After
Boston, lawmakers see case for use of drones to kill Americans
26
January, 2013
In
the aftermath of the Boston bombing standoff that ended last Friday,
lawmakers have changed their tune on whether a drone should ever be
used to target an American citizen on U.S. soil
The
use of drones to kill American citizens is not "inherently
illegal," as long as that citizen is a "combatant," a
constitutional expert told a Senate panel considering the
implications of targeted killings Tuesday.
"I
think it's not inherently illegal to target American citizens so long
as American citizens are also combatants in a relevant war. Sometimes
U.S. citizens can be classified as enemy combatants" Ilya Somin,
a law professor at George Mason University School of Law, told the
Senate Judiciary subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and
Human Rights.
"It's
not important [what technology we're using], what matters is we're
choosing the right target," he said. "If we're choosing the
right target then we should use the appropriate weapons, we'd be
wrong to ban specific technology."
That
question has become increasingly important as senators such as Ted
Cruz and Rand Paul consider the possibility of American citizens
being targeted by drones on U.S. soil. In September, 2011, suspected
Al-Qaeda operative and U.S. citizen Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a
U.S. drone strike in Yemen.
[BROWSE:
Political Cartoons on Drones]
Last
month, Paul spent 13 hours filibustering the confirmation of CIA
director John Brennan because he said he was concerned that the
United States could eventually target citizens on U.S. soil. Tuesday,
Paul changed his tune, telling Fox Business Network that he would
have approved of a drone targeting Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev.
"I've
never argued against any technology being used when you have an
imminent threat, an active crime going on," Paul said. "If
someone comes out of a liquor store with a weapon and fifty dollars
in cash … I don't care if a drone kills him or a policeman kills
him."
Even
liberal senators, such as Al Franken, have considered the possibility
that drones could have been useful in taking down Tsarnaev, who was
eventually captured, though he suggested using a drone strike would
not be ideal and is "odd for [him] to even consider."
"We
had a situation in Boston, a guy holed up in a boat who for all
accounts had explosives on him. They did send a robot in to take off
tarp," Franken said. "Isn't it possible we could see a
situation in which we might want to take that person out in a
different way [with drones]?"
Retired
Marine Corp. General James Cartwright, who has experience using
drones overseas, said he doesn't think using a drone would have been
a good idea in Tsarnaev's case.
"Inside
the US there are so many other means we can use to approach the
situation safely," he said. "If [Tsarnaev's] last act was
to stand up and put his hands up in a standoff, to shoot him with a
drone is not normally something we'd want to do."
Last
month, Attorney General Eric Holder said 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."
Cruz
said Tuesday that if a suspected terrorist is a U.S. citizen but does
not pose an "imminent threat," they should not be targeted.
"If
a United States citizen is on U.S. soil and we have intelligence to
suggest that individual is a terrorist involved with al-Qaeda but at
that moment poses no imminent threat, if they are sitting on U.S.
soil at a cafe in Northern Virginia, should we be allowed to kill
that citizen?," he asked. "In my view, the answer to that
question should be 'absolutely not.'"
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