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	  Targeted Assassinations: Challenging US Policy
	   
	  By Stephen Lendman 
	  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 8, 2010
  
	     The WikiLeaks "Afghan War Diaries" provided documented 
	  evidence of America's out-of-control lawlessness, including Special Forces 
	  death squads (Task Force 373) extrajudicially murdering or capturing 
	  suspected Taliban and Al-Qaeda figures, many hundreds or perhaps thousands 
	  on a so-called Jpel (joint prioritized effects) list, also willfully 
	  killing civilian men, women and children, the London Times Kabul-based 
	  Jerome Starkey reporting earlier on these crimes, suppressed in US media 
	  accounts, presenting an embedded view of the war, omitting the targeting 
	  of Americans until then Director of National Intelligence Dennis C. Blair 
	  acknowledged it in February, explaining that:   CIA operatives and 
	  Special Forces death squads have been authorized to kill US citizens 
	  abroad, suspected of terrorist involvement, Blair saying:    "If we 
	  think that direct action will involve killing an American, we get specific 
	  permission to do that," the criteria being "whether that American is 
	  involved in a group that is trying to attack us, whether that American is 
	  a threat to other Americans. Those are the factors involved. We don't 
	  target people for free speech. We target them for taking action that 
	  threatens Americans or has resulted in it," based on suspicions, not 
	  evidence.   Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, a US citizen living in 
	  Yemen, was perhaps the first "announced" candidate, targeted for opposing 
	  US belligerency, not crimes.    In late June, Deputy White House 
	  National Security Adviser for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism, John 
	  O. Brennan, acknowledged a hit list with dozens of other names, saying: 
	    "There are, in my mind, dozens of US persons who are in different 
	  parts of the world, and they are very concerning to us, not just because 
	  of the passport they hold, but because they understand our operational 
	  environment here, they bring with them certain skills, whether it be 
	  language skills or familiarity with potential targets, and they are very 
	  worrisome, and we are determined to take away their ability to assist with 
	  terrorist attacks."    "If an American person or citizen is in Yemen 
	  or in  Pakistan or in Somalia or another place, and they are 
	  (suspected of) trying to carry out attacks against US interests, they also 
	  will face the full brunt of a US response. What we need to do is to apply 
	  the appropriate tool and the appropriate response," leaving little doubt 
	  what he meant, putting all Americans at risk globally, based on 
	  suspicions, not proof - potential targets for lawless assassinations with 
	  impunity.    It was standard policy under George Bush's November 
	  2001 Military Order Number 1, authorizing the capture, kidnapping, or 
	  otherwise neutralizing of non-citizens (and later citizens) suspected of 
	  terrorist involvement, holding them indefinitely without charge, evidence, 
	  or due process, treating them as non-persons, disappearing them forever, 
	  the practice continuing under Obama.   Last September, it was 
	  learned that then Central Command head General David Petraeus issued a 
	  secret directive to send covert US Special Operations forces to friendly 
	  and hostile states in the Middle East, Central Asia, the Horn of Africa, 
	  and by implication anywhere in the world to "penetrate, disrupt, defeat or 
	  destroy" terror threats and "prepare the environment" for planned military 
	  attacks.   On June 4, Washington Post writers Karen DeYoung and Greg 
	  Jaffe headlined, "US 'Secret War' Expands Globally as Special Operations 
	  Forces Take a Larger Role," saying:   The Obama administration "has 
	  significantly expanded a largely secret US war against al-Qaeda and other 
	  radical groups with Special Ops forces in 75 countries, compared with 
	  about 60 at the beginning of last year."   On June 5, London Sunday 
	  Times writers Tim Reid and Michael Evans repeated it, headlining, "Obama 
	  secretly deploys US special forces to 75 countries across the world," 
	  saying:   He usurped even greater power than George Bush to pursue 
	  an "aggressive secret war against al-Qaeda and other radical groups," 
	  using increased drone attacks and 9,000 Special Forces in Afghanistan and 
	  Pakistan, killing hundreds, perhaps thousands, of civilians, operations 
	  continuing daily.   Petraeus' order "also allowed for US special 
	  forces to enter Iran to gather intelligence" for potential future 
	  operations. The Pentagon's Joint Unconventional Warfare Task Force Execute 
	  Order authorizes Special Ops forces sent anywhere, and its Joint Special 
	  Operations Command (JSOC) deploys covertly to kill suspected suspects, 
	  including US citizens.   Washington Denying Anwar al-Awlaki's Right 
	  to Legal Representation   US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets 
	  (OFAC) regulations, under The International Emergency Economic Powers Act, 
	  prohibit lawyers from defending accused terrorists pro bono without 
	  government permission, violators subject to up to 20 years imprisonment 
	  and fines up to $1 million.    According to Bill Quigley, Legal 
	  Director for the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), the prohibition 
	  is unconstitutional, violating the Separation of Powers and First 
	  Amendment protection of "the right of non-profit lawyers and legal 
	  organizations to give pro bono legal representation to any US citizen," 
	  guaranteed also under the Fifth Amendment. CCR/ACLU'/s brief states:   
	  "The notion that the government can compel a citizen to seek its 
	  permission before challenging the constitutionality of its actions in 
	  court is wholly foreign to our constitutional system, (and as) non-profit 
	  organizations dedicated to protecting civil liberties and human rights, 
	  Plaintiffs have a First Amendment (Fifth Amendment, and Separation of 
	  Powers) right to represent clients in litigation consistent with their 
	  organizational missions."   US law, not al-Awlaki, is at issue, the 
	  Obama administration exceeding its predecessor's lawlessness, expanding 
	  its imperial wars, threatening other parts of the world on every 
	  continent, openly targeting US citizens globally, perhaps even in America 
	  covertly by disappearing them, and denying lawyers the right to represent 
	  them - a clear example of despotism.    Several times it tried 
	  unsuccessfully to kill al-Awlaki. Covert efforts continue. CCR and ACLU 
	  want to defend him, saying civil law must decide, not Treasury regulations 
	  or Pentagon/CIA assassins. His father said "If the government has proof 
	  his son violated the law, then they should charge him in public and let 
	  the law take its course."   According to Quigley and others 
	  supporting the rule of law, "The right to go to court to challenge the 
	  government is a core US value."   As a result, on August 3, CCR and 
	  the ACLU sued  Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Adam Szubin,  
	  Office of Foreign Assets Control Director,   "challeng(ing) the 
	  legality of a regulatory scheme that requires attorneys to seek permission 
	  from the government before providing uncompensated legal representation to 
	  or for the benefit of individuals whom the government has designated as 
	  terrorists. In this case, the effect of the scheme may be to deny legal 
	  representation to a United States citizen whom the government is 
	  attempting to kill without any legal process."   The suit seeks an 
	  emergency order, invalidating the Treasury's unconstitutional regulation, 
	  permitting pro-bono representation to proceed without criminal or monetary 
	  penalties. If successful, a second suit will try to enjoin al-Awlaki's 
	  assassination. However, in today's lawless environment, the federal courts 
	  stacked with right-wing ideologues, and a reckless, out-of-control 
	  administration, CCR and ACLU lawyers face daunting obstacles to succeed - 
	  despite only wanting constitutional law enforced.   In early July, 
	  Nasser al-Awlaki, Anwar's father, retained CCR and the ACLU on his behalf. 
	  On July 16, OFEC named him a "specially designated global terrorist," 
	  prohibiting legal representation without permission. CCR and ACLU sought 
	  it but were denied, their suit challenging OFAC's decision "to invalidate 
	  the regulations and to make clear that lawyers can (represent 
	  "designated") individuals without first seeking the government's consent." 
	    Its purpose is to challenge the lawless decision to kill American 
	  citizens, including al-Awlaki, without charge, evidence, trial, or due 
	  process - authority not allowed under US and international law.   
	  "Under international human rights law, lethal force may be used in 
	  peacetime only when there is an imminent threat of deadly attack and 
	  (killing) is a last resort."   Designating US citizens terrorists, 
	  providing no criminal proof of guilt or evidence of an imminent threat, 
	  and denying them legal representation is lawless and egregious by any 
	  standard. Yet, post-9/11, "the US government has (targeted and) detained 
	  thousands of men as terrorists, only for courts or the government itself 
	  later to discover that the evidence (or charge) was wrong or unreliable 
	  and released them."   No one should be denied due process and 
	  judicial fairness. US policy is shocking, egregious and illegal, CCR, 
	  ACLU, numerous human rights groups, and others challenging it 
	  courageously, representing our rights like al-Awlaki's, fighting for the 
	  rule of law to prevent further democratic freedom erosions, vanishing in 
	  plain sight.   A Final Comment   In a late development, 
	  Politico.com reports that the Treasury Department will let CCR and ACLU 
	  represent al-Awlaki, OFAC Director Szubin saying Treasury's policy "is to 
	  broadly authorize the provision of pro bono legal services....To the 
	  extent that the particular legal services that the ACLU (and CCR wish) to 
	  provide in this instance do not fall into any of the broad categories that 
	  are generally licensed, (OFAC) will work with (them) to ensure that the 
	  legal services can be delivered."   At issue now is enjoining al-Awlaki's 
	  assassination, CCR  Executive Director saying:    "President 
	  Obama is claiming the power to act as judge, jury and executioner while 
	  suspending any semblance of due process....The US government is going 
	  outside the law to create an ever-larger global war zone and turn the 
	  whole world into a battlefield. Would we tolerate it if China or France 
	  secretly decided to execute their enemies inside the US?"   In a 
	  separately filed March Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) suit, the ACLU 
	  wants information on procedures followed to put individuals like al-Awlaki 
	  on an unconstitutional hit list.   Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago 
	  and can be reached at 
	  lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at 
	  sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with 
	  distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive 
	  Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays 
	  at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.   
	  
	  http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/. 
	    
	   
       
       
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