Holder Promises To Kill Citizens With Care

Attorney General Eric Holder was at Northwestern University Law School yesterday explaining President Barack Obama’s claimed authority to kill any American if he unilaterally determines them to be a threat to the nation. The choice of a law school was a curious place for discussion of authoritarian powers. Obama has replaced the constitutional protections afforded to citizens with a “trust me” pledge that Holder repeated yesterday at Northwestern. The good news is that Holder promised not to hunt citizens for sport.

Holder proclaimed that “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 U.S. citizen.” The use of the word “abroad” is interesting since senior Administration officials have asserted that the President may kill an American anywhere and anytime, including the United States. Holder’s speech does not materially limit that claimed authority. He merely assures citizens that Obama will only kill those of us he finds abroad and a significant threat. Notably, Holder added “Our legal authority is not limited to the battlefields in Afghanistan.”

The Obama Administration continues to stonewall efforts to get it to acknowledge the existence of a memo authorizing the killing of Awlaki. Democrats previously demanded the “torture memos” of the Bush Administration that revealed both poor legal analysis by Judge Jay Bybee and Professor John Yoo to justify torture. Now, however, Democrats are largely silent in the face of a president claiming the right to unilaterally kill citizens.

Holder became particularly cryptic in his assurance of caution in the use of this power, insisting that they will kill citizens only with “the consent of the nation involved or after a determination that the nation is unable or unwilling to deal effectively with a threat to the United States.” What on earth does that mean?

He was more clear in establishing that due process itself is now defined differently than it has been defined by courts since the start of this Republic. He declared that “a careful and thorough executive branch review of the facts in a case amounts to ‘due process.’” Of course, from any objective standpoint, that statement is absurd and Orwellian. It is basically saying that “we will give the process that we consider due to a target.” His main point was that “due process” will now longer mean “judicial process.”

That last statement goes to the heart of the controversy. Many reporters have bought into the spin of the Administration that there are real limits to this power because they perform their own constitutional analysis for each killing. This starts with the presumption that the Constitution does not require these determinations to be made by a court or that they be subject to court review. They then redefine the protections of due process as a balancing test within the administration. This Administration has consistently maintained that courts do not have a say in such matters. Instead, they simply define the matter as covered by the Law Of Armed Conflicts (LOAC), even when the conflict is a war on terror. That war, they have stressed, is to be fought all around the world, including the United States. It is a battlefield without borders as strikes in other countries have vividly demonstrated.

The result is that they are claiming that they are following self-imposed “limits” which are meaningless — particularly in a system that is premised on the availability of judicial review. The Administration has never said that the LOAC does not allow the same powers to be used in the United States. It would be an easy thing to state. Holder can affirmatively state that the President’s inherent power to kill citizens exists only outside of the country. He can then explain where those limits are found in the Constitution and why they do not apply equally to a citizen in London or Berlin.

All the Administration has said is that they closely and faithfully follow their own guidelines — even if their decision are not subject to judicial review. The fact that they say those guidelines are based on notions of due process is meaningless. They are not a constitutional process of review. They are a dressed claim of process for a unilateral power. Presumably, the President can override the panel or disregard the panel. The panel is an extension of his claim of inherent unilateral authority.

If the “limit” is the internal review described by the administration, we are speaking a different language. Any authoritarian measure can be dressed up as carefully executed according to balancing tests, but that does not constitute “fifth amendment analysis,” “fourth amendment analysis,” or any constitutional analysis that I know of. It is at best a loose analogy to constitutional analysis.

This is precisely why the Framers rejected the “trust me” approach to government, as discussed in this column.

Since last year, U.S. drones have killed three Americans overseas.

Source: LA Times

213 thoughts on “Holder Promises To Kill Citizens With Care”

  1. This is for Eric Holder, Mitch McConnell and all the other chickenhawks out there. Once you kill someone–and I don’t mean kill by proxy–you are changed forever. You are never the same again, cannot be the same again. Would you, Mr. Holder, be willing and able to look down a long gunbarrel and squeeze off a shot at another human being? If the answer is “no” then why the hell are you sending others to do it?

  2. Mespo, far too few of our Presidents have ever had to look over a gunsight at an enemy, or been shot at. Look back at history. The last was George H.W. Bush, who was a naval aviator. Harry Truman was an artilleryman. Eisenhower was a General, but never an actual combat veteran. Before Truman, it was Theodore Roosevelt, who is the only President to be awarded the Medal of Honor.

    I like to think that if more of our leaders had been in firefights or on the receiving end of a mortar barrage, they would not be so damn quick to want to send kids barely out of high school into the meat grinder.

  3. raff, I do not believe LC ever sang that song. That was the late Dave van Ronk singing.

  4. I will say again that I had an algebra teacher that better watch out when I become President.

  5. Mespo, thanks. Too many went there. We left too many there. Those in power never learn.

  6. Jonathan Hughes:

    “The only thing that is good is the spirit of God that no man can touch living in his soul to love all even as Jesus loved.”

    *******************************

    “I will smash them one against the other, fathers and sons alike, declares the LORD. I will allow no pity or mercy or compassion to keep me from destroying them.”

    ~Jer.13:14

    “You must destroy all the peoples the LORD your God gives over to you. Do not look on them with pity and do not serve their gods, for that will be a snare to you.”

    ~ Deut. 7:16

    “But God struck down some of the men of Beth Shemesh, putting seventy of them to death because they had looked into the ark of the LORD. The people mourned because of the heavy blow the LORD had dealt them,”

    ~ 1 Sam. 6:19

    That’s one scary good Spirit there, Jonathan. I really do wish you would read this horror novel.

  7. Michael Murry; well said. While we are on the subject of tunes, here is one you may have heard before. Most of the rest of the regulars here probably have not heard it. Some things are timeless. Some things speak to the times.

  8. “The song this whole situation brings to my mind is something else altogether.” -Gene H.

    Gene H.,

    An excellent choice for “this whole situation”, as you said.

  9. The song this whole situation brings to my mind is something else altogether.

    “Call me Lucifer,” said the politicians, “I’m in need of some restraint.”

  10. Sometimes I feel like I just returned from Vietnam yesterday, instead of forty years ago — to America, The Land that Forgot Time.

    As Bruce Hornsby sang it:

    “If these guys are the good ones, I don’t want to know the bad …
    You wonder how it happened. They just picked it up from dad?.
    Faded Old Glory, hanging like a rag —
    Defenders, defenders of the flag..”

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