since, a handful of statements made from senior White House
officials, including Pres. Barack Obama himself, have provided some
but little insight into the Executive Branch’s insistence that the
killings were all justified and constitutionally-sound. Attempts from
the ACLU and the Times via FOIA requests to find out more have been
unfruitful, though, which spawned a federal lawsuit that has only now
been decided in court.
Siding
with the defendants in what can easily be considered as cloaked in
skepticism, Judge McMahon writes that the Obama White House has been
correct in refusing the FOIA requests filed by the plaintiffs.
"There
are indeed legitimate reasons, historical and legal, to question the
legality of killings unilaterally authorized by the Executive that
take place otherwise than on a 'hot' field of battle," McMahon
writes in her ruling. Because her decision must only weigh whether or
not the Obama administration has been right in rejecting the FOIA
requests, though, her ruling cannot take into consideration what sort
of questions — be it historical, legal, ethical or moral — are
raised by the ongoing practice of using remote-controlled drones to
kill insurgents and, in these instances, US citizens.
"The
Alice-in-Wonderland nature of this pronouncement is not lost on me;
but after careful consideration, I find myself stuck in a paradoxical
situation in which I cannot solve a problem because of contradictory
constraints and rules — a veritable Catch-22,” she
writes. “I
can find no way around the 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 reason
for their conclusion a secret.”
Throughout
her ruling, Judge McMahon cites speeches from both Pres. Obama and
Attorney General Eric Holder in which the al-Awlaki killings are
vaguely discussed, but appear to do little more than excuse the
administration’s behavior with their own secretive explanations.
“The
Constitution’s guarantee of due process is ironclad, and it is
essential — but, as a recent court decision makes clear, it does
not require judicial approval before the President may use force
abroad against a senior operational leader of a foreign terrorist
organization with which the United States is at war — even if that
individual happens to be a US citizen,” McMahon
quotes Mr. Holder as saying during a March 2012 address at Chicago’s
Northwestern University.
“Holder did not identify which recent court decisions so held,”
the judge replies, “Nor
did he explain exactly what process was given to the victims of
targeted killings at locations far from ‘hot’ battlefields…”
And
while both Mr. Holder and Pres. Obama have discussed the killings in
public, including one appearance by the president on the Tonight Show
with Jay Leno, the Justice Department insists that going further by
releasing any legal evidence that supports the executions would be
detrimental to national security.
While
Judge McMahon ends up agreeing with the White House, she does so by
making known her own weariness over how the Obama administration has
forced the court to rely on their own insistence that information
about the attacks simply cannot be discussed.
“As
they gathered to draft a Constitution for their newly liberated
country, the Founders — fresh from a war of independence from the
rule of a King they styled a tyrant — were fearful of concentrating
power in the hands of any single person or institution, and most
particular in the executive,” McMahon
writes.
Responding
to the decision on Wednesday, ACLU Deputy Legal Director Jameel
Jaffer issued a statement condemning the White House’s just-won
ability to relieve itself from any fair and honest explanation as to
the justification of Americans.
“This
ruling denies the public access to crucial information about the
government’s extrajudicial killing of US citizens and also
effectively green-lights its practice of making selective and
self-serving disclosures,” Jameel
writes. “As
the judge acknowledges, the targeted killing program raises profound
questions about the appropriate limits on government power in our
constitutional democracy. The public has a right to know more about
the circumstances in which the government believes it can lawfully
kill people, including US citizens, who are far from any battlefield
and have never been charged with a crime.”
The
ACLU says they plan to appeal Judge McMahon’s decision and are
currently awaiting news regarding a separate lawsuit filed alongside
the Center for Constitutional Rights that directly challenges the
constitutionality of the targeted kills.
“The
government has argued that case should also be dismissed,”
the ACLU notes.
In
a Wednesday afternoon statement from the Times, assistant general
counsel David McCraw says the paper will appeal the ruling as well.
"We
began this litigation because we believed our readers deserved to
know more about the US government's legal position on the use of
targeted killings against persons having ties to terrorism, including
US citizens," McCraw
says.
Although
she ruled against the plaintiffs, Judge McMahon, says McCraw,
explained "eloquently
… why in a democracy the government should be addressing those
questions openly and fully."
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