Obama's Kill Doctrine

Trust us, Attorney General Eric Holder says -- we'll only assassinate Americans after administrative "due process." That's not how the Constitution works, buddy.

BY JONATHAN TURLEY | MARCH 6, 2012

On Monday, March 5, Northwestern University School of Law was the location of an extraordinary scene for a free nation. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder presented President Barack Obama's claim that he has the authority to kill any U.S. citizen he considers a threat. It served as a retroactive justification for the slaying of American-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki last September by a drone strike in northeastern Yemen, as well as the targeted killings of at least two other Americans during Obama's term.

What's even more extraordinary is that this claim, which would be viewed by the Framers of the U.S. Constitution as the very definition of authoritarian power, was met not with outcry but muted applause. Where due process once resided, Holder offered only an assurance that the president would kill citizens with care. While that certainly relieved any concern that Obama, or his successor, would hunt citizens for sport, Holder offered no assurances on how this power would be used in the future beyond the now all-too-familiar "trust us" approach to civil liberties of this administration.

In his speech, Holder was clear and unambiguous on only one point: "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 because senior administration officials have previously asserted that the president may kill an American anywhere and anytime, including within the United States. Holder's speech does not materially limit that claimed authority, but stressed that "our legal authority is not limited to the battlefields in Afghanistan." He might as well have stopped at "limited" because the administration has refused to accept any limitations on this claimed inherent power.

Holder became highly cryptic in his assurance that caution would be used in exercising this power -- suggesting some limitation that is both indefinable and unreviewable. He promised that the administration would kill Americans 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." He did not explain how the nation in question would consent or how a determination would be made that it is "unable or unwilling to deal" with the threat.

Of course, the citizens of the United States once consented on a relevant principle when they ratified the Constitution and later the Bill of Rights. They consented to a government of limited powers where citizens are entitled to the full protections of due process against allegations by their government. That is clearly not the type of consent that Holder wants to revisit or discuss. Indeed, he insisted that "a careful and thorough executive branch review of the facts in a case amounts to 'due process.'"

Holder's new definition of "due process" was perfectly Orwellian. While the Framers wanted an objective basis for due process, Holder was offering little more than "we will give the process that we consider due to a target." And even the vaguely described "due process" claimed by Holder was not stated as required, but rather granted, by the president. Three citizens have been given their due during the Obama administration and vaporized by presidential order. Frankly, few of us mourn their passing. However, due process appears to have been vaporized in the same moment -- something many U.S. citizens may come to miss.

What Holder is describing is a model of an imperial presidency that would have made Richard Nixon blush. If the president can kill a citizen, there are a host of other powers that fall short of killing that the president might claim, including indefinite detention of citizens -- another recent controversy. Thus, by asserting the right to kill citizens without charge or judicial review, Holder has effectively made all of the Constitution's individual protections of accused persons matters of presidential discretion. These rights will be faithfully observed up to the point that the president concludes that they interfere with his view of how best to protect the country -- or his willingness to wait for "justice" to be done. And if Awlaki's fate is any indication, there will be no opportunity for much objection.

Already, the administration has successfully blocked efforts of citizens to gain review of such national security powers or orders. Not only is the list of citizens targeted with death kept secret, but the administration has insisted that courts do not play a role in the creation of or basis for such a list. Even when Awlaki's family tried to challenge Obama's kill order, the federal court declared that the cleric would have to file for himself -- a difficult task when you are on a presidential hit list. Moreover, any attorney working with Awlaki would have risked being charged with aiding a terrorist.

When the applause died down after Holder's speech, we were left with a bizarre notion of government. We have this elaborate system of courts and rights governing the prosecution and punishment of citizens. However, that entire system can be circumvented at the whim or will of the president. The president then becomes effectively the lawgiver or lifetaker for all citizens. The rest becomes a mere pretense of the rule of law.

Holder was describing the very model of government the Framers denounced in crafting both the Constitution and Bill of Rights. James Madison in particular warned that citizens should not rely on the good graces and good intentions of their leaders. He noted, "If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary." The administration appears to have taken the quote literally as an invitation for unlimited authority for angels.

Of course, even those who hold an angelic view of Obama today may come to find the next president less divine. In the end, those guardian angels will continue to claim to be acting in the best interests of every citizen -- with the exception, of course, of those citizens killed by them.

JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images

 

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University.

MBR

7:52 PM ET

March 6, 2012

Wretched

Words fail, both when pondering the dangerous piffle to come out of the mouth of a United States Attorney General to defend the indefensible, and when considering the absence of meaningful public discourse over such a "policy" step that is nothing less than an existential threat to our fair land.

And so swept up are we in the whole Red-versus-Blue framework for discussing issues that we can't even consider we are 11 years into an America where legal justifications are kept secret? Really?

 

HURRICANEWARNING

12:19 AM ET

March 7, 2012

...is this article a joke?

I'm not sure the author here actually knows what really goes on before a "kill" order is given. He should probably do a little more thorough research on the topic (what's the matter sir? Nobody with a 'need to know' actually wanted to talk to you?...what a surprise).

The article stated:
"President Barack Obama's claim that he has the authority to kill any U.S. citizen he considers a threat"

The above statement is just so unbelievably incorrect that it almost doesn't even deserve a rebuke. I mean, where to begin?

Firstly: the constitution is a living document. It was designed to adapt with the times.

Secondly: Your entire premise is a prime example of the "post hoc ergo propter hoc" fallacy. Just because one action by our government slightly resembles that of an authoritarian regime; DOES NOT MAKE OUR GOVERNMENT AN AUTHORITARIAN REGIME.

Thirdly: The legal process and evidence collection that goes into deciding who goes onto the "list" is a serious process. It is NOT just based off of what the president decides. In fact, the President is the LAST person to know. He sees all the evidence collected and makes the serious decision to end another human beings life.

I disagree with the premise of this article. I DO believe that this country has the right to defend itself against all threats. Both foreign and domestic.

 

JKLFAIRWIN

1:48 AM ET

March 7, 2012

Scary

It is scary to think that the President can so easily ignore the Constitution and his legal minions can so easily mangle to support this appalling usurpation of power, but it is even scarier to think that there are millions of Americans so brainwashed that they agree with the likes of this comment.

 

STEPHENKROGH

9:05 AM ET

March 7, 2012

...is this reply a joke?

I'm not sure you understand the fallacy of false cause (the English name for the Latin you posted). Just a heads up.

Also, you should trust the strength of your writing for emphasis. Simply capitalizing words you want to emphasize is distracting (that is also not a case of false cause, by the way).

Cheers.

 

RMDUENAS

1:13 PM ET

March 7, 2012

The reply must surely be a joke

Hurricanewarning wrote: "I'm not sure the author here actually knows what really goes on before a "kill" order is given."

Whatever goes on, it is not due process, and due process is what the US Constitution establishes for all US citizens regardless of who they are or where they live; nothing more, nothing less. The President is not, or should not be, over the Constitution. There should indeed be an outcry requesting Holder to explain further.

On one hand, Holder's methods or ideas do not surprise me anymore; after all, they have already allowed the illegal export of weapons into Mexico to "catch drug traffickers", with terrible, predictable results.

However, if Obama is upset by war mongering GOP members, because "war is a serious matter", he should be equally upset about his Attorney General's declarations because killing a US citizen without due process is a matter as serious as war.

 

RMDUENAS

1:16 PM ET

March 7, 2012

PS

The Constitution might be a "living document", but it is up to the Legislative and Judiciary branches to modify it, and not to the President, after a due process as well.

 

HURRICANEWARNING

3:00 PM ET

March 7, 2012

Eating Crow/ Rebuttal

Firstly, I have indeed used the wrong fallacy in my above argument. I wrote "post hoc, ergo propter hoc", which implies logical fallacy due to the order of events. What I should have wrote was "cum hoc, ergo propter hoc".
To completely explain my point of false correlation, let me spell it out. The Author of the above article was basically trying to say that: Authoritarian leaders order the death of their own citizens. Therefore, because Obama has ordered the killing of his own citizens, he is an Authoritarian leader. This is false logic, "Slippery slope" logic.

Secondly: In reply to the response discussing due process, as guaranteed by the constitution. You are correct, the Constitution does indeed guarantee "due process". I do believe, however, that you have confused "due process", with "judicial process". Judicial process is what every citizen accused of a crime, and read their miranda rights, is guaranteed. "Due process" is actually a legal process that does not necessarily involve a trial, it just involves what is essentially an understanding of the facts. Due process, under the constitution, guarantees four things: procedural due process (in civil and criminal proceedings), substantive due process, a prohibition against vague laws, and as the vehicle for the incorporation of the Bill of Rights.

If you are an American terrorist, actively engaged in acts of war and violence overseas, against American national interests, civilians, and military forces alike (which Awlaki indeed was); then you are in fact depriving other Americans, or seeking to deprive them, of their own rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". Therefore, since you are not a domestic criminal, nor is this a civil suit, you will not need to receive, procedural due process, substantive due process, protection against vague laws (there is nothing "vague" about pre-meditated murder), or protection from the Bill of Rights. This "due process" also becomes even more irrelevant when you consider that a terrorist, with American citizenship, is also a traitor, and an enemy combatant. There are no laws on the books protecting enemy combatants from being killed. Their nationality is irrelevant.

 

ACTIONABLE MANGO

4:01 PM ET

March 7, 2012

Having the guy in power

Having the guy in power deciding to kill you based off of secret evidence provided by his chosen inner circle is NOT due process.

Also, keep in mind the next president will have this power. So even if you don't mind the big O knocking off American citizens, how will you feel about, I dunno, a Dick Cheney-like president having that authority?

 

NIHONSEAN

5:24 PM ET

March 7, 2012

Presidential Assassination of U.S. Citizens = Authoritarian

I love it when people claim the U.S. Constitution is a "living" document. This is the kind of trype people spout when they know what the consitution says, but wish it really said something else. The U.S. Constitution is a CONTRACT between the American people, the various states and the federal government. It is no more maleable and changeable than my cell phone contract or mortgage (though they are open to judicial review). You are right though when you said the constitution was designed to change with the times, through what we call "the amendment process" (Article 5).

To argue that somehow executing Americans abroad without a trial or due process is legal is a stretch. To further argue that they can then be killed because they havent returned to the United States to begin legal proceedings to get their names removed from the kill list , well that is just comically stupid. Sadly though Comically Stupid is what our government (and president) are using as the crux of their argument.

If the government feels that certain individuals are a threat to American security and need to be eliminated, fine. But there needs to be a process that is fair and open to review, not based on the president or his advisers simply deciding that this person or that person should die. In short we need due process and judicial oversight.

 

STG58

12:53 AM ET

March 10, 2012

is this comment a joke?

Hurricanewarning.

If this administration is not an authoritarian regime simply because it unilaterally decides to kill its own citizens, how many steps, or which steps would it have to take to merit that designation from you?

At what point does it become that totalitarian regime?

This government has, stretching back to 2001, eliminated the following rights and legal protection (I am sure there are more I don't know about):

1st Amendment rights (free speech zones, religious/muslim intimidation, prohibition on protest where the president or other official is present)
2nd Amendment rights (intent on signing various UN small arms treaties, Fast & Furious)
3rd Amendment rights (not yet, but probably coming soon)
4th Amendment rights (Patriot Act, Intelligence Reform act, TSA, VIPR checkpoints, warrantless wiretaps)
5th Amendment rights (NDAA)
6th Amendment rights (NDAA, secret evidence)
8th Amendment (NDAA, waterboarding/enhanced interrogations, renditions)
9th Amendment rights (Catch all, any power not expressly granted to the states and the people abrogated by the Federal Government)
10th Amendment rights (Real ID, Unfunded mandates)
Habeas Corpus protections (Military Commissions Act)
Posse Comitatus (NDAA)
Willful failure to follow Constitutional provisions for establishing treason

Hurricanewarning, are we there yet? Let me know when we get there.

 

REALBEALDEAL

10:30 AM ET

March 16, 2012

Only Takes Once

According to your response, once can be overlooked. But it only takes once to become pregnant; therefore, it only takes ONCE for an assassination to be ordered for this government to become an authoritarian regime. President Obama has said that YOU ARE a terrorist if you are Christian, conservative or own guns. Am I a threat to the regime for I am all three?

If you believe that the country has the right to defend itself against all threats, then you must check under your bed every night for the so-called boogey-man. What threats? What false flags are you listening?

Per our Constitution - which is a cut and dry document not meant to yield with time - all citizens have the right to due process. PERIOD! Our Founding Fathers took weeks orchestrating a well-devised plan to limit the central government and to promote states' rights.

You may now return your head to the sand and say good-night. Remember, ONCE IS ALL IT TAKES!

 

SMITHEVNE

12:25 AM ET

March 7, 2012

Obama

As meteor eskize great abyss of the solar system on a winter night, Barack Hussein Obama arrived at the Presidential national scene as a secret and impressive. Seemingly, from the depths of emptiness, an endless political fills a gap for the amorphous desire for change and hope to vaunt himself in the Oval Office. After months of campaigning, even the most ardent supporters were hard pressed to describe what he believed, basic values, formative mentors or ideological philosophy. As Boston-based Democratic political consultant Michael Goldman said laconically: "There was an expectation that this would be like a Hollywood movie. Candidate was almost fantastic story from the first day ... "(From article," Obama is here to Coakley "Boston Globe, 17, January 2010). Obama has maintained an aura of enigma, as Sen. John McCain fought furiously to detail every political position he had taken from the first years of the United States House of Representatives. Obama became the followers of what is displayed to him, "I serve as a blank screen on which people of very different political stripes plead their own opinions." (Audacity of Hope, p 11) .. Obama became the nation's Rorschach test, a great view of the voter's hope for the future. The alter ego presented in millions of screens, surrounded by Greek columns and masses enthralled to hear soaring rhetoric answer for their souls. " Could never be wrong, because (the enlightened ones) now have found, for whom they waited. This was not a mere politician, but a super-human, and for some, a god. Have you forgotten or not aware of the humbling and liberating truth of theistic exceeded millions of Americans longed for a reality beyond this, but it was next monitored on a spectacular site where he placed man as the nation's homes and the future of world. "Historians of the future, seeking to understand this enthusiasm may well conclude that it was a kind of despair, the despair of those who, having lost faith in traditional institutions restoration of their culture, embrace a mirage." ("The core of the Obama" Brand Michael Knox, article from National Review, 3 November 2008). The election of Barack Obama looked more like a coronation, taking a royal office is not a simple chair. But in the coming months, millions now realize that this, "who would be king," not in agreement with their beliefs rudimentary history, the nation's morals, economy and religion. words, actions and appointments are foreign to America's past . There is a growing sense within the country that there is a gap between the president hopes valuable as their own. loss in the value of rights, not only in business but also in the family sphere haunts many Americans less than one year in the Obama presidency. Many now realize that there is now a "blank slate." You will see that he had purposely built to hide an alien philosophy.

Raspberry Ketones

 

ERICJCLARKII

3:23 AM ET

March 7, 2012

What?

The warning annoucements said DON'T eat the brown acid!

 

PUPIL

1:35 PM ET

March 7, 2012

Writing on the Wall

Your comment is much better written and makes way more sense than the fairly demagogic original blog. However, not everyone was carried away with the ecstatic admiration and utmost submissiveness to the new American Idol.

Joe the Plumber, in fact, provided the best, profound and heartfelt ripost by simply saying he did not want his 30 shekels from High Priests of the new cult for betraying his independence and the choice of his own path in this life. McCain, for a comparison, sounded way more distant, less poignant and convincing.

But, anyway, this country fist time in history suffered from mass hysteria of adoration and deification closely resembling European mass madness that eventually propelled Mussolini and Hitler to power. However the differences in culture and everything else between last century Europe and US in 2008, we have to admit that America is no more immune to Fascism.

 

UNCKLE BUD

10:24 AM ET

March 8, 2012

The Brown Acid

Wow wtf was that. I promise to never read that again.

 

SYDNEY BUILDERS

3:27 AM ET

March 7, 2012

Thank you for helping me through all those tough times in life.

Thank you for helping me through all those tough times in life. I would thank you from the bottom of my heart. It’s really helpful information.
sydney builders

 

KIRBANG

9:06 AM ET

March 7, 2012

Scary

Presidents ignoring the constitution is not new. Bush the Latter through signing statements did so hundreds of times. Obama is absolutely cerebral and cautious to a fault compared to his near past conservative counterparts.

So what is the problem, besides contrivance? if Al -Awlaki was ignored and the underwear bomber v2.0 were successful think of the howls. Is any one really truthfully unhappy this zealot and sworn enemy of the US is dead?

And I agree with the view the Constitution is a living document which must be interpreted as it relates to the times. Not some document which portends the future with 100% accuracy.

 

MBR

12:49 PM ET

March 7, 2012

No problem: just kill all zealots and sworn enemies

'"Living document" and "cautious to a fault" are both ironic turns of phrase to use in the context of self-authorization by one branch of our government to assassinate Americans without judicial process, based on a legal justification that itself is kept secret (never mind the secrecy of any purported evidence related to the "kill" beyond confirmation of enemy status and zealotry).

The clear and present danger we face is not the level of potential "howls" after a future terror event, but the very dark place where the mongering of fear continues to drive the government of the United States -- through both the current and previous administration despite their occupying quite different positions on the political spectrum.

 

MALDONADOCHARITY

2:04 PM ET

March 7, 2012

Make Money Working Online

my classmate's step-aunt makes $73 every hour on the computer. She has been unemployed for six months but last month her pay check was $12870 just working on the computer for a few hours. Here's the site to read more ....... http://LazyCash9.com

 

SPOOD

2:42 PM ET

March 7, 2012

What's annoying here...

Is not that we are using our intelligence forces and military to take out individuals who are considered enemies of the state. Its that the government isn't bothering to be discrete about it and looking for excuses to justify it to the public.

If you are going to do black ops, do it and keep it quiet. Everyone does it. Just don't brag about it and don't make lame excuses for why it was done. This sort of thing is not supposed to be excused in the eyes of the public. Its supposed to be kept secret and released 20 years after the fact for interesting cable documentaries.

Jeez!

This is what happens when we have a government more familiar with Mack Bolan than John LeCarre.

 

RENEMF

3:22 PM ET

March 7, 2012

why not americans ?

Forget about the constitution, a document conceived for the conditions of the pony express, that has - "living" or dead - been perverted from facilitating the original principle of the people's self determination (democracy) into accommodating the current oligarchy established by money powered media mind control, and which moreover serves as a quasi-justification of the pipe dream of "american exceptionalism".

If one accepts the legitimacy of killing anyone considered a terrorist threat, itself a very debatable and questionable proposition, then what difference does it make who issued that person's passport, or under whose jurisdiction that person is at the time of the killing ? I am sure most americans won't care much about these legal fine points.

 

UNCKLE BUD

10:30 AM ET

March 8, 2012

most americans won't care much about these legal fine points

Not currently, but that will ultimatly change when they start to use this power at home.

 

BING520

4:08 PM ET

March 7, 2012

Obama

I lent all my support to Obama during the last presidential campaign. There were more than a dozen of phone banking sessions, fund raisings, and meetings heldi n my house. I believed George W. Bush was not decent, principled enough to hold that office. Gitmo detention, denial of our responsibility to adhere to Geneva Convention, an immoral Iraq war and Patriot Act are the brazen violations of the principles this country represents.

Eric Holden's kill doctrine is so troubling that Obama presidency began to disgust me. Were I to accept or tolerate Eric Holden's statement ane action, I could easily accept John Yoo and George W. Bush. That would make no difference between Bush and Obama.

 

RENEMF

6:05 PM ET

March 7, 2012

huge difference

Few would disagree that something should be done to prevent terrorist activity. Exactly what, needs to be debated and agreed upon. Not being a lawyer I don't care about doctrines and their legal justification, and as we have seen, they can be expected to be twisted into place anyway, leading to endless legal arguments while the derived policies continue to be pursued regardless. However while Obama's targeted drone strikes (admittedly often far from precise) or assassinations by special forces or agents are questionable, Bush's invasions resulting in tens of thousands of civilian deaths are totally unacceptable. I think if you go beyond doctrinal considerations the difference between Bush and Obama becomes inescapable.

 

RUSSELLM

7:25 PM ET

March 7, 2012

"Robert M. Chesney, a

"Robert M. Chesney, a University of Texas School of Law professor who specializes in national security law, said he believed the killing was legal. But he said it was "plenty controversial" among legal experts.

The administration's legal argument in Awlaki's case, Chesney said, appears to have three elements: First, Awlaki posed an imminent threat to the lives of Americans; second, he was fighting with the enemy in the armed conflict; and third, there was no feasible way to arrest him."

http://www.statesman.com/news/world/awlaki-killing-fuels-debate-on-presidential-power-1889257.html?printArticle=y

 

STG58

12:56 AM ET

March 10, 2012

No feasible arrest

If it wasn't feasible to arrest Al Awlaki, how was it feasible to infiltrate the heart of the military establishment of a nuclear nation to kill OBL?

 

REALREALIST

12:04 AM ET

March 8, 2012

a must read for all real liberals...

http://blogs.jpost.com/content/dangerous-alliance-faux-liberals-and-islamists

 

MARTY24

9:54 AM ET

March 8, 2012

Getting to the right issue

Bing520 comes closest to what needs to be understood, that Obama is not what he presented himself to be during the 2008 election.

Posters need to ask themselves two questions: 1) whether those in control of government have the right to do as they see fit without reference to established procedures, and 2) whether they have the right to use national assets to advance their personal and/or partisan objectives.

These two questions underscore what is wrong with the Obama approach to government. Obama ran in 2008 on a platform of not telling the voters what his objectives were, the "blank slate" notion. Having done so, he acquired no mandate to do anything, but took office with the belief that having been elected, he, and he alone, was entitled to use the US government for whatever he wanted. This is the mindset of a dictator. This situation with Holder is simply the latest manifestation of this problem.

Most of the hostility Obama has encountered is a direct reflection of his persuit of goals most Americans oppose. His case has basically been that he is entitled to do what he wants. Those who worked for his election in 2008 need to ask themselves whether they have been had and draw the appropriate conclusions.

If Obama's supporters from 2008 have the integrity to come out and announce that they were wrong, it would go a long way toward getting Obama to do the job Americans expect of their president during the remaining months of his presidency. It's a pity there is no Democrat with the integrity to offer him/herself as an alternative to Obama as the Democratic nominee this year.

 

TRAVELIN_G

12:48 PM ET

March 8, 2012

In technical terms...

...it's called "Redacting the Constitution."

 

MRJS1G

4:26 PM ET

March 22, 2012

Alternative?

Just wondering -- if the author is indeed correct that killing al-Alwaki was indeed illegal, then what is his alternative? Run into Yemen and attempt to capture him? Or perhaps, let him resume his plotting and propagandizing because it'd be illegal to kill him?

 

LAMONT BIDROWSKI

8:48 PM ET

April 3, 2012

Eric Holder and president Obama

I think that, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and president is right. By this way, the US can avoid and prevent the threats as well as violence and terrorist. I that, To do this will help American to be safe and peace. Eric Himpton Holder, is the 82nd and current Attorney General of the United States and the first black American to hold the position,] serving under President Barack Obama. Holder previously served as a judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia and a United States Attorney. In that office he prosecuted Congressman Dan Rostenkowski (Democrat, Illinois) for corruption charges related to his role in the Congressional Post Office scandal. Later, he was Deputy Attorney General of the United States and worked at the law firm of Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C. He was senior legal advisor to then-Senator Barack Obama during Obama's presidential campaign and one of three members of Obama's vice-presidential selection committee.