MARK KARLIN, EDITOR OF BUZZFLASH AT TRUTHOUT "Predator drone sometimes used in targeted killings"
Sometimes, it even takes BuzzFlash at Truthout a little time to write commentaries about killer issues, in this case literally.
According to the Wall Street Journal
(in a February 15 article), Obama's nominee to head the CIA, John
Brennan, ambiguously left open the possibility that US citizens could be
targeted for assassination in the United States:
John
Brennan, President Barack Obama's nominee to be director of the Central
Intelligence Agency, didn't rule out the use of unmanned drones in the
U.S. when quizzed about the matter.
Mr.
Brennan's written answer came in response to questions from the Senate
intelligence committee following his confirmation hearing last week. The
Senate intelligence committee released a declassified version of Mr.
Brennan's responses in a 30-page document Friday.
Mr.
Brennan, the White House's counterterrorism chief, was asked, "Could
the Administration carry out drone strikes inside the United States?"
His reply was: "This Administration has not carried out drone strikes
inside the United States and has no intention of doing so."
A few days back, Democracy Now analyzed excerpts from the Brennan Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on his nomination, including this one:
SEN.
RON WYDEN: Let me ask you several other questions with respect to the
president’s authority to kill Americans. I’ve asked you how much
evidence the president needs to decide that a particular American can be
lawfully killed and whether the administration believes that the
president can use this authority inside the United States. In my
judgment, both the Congress and the public need to understand the
answers to these kind of fundamental questions. What do you think needs
to be done to ensure that members of the public understand more about
when the government thinks it’s allowed to kill them, particularly with
respect to those two issues, the question of evidence and the authority
to use this power within the United States?
JOHN
BRENNAN: I have been a strong proponent of trying to be as open as
possible with these programs, as far as our explaining what we’re doing.
What we need to do is optimize transparency on these issues, but at the
same time optimize secrecy and the protection of our national security.
I don’t think that it’s one or the other. It’s trying to optimize both
of them. And so, what we need to do is make sure we explain to the
American people what are the thresholds for action, what are the
procedures, the practices, the processes, the approvals, the reviews.
The Office of Legal Counsel advice establishes the legal boundaries
within which we can operate. It doesn’t mean that we operate at those
out of boundaries. And, in fact, I think the American people will be
quite pleased to know that we’ve been very disciplined, very judicious,
and we only use these authorities and these capabilities as a last
resort.
If
ever there was the epitome of obfuscating bureaucratic blather, Brennan
achieved it in pointedly not ruling out the killing of US citizens on
US soil.
Jeremy
Scahill, author of the best selling "Blackwater: The Rise of the
World’s Most Powerful Mercenary Army," commented about the exchange
posted above at Brennan's confirmation:
Well,
you know, if you listen to John Brennan, I mean, it’s like he’s talking
about buying a used car and what, you know, sort of little gadgets and
whistles it has on it. He used "optimize"? Ron Wyden was asking him
about whether—about the extent of the CIA’s lethal authority against
U.S. citizens, on U.S. soil and abroad. And, see, the problem is that
while some questions were asked that are central questions, there was
almost no follow-up. People wouldn’t push—senators wouldn’t push Brennan
back when he would float things that were nonsensical or just
gibberish, you know, or using terms like "we need to optimize this, we
need to optimize that." There was no sense that—I mean, remember, this
is a guy who is, for all practical purposes, President Obama’s hit man
or assassination czar.
According
to the Wall Street Journal article, at least some US citizens concerned
about the potential for US government sanctioned kill lists on US soil
have expressed dismayed outrage at this failure of the Obama
administration to exclude killing US citizens on US soil (which would
appear to be a minimal constitutional standard considering the appalling
decision of an executive branch cabal and president to kill US citizens
abroad): MORE
No comments:
Post a Comment