Jeremy
Scahill: The Secret Story Behind Obama’s Assassination of Two
Americans in Yemen
Click
here to watch Part 2 of
this interview.
23
April, 2013
The
Obama administration’s assassination of two U.S. citizens in 2011,
Anwar al-Awlaki and his 16-year-old Denver-born son Abdulrahman, is a
central part of Jeremy Scahill’s new book, "Dirty Wars: The
World Is a Battlefield."
The book is based on years of reporting
on U.S. secret operations in Yemen, Somalia and Afghanistan. While
the Obama administration has defended the killing of Anwar, it has
never publicly explained why Abdulrahman was targeted in a separate
drone strike two weeks later.
Scahill reveals CIA Director
John Brennan, Obama’s former senior adviser on counterterrorism and
homeland security, suspected that the teenager had been killed
"intentionally."
"The idea that you can simply have
one branch of government unilaterally and in secret declare that an
American citizen should be executed or assassinated without having to
present any evidence whatsoever, to me, is a — we should view that
with great sobriety about the implications for our country,"
says Scahill, national security correspondent for The Nation
magazine.
Today the U.S. Senate is preparing to hold its first-ever
hearing on the Obama administration’s drone and targeted killing
program. However, the Obama administration is refusing to send a
witness to answer questions about the program’s legality.
"Dirty
Wars" is also the name of a new award-winning documentary by
Scahill and Rick Rowley, which will open in theaters in June. We air
the film’s new trailer.
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