White
House admits it can't kill Americans with drones in US
Two
leading figures within the Obama administration now insist that the
president of the United States does not have the authority to launch
drone strikes on US soil.
RT,
7
March, 2013
Sen.
Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) received a response from the Obama
administration on Thursday afternoon after spending 13 hours
demanding answers about the possible use of drones inside of the
United States.
During
a briefing Thursday afternoon, White House press secretary Jay Carney
said, "The president has not and
would not use drone strikes against American citizens on American
soil.
Mr.
Carney also elected to read a statement penned by Attorney General
Eric Holder earlier that day that had been sent to Sen. Paul. Mr.
Holder’s entire statement, only 43 words, confirmed Mr. Carney’s
remark.
“It
has come to my attention that you have now asked an additional
question: ‘Does the President have the authority to use a
weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on
American soil?’ The answer to that question is no,”
wrote the attorney general.
The
official response came one day after Sen. Paul stood up on the floor
of the Capital Building in Washington and said he would filibuster
the nomination hearing for US President Barack Obama’s choice for
the next CIA director, John Brennan, until he was presented with
answers about the administration’s past and planned use of drones
both overseas and domestically. Days earlier, Holder told the
senator, “It is possible, I
suppose, to imagine an extraordinary circumstance in which it would
be necessary and appropriate under the Constitution and applicable
laws of the United States for the President to authorize the military
to use lethal force within the territory of the United States.”
Into the evening and even the Thursday morning, Sen. Paul continued
with his presentation, occasionally being joined by members of both
sides of the aisle to demand answers about the drone program.
“I
will speak until I can no longer speak. I will speak as long as it
takes, until the alarm is sounded from coast to coast that our
Constitution is important, that your rights to trial by jury are
precious, that no American should be killed by a drone on American
soil without first being charged with a crime, without first being
found to be guilty by a court,”
Paul said during part of the roughly 13-hour filibuster.
When
caught on camera after receiving word of the remarks from both the
White House and Justice Department, Sen. Paul was asked if he was
satisfied with their response. “Yes,”
Sen. Paul told CNN, adding that he would allow for the Senate to
continue confirming Mr. Brennan since he felt he won his fight: the
right for every American of due process.
The
remarks from both the attorney general and official administration
spokesperson came shortly after a reconvened US Senate continued
weighing in on the nomination of Mr. Brennan earlier in the day.
During the filibuster, Sen. Paul and his colleagues raised questions
about the government’s drone program and the possible overstepping
of authority from around the world, earning headlines and praise by
even fair-weather followers of American politics. Right on cue,
however, establishment politicians of both the Democratic and
Republican parties responded by dismissing Sen. Paul’s claims as
neither relevant to either major groups, smearing his statements much
the way the politics of his father, former-Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas),
often left him portrayed as a representative “on
the fringe.”
The
senator from Kentucky finally finished his coup Thursday morning at 1
a.m., and the Senate retired for the evening before reconvening to
continue with the confirmation nearly one day to the minute after
Sen. Paul first spoke up. Among the first order of business, to some
lawmakers, was responding to the problems with the drone program
raised during the filibuster.
Shortly
after Thursday morning’s matters got off the ground, Sen. John
McCain took the floor to condemn his colleague’s claims from
earlier that day, reading in part from an op-ed published hours
earlier by the Wall Street Journal.
"If
Mr. Paul wants to be taken seriously, he needs to do more than pull
political stunts that fire up impressionable libertarian kids,”
read Sen. McCain.
John
Stanton, the DC bureau chief for Buzzfeed.com, tweeted from
Washingon, “So while much of
the GOP establishment scrambled last night to be seen with
@SenRandPaul, McCain is clearly not one of them.”
"I
don't think what happened yesterday is helpful to the American
people,”
continued McCain, who added at one point that Sen. Paul did a
"disservice to a lot of
Americans for making them fear they're in danger from their
government."
“They’re
not,”
added McCain. "That
brings the conversation from a serious discussion of us policy to the
realm of ridiculous.”
Shortly
after McCain began his assault, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South
Carolina_ joined him on the floor in order to continue picking apart
Sen. Paul’s remarks from the filibuster. Although the marathon
diatribe began Wednesday morning during a confirmation hearing for
Mr. Brennan, Sen. Paul’s testimony quickly turned into an attack on
the Obama administration’s drone program, where Brennan has served
as a counterterrorism adviser. By proxy, then, Sen. Paul is using the
nomination of Brennan to bring the drone discussion further in the
forefront. Even opponents on the same side of the aisle saw a problem
with this approach, though, and on Thursday Sen. Graham said he was
offended by his cohort’s demands.
“He
says he wants this president to tell him that he won’t use a drone
to kill an American citizen sitting in a café having a cup of coffee
who is not a combatant,”
Sen. Graham said of Paul’s demands. “I
find the question offensive.”
Sen.
Graham went on to say that such discussion “cheapens
the debate,”
and that while the president of the United States does and should
have the authority to use military action in the event of a national
emergency, no American should ever fear of being attacked by a drone.
Just
days earlier, though, the Obama administration informed Sen. Paul
that, indeed, a US citizen could be struck with a drone strike
anywhere in America without ever being brought to court.
“It
is possible, I suppose, to imagine an extraordinary circumstance in
which it would be necessary and appropriate under the Constitution
and applicable laws of the United States for the President to
authorize the military to use lethal force within the territory of
the United States,”
Attorney General Eric Holder wrote Sen. Paul earlier that week.
Following
the administration’s admission, Sen. Paul has demanded a more
forthright response from the president. During the filibuster, he
made repeated demands for a direct answer from Pres. Obama, and at
one point said, “I can’t
understand the president’s unwillingness to say he’s not going to
kill noncombatants. Think about that. He’s unwilling to say
publicly that he’s not going to kill noncombatants.”
Responding
to his remarks, Sen. Graham said Thursday,
“I hope all of us would agree using military force”
in a situation that put the US in danger — even if it involved an
American citizen on US soil —
“is not only lawful under the Authorization to Use Military Force”
but “within the inherent
authority”
of the commander-in-chief.
“The
question is, do you feel threatened anymore? I do. I think al-Qaeda
is alive and well,”
said Graham. The senator from South Carolina continued on dismiss
Sen. Paul’s claims by rejecting his worries about an American
citizen being blown up by a drone while enjoying lunch.
“We
don’t want to blow up the café. We want to go in there and grab
the person for intelligence persons,”
said Graham. In situations when that isn’t feasible, he added,
drones might be the only answer.
Sen.
McCain aligned himself with Graham and said in some “extreme
situations”
involving a “direct threat,”
a drone may be deployed. Sen. McCain proposed a hypothetical scenario
in which a bomb-laden vehicle was en route to a nuclear power plant.
Such an incident, he said, would indeed warrant the president to use
any asset in order to prevent an impending catastrophic attack.
“That
is within the realm of possible scenarios,”
said McCain, “So to somehow
say that we would kill people in cafes and therefore drone strikes
should never be used under any circumstances, I believe, is a
distortion of the reality of the threats we face.”
Sen.
Graham added that Americans faced a zero percent chance of being
struck with a drone, yet insisted that the president needn’t bother
responding with Sen. Paul’s demands about the use of the aircraft
domestically.
“The
chance of you being killed by a drone because you go to a Tea Party
rally or a moveon.org rally or any other political rally — or just
chatting on the internet quietly alone — by your government through
the use of a drone is zero. Under this administration and future
administrations.”
Sens.
Graham and McCain were joined on the floor during Thursday’s
hearing by Sen. Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, showing that
the issue at hand is one that is warranting varying responses from
both sides of the aisle. Although a member of another political
party, Durbin agreed that drones should be used like any other weapon
and asked for the confirmation hearing to continue. But while other
democrats are agreeing with Sen. Paul as well, some say that the
issue is so controversial that other politicians won’t bother
speaking up.
“[A]
lot of Dems agree with Paul on civil liberties and don't want to
cross their left,”
tweeted Buzzfeed’s Stanton, “so
they're letting McCain and Graham do their dirty work.”
The
day before, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon), joined Sen. Paul on floor to
bring bi-partisan support to the filibuster. As debates continue
though, a rift between sects of both the Democrat and Republican
parties could easily widen as the rules relating to the extrajudicial
killings of Americans cause even the most diverse politicians to
ponder the question.
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