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Is US Considering Expansion of Targeted Kill List Into North Africa? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=24110"><span class="small">Daniel Politi, Slate</span></a>   
Sunday, 10 February 2013 14:21

Politi writes: "At a time when targeted killings have once again become subject of debate in Washington and across the country, some senior officials are pushing to expand the 'capture or kill' lists into northwestern Africa."

President Barack Obama delivers remarks during a rally in Largo, Maryland, 03/15/12. (photo: Getty Images)
President Barack Obama delivers remarks during a rally in Largo, Maryland, 03/15/12. (photo: Getty Images)



Is US Considering Expansion of Targeted Kill List Into North Africa?

By Daniel Politi, Slate Magazine

10 February 13

 

t a time when targeted killings have once again become subject of debate in Washington and across the country, some senior officials are pushing to expand the "capture or kill" lists into northwestern Africa. The Wall Street Journal reports that "senior U.S. officials" want to add Algerian militant Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the self-proclaimed mastermind of the attack and hostage-taking in the Algerian natural-gas plant, to the list. That would represent a marked expansion of the country's programs of drone strikes and lethal counterterrorism operations that has focused on Somalia, Yemen, and Pakistan. So far, the United States has tried to keep some distance from northwest Africa operations because militants there aren't seen as posing a direct threat to the homeland but now some U.S. officials say militants like Belmokhtar have proven to pose a danger to Americans and other westerners in the region.

Chances are that whatever is decided, there won't be much congressional oversight. Politico takes a look at how despite some sporadic tough words, lawmakers have provided virtually no oversight of the targeted-killing program that has expanded greatly since President Obama arrived in the White House. And there's no sign that's going to change anytime in the near future. Sure, the White House may have turned over classified legal opinions this week. But "there's plenty of evidence to suggest that Congress will return to status quo, as the Hill often does after a brief moment of interest in a headline-grabbing national security program."

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When We Kill Without Caring Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=15952"><span class="small">Bill Moyers, Moyers & Company</span></a>   
Sunday, 10 February 2013 08:39

Moyers writes: "This week, the New York Times published a chilling account of how indiscriminate killing remains bad policy even today."

Portrait, Bill Moyers. (photo: Robin Holland)
Portrait, Bill Moyers. (photo: Robin Holland)



When We Kill Without Caring

By Bill Moyers, Moyers and Company

10 February 13

 

 

'm Bill Moyers. This week, the New York Times published a chilling account of how indiscriminate killing remains bad policy even today. This time, it's done not by young G.I.'s in the field but by anonymous puppeteers guiding drones by remote control against targets thousands of miles away, often killing the innocent and driving their enraged families and friends straight into the arms of the very terrorists we’re trying to eradicate.

The Times told of a Muslim cleric in Yemen named Salem Ahmed bin Ali Jaber, standing in a village mosque denouncing Al Qaeda. It was a brave thing to do - a respected tribal figure, arguing against terrorism. But two days later, when he and a police officer cousin agreed to meet with three Al Qaeda members to continue the argument, all five men - friend and foe - were incinerated by an American drone attack.

The killings infuriated the village and prompted rumors of an upwelling of support in the town for Al Qaeda, because, the Times reported, "such a move is seen as the only way to retaliate against the United States.” Our blind faith in technology combined with a sense of infallible righteousness continues unabated. It brought us to grief in Vietnam and Iraq and may do so again with President Obama's cold-blooded use of drones and his seeming indifference to so-called "collateral damage," otherwise known as innocent bystanders. By the standards of slaughter in Vietnam the deaths by drone are hardly a blip on the consciousness of official Washington.

But we have to wonder if each one - a young boy gathering wood at dawn, unsuspecting of his imminent annihilation, the student picking up the wrong hitchhikers, that tribal elder standing up against fanatics - doesn't give rise to second thoughts by those judges who prematurely handed our president the Nobel Prize for Peace. Better they had kept it on the shelf in hopeful waiting, untarnished.

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Brennan and Kiriakou Print
Sunday, 10 February 2013 08:36

Goodman writes: "John Brennan and John Kiriakou worked together years ago, but their careers have dramatically diverged. Brennan is now on track to head the CIA, while Kiriakou is headed off to prison."

John Brennan, architect of the CIA's drone assassination program. (photo: Susan Walsh/AP)
John Brennan, architect of the CIA's drone assassination program. (photo: Susan Walsh/AP)



Brennan and Kiriakou

By Amy Goodman, Guardian UK

10 February 13

 

ohn Brennan and John Kiriakou worked together years ago, but their careers have dramatically diverged. Brennan is now on track to head the CIA, while Kiriakou is headed off to prison. Each of their fates is tied to the so-called "war on terror", which under President George W Bush provoked worldwide condemnation.

President Barack Obama rebranded the "war on terror" innocuously as "overseas contingency operations", but, rather than retrench from the odious practices of his predecessor, Obama instead escalated. His promotion of Brennan, and his prosecution of Kiriakou, demonstrate how the recent excesses of US presidential power are not transient aberrations, but the creation of a frightening new normal, where drone strikes, warrantless surveillance, assassination, and indefinite detention are conducted with arrogance and impunity, shielded by secrecy and beyond the reach of law.

John Kiriakou spent 14 years at the CIA as an analyst and a case officer. In 2002, he led the team that found Abu Zubaydah, alleged to be a high-ranking member of al-Qaida. Kiriakou was the first to publicly confirm the use of waterboarding by the CIA, in a 2007 interview with ABC's Brian Ross. He told Ross:

"At the time, I felt that waterboarding was something that we needed to do … I think I've changed my mind, and I think that waterboarding is probably something that we shouldn't be in the business of doing."

Kiriakou says he found the "enhanced interrogation techniques" immoral, and declined to be trained to use them.

Since the interview, it has become known that Zubaydah was waterboarded at least 83 times, and that he provided no useful information as a result. He remains imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay, without charge. Kiriakou will soon start serving his 30-month prison sentence, but not for disclosing anything about waterboarding. He pled guilty to disclosing the name of a former CIA interrogator to a journalist, with information that the interrogator himself had posted to a publicly available website.

Meanwhile, John Brennan, longtime counterterrorism advisor to Obama, is expected to receive Senate confirmation as the new director of central intelligence. I recently asked Kiriakou what he thought of Brennan:

"I've known John Brennan since 1990. I worked directly for John Brennan twice. I think that he is a terrible choice to lead the CIA. I think that it's time for the CIA to move beyond the ugliness of the post-September 11 regime, and we need someone who is going to respect the constitution and to not be bogged down by a legacy of torture.

"I think that President Obama's appointment of John Brennan sends the wrong message to all Americans."

Obama has once already considered Brennan for the top CIA job, back in 2008. Brennan withdrew his nomination then under a hail of criticism for supporting the Bush-era torture policies in his various top-level intelligence positions, including head of the National Counterterrorism Center.

What a difference four years makes. With the killing of Osama bin Laden notched in his belt, Obama seems immune from counterterror criticism. John Brennan is said to manage the notorious "kill list" of people that Obama believes he has the right to kill anytime, anywhere on the planet, as part of his "overseas contingency operations". This includes the killing of US citizens, without any charge, trial, or due process whatsoever.

Drone strikes are one way these assassinations are carried out. US citizen Anwar al-Awlaki was killed in Yemen by a drone strike; then, two weeks later, his 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, was killed the same way.

I asked Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, who served as chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell from 2002 to 2005, what he thought of Brennan. He told me:

"What's happening with drone strikes around the world right now is, in my opinion, as bad a development as many of the things we now condemn so readily, with 20/20 hindsight, in the George W Bush administration. We are creating more enemies than we're killing. We are doing things that violate international law.
"We are even killing American citizens without due process and have an attorney general who has said that due process does not necessarily include the legal process. Those are really scary words."

While Kiriakou goes to prison for revealing a name, the UK-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism is launching a project called "Naming the Dead", hoping "to identify as many as possible of those killed in US covert drone strikes in Pakistan, whether civilian or militant." The BIJ reports a "minimum 2,629 people who appear to have so far died in CIA drone strikes in Pakistan".

John Brennan should be asked about each of them.

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Drones: Tough Talk, Little Scrutiny Print
Sunday, 10 February 2013 08:33

Nather writes: "From the way senators talked about the drone program at the John Brennan hearing Thursday, you'd think Congress has been hauling in White House officials to explain."

A US drone flies over Edwards Air Force Base. (photo: Keystone/Zuma/Rex Features)
A US drone flies over Edwards Air Force Base. (photo: Keystone/Zuma/Rex Features)



Drones: Tough Talk, Little Scrutiny

By David Nather, Politico

10 February 13

 

rom the way senators talked about the drone program at the John Brennan hearing Thursday, you'd think Congress has been hauling in White House officials to explain the program in the light of day again and again.

But Congress' public oversight of targeted killings has been almost nonexistent. The last hearings on the drone strikes - held by a House national security subcommittee - faded away after the early months of 2010.

And until Thursday's Brennan hearing, the two committees with jurisdiction over the CIA drone program - the Senate and House Intelligence Committees - have never held a public inquiry on the program. The Senate and House Armed Services Committees, which oversee the military drone program in war zones, haven't held hearings, either.

Senior members of Congress insist they are briefed on strikes, but that only happens after a strike - behind closed doors, far from public view.

In addition, lawmakers and congressional leaders with the authority to investigate won't say if they've given the program greater scrutiny in private, so whatever questions have been asked aren't part of the public record.

That's angered a small band of senators - mostly liberals, but a few Republicans too - who have complained for years that the program exists only in the shadows.

So while it's big news this week that the White House turned over classified legal opinions that justify using drone strikes to kill Americans abroad, it's not clear that the revelation marks a new day for drone oversight.

In fact, there's plenty of evidence to suggest that Congress will return to status quo, as the Hill often does after a brief moment of interest in a headline-grabbing national security program like the eavesdropping program under President George W. Bush.

Just look at what some of the overseers say about the strikes and the idea that Congress should try to second-guess them.

"The idea of having 535 commanders in chief decide the target is ridiculous," said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), a member of the Armed Services Committee, who plans to introduce a resolution next week supporting the drone strike program. "It should reside with the commander in chief to decide who is an enemy combatant."

Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, says he's fine with the drone strikes even though he was one of the lawmakers calling on the Obama administration to release the legal opinions.

"This has been a huge value-added in disrupting al Qaeda events. And guess what? Sometimes Americans have joined that organization to kill Americans. That's their choice, not ours," Rogers said in an interview on MSNBC Wednesday.

Even Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, sounds at times like one of the drone program's biggest defenders. At Thursday's hearing, she did push Brennan for help getting eight other legal opinions on the program. But what was Feinstein's main complaint about the classification rules? They're preventing her from talking about how low the civilian casualties are.

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), one of the senators who led the push to get the legal opinion, suggested at Thursday's hearing that the senators had been stiffed - that the Justice Department hadn't actually given the intelligence committees all of the legal opinions after all.

Some of the overseers, like Wyden, have gotten some mileage out of pressuring the administration. And some Senate intelligence committee members did sound concerned about the drone strikes at Thursday's hearing, including Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, who suggested to Brennan that the number of targeted killings under Obama has been four times as high as it was during the entire Bush presidency.
But others, if they're not actively cheering for the program, are just scared to say too much about it.

"I think the committee has been doing the work it's supposed to be doing," Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida - Time magazine's newly appointed "Republican savior" - told POLITICO with a nervous look on his face before rushing into a senators' luncheon. "I'm a new member. I just want to make sure I'm not talking about things I'm not supposed to discuss."

Even the Obama administration's allies aren't impressed. They want Congress to get tougher with the president - and force him not just to reveal the legal reasoning behind the CIA drone strikes, but to explain more about who gets to make the strike decisions and what groups can be targeted. And they want to open the program to some kind of outside scrutiny, whether it's done in public or not.

"I have every confidence that this administration is doing everything it can to make the right decisions, but our system is built on checks and balances," said Ken Gude, chief of staff and vice president at the Center for American Progress, which has close ties to the Obama administration. "I shouldn't be any more accepting of the assurances of this administration than I was of the Bush administration."

The irony isn't lost on Gude. He worked on a CAP paper in 2006 that recommended ways to improve congressional oversight of intelligence after Bush's warrantless surveillance program was revealed. The lead author of the paper: Denis McDonough - now the new White House chief of staff.

The Brennan hearing was a rare case where lawmakers have even tried to ask questions in public about the Central Intelligence Agency's drone strikes against suspected militants in Pakistan and Yemen.

Most of the Senate and House intelligence committee hearings are closed, and committee aides refused to say whether the CIA drone strikes have even been a topic of the hearings. But the Senate and House Armed Services Committees, which have jurisdiction over the Defense Department drones used in Afghanistan and Iraq, have held no hearings on the topic during Obama's presidency.

One House panel, the House Oversight and Government Reform National Security Subcommittee, did hold two hearings in March and April 2010 about the legal and ethical questions raised by the targeted killings. Since then, the full committee and subcommittee have held no hearings on the topic.

And none of the members of the "Gang of Eight," the top Democratic and Republican leaders in the House and Senate and the chairmen and ranking members of the Intelligence Committees, would say whether they've gotten details on the program during the closed briefings about covert activities they get from the Obama administration.

Until now, it has been just a handful of senators - like Democrats Wyden and Patrick Leahy (Vt.) and Republican Chuck Grassley (Iowa) - who have been pushing for the legal opinions, and it's only with the Brennan hearing that they really had an impact.

Wyden told POLITICO he thinks there is a "new pragmatic and bipartisan coalition emerging on these issues," and that Obama told him Wednesday night that "we need a public discussion" of the issues surrounding the drone program.

But that only made Wyden more frustrated when he realized the Intelligence Committee had not received all of the legal opinions Obama promised. "There seems to be a pretty big disconnect between what the president said last night and what we saw this morning," Wyden said.

Wyden and the other senators used their moment of maximum leverage, since Obama needs them to confirm Brennan as the next CIA director - and they had hinted strongly that they might not do that if Obama didn't turn over the legal opinions. They won't have that kind of leverage to get more details for a long time after Brennan is confirmed, assuming the Senate approves him.

But Grassley, for one, bristles at the notion that they should even need leverage.

"What leverage do we need to have when this administration said on Jan. 20, 2009 that they were going to be the most transparent and honest administration in the history of the country?" Grassley asked.

The drone strikes have become a major test of how Congress has built up its oversight of covert activities since the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance program came to light during the Bush years.

That episode revealed serious limits on the leverage lawmakers had to ask questions about the programs - especially in the briefings that are limited to the Gang of Eight. At the time, gang members couldn't even share their concerns about the program, and Sen. Jay Rockefeller, then the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, had to resort to writing a letter to then-Vice President Dick Cheney and keeping it locked in a safe. Eventually, Bush halted the program under public pressure - but only after it had been revealed in news reports.

Since then, the law has been strengthened a bit, to require the White House to give at least a general description of a covert activity to all Intelligence Committee members after the more detailed briefing is given to the Gang of Eight.

Even now, though, civil liberties groups say the limits of secret oversight are becoming obvious again with the new questions about the CIA drone program.

"These committees get very little bang for the buck for pushing back," said Elizabeth Goitein of the Brennan Center for Justice. "The public can't get fired up about things they don't know."

Most of lawmakers' comments lately have focused on the September 2011 strike that killed Anwar al-Awlaki, a Yemeni cleric who was born in the United States and was tied to plots to blow up an airplane in December 2009 and cargo planes in 2010.

They haven't paid as much attention to the numerous other attacks. The New America Foundation, which has been tracking the strikes through news reports, estimates that 1,953-3,279 people have been killed by CIA drone strikes in Pakistan since 2004. Most were reported to be militants, the group says, but about 18-23 percent of the deaths were believed to be civilian casualties.

The CIA runs the drone attacks in non-war zones like Pakistan, while the Department of Defense has been in charge of the drone missions in areas like Iraq and Afghanistan, according to the Council on Foreign Relations.

The drone strikes in general are wildly popular with American voters. They approve of the CIA drone attacks by a three-to-one margin and the U.S. military strikes by a six-to-one margin, according to a Fairleigh Dickinson University poll released Thursday. Strikes on American citizens overseas are a different matter, though - 48 percent say they think those strikes are illegal, while 24 percent say they're legal.

It's not that there has been no oversight. Feinstein said Thursday that the committee has been conducting "significant oversight" of the drone program - and suggested it has been detailed enough that she knows the exact number of civilian casualties. Last summer, the Los Angeles Times reported that House and Senate Intelligence Committee staffers have been watching videos of the drone strikes at the CIA headquarters.

And Rogers told MSNBC he reviews "all of the air strikes that we use under this title of the law." But he also suggested he doesn't have any real doubts about the program.

"You don't just kill the enemy when they're at the gate. You try to make sure that you get them before they even get close to having an operation that could kill Americans," he said.

And House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon (R-Calif.) told POLITICO he has seen the Defense Department drone operations firsthand - because he has watched his nephew, who used to fly Predator drones over Afghanistan from a remote location in Nevada.

He's not bothered by what he has seen.

"I'm aware of the concerns that are being raised. I don't think we have the same problems with the DoD program that are being raised with the CIA program," said McKeon. "I think we're doing everything we can to comply with the law. In fact, sometimes they go overboard. They'll lose a target rather than risk collateral damage."

Realistically, most of the oversight of CIA activities like the drone program is going to have to stay behind closed doors. But Congress does have another option: passing legislation to authorize the drone program outside of war zones and putting conditions and limits on it.

Even if lawmakers were inclined to do that, though - and the legislation could get through a divided Congress - Brennan insists the Obama administration doesn't need it, signaling that he'd put up a fight as CIA director. The 2001 authorization for military force after the Sept. 11 attacks already takes care of that, he said in written responses to questions from the Senate intelligence committee.

That authorization "does not contain a geographical limitation," Brennan wrote. "Consequently I do not believe additional legislation along these lines is necessary."

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'Suicide Conservatives' Print
Saturday, 09 February 2013 14:56

Blow writes: "There used to be a political truism: Democrats fall in love, while Republicans fall in line. That's no longer true. Not in this moment. Democrats have learned to fall in love and fall in line. Republicans are just falling apart."

Glenn Beck blasted Sen. Marco Rubio for coming out for immigration reform. (photo: Reuters)
Glenn Beck blasted Sen. Marco Rubio for coming out for immigration reform. (photo: Reuters)


'Suicide Conservatives'

By Charles M. Blow, The New York Times

09 February 13

 

here used to be a political truism: Democrats fall in love, while Republicans fall in line.

That's no longer true. Not in this moment. Democrats have learned to fall in love and fall in line. Republicans are just falling apart.

Last week, the opening salvos were launched in a very public and very nasty civil war between establishment Republicans and Tea Party supporters when it was reported that Karl Rove was backing a new group, the Conservative Victory Project, to counter the Tea Party's selection of loopy congressional candidates who lose in general elections.

The Tea Party was having none of it. It sees Rove's group as a brazen attack on the Tea Party movement, which it is. Rove sees winning as a practical matter. The Tea Party counts victory in layers of philosophical purity.

Politico reported this week that an unnamed "senior Republican operative" said that one of the party's biggest problems was " 'suicide conservatives, who would rather lose elections than win seats with moderates.' "

Democrats could be the ultimate beneficiaries of this tiff. Of the 33 Senate seats up for election in 2014, 20 are held by Democrats. Seven of those 20 are in states that President Obama lost in the last presidential election. Republicans would have to pick up only a handful of seats to take control of the chamber.

But some in the Tea Party are threatening that if their candidate is defeated in the primaries by a candidate backed by Rove's group, they might still run the Tea Party candidate in the general election. That would virtually guarantee a Democratic victory.

Sal Russo, a Tea Party strategist, told Politico: "We discourage our people from supporting third-party candidates by saying 'that's a big mistake. We shouldn't do that.' " He added: "But if the position [Rove's allies] take is rule or ruin - well, two can play that game. And if we get pushed, we're not going to be able to keep the lid on that."

The skirmish speaks to a broader problem: a party that has lost its way and can't rally around a unified, coherent vision of what it wants to be when it grows up.

The traditional Republican message doesn't work. Rhetorically, the G.O.P. is the party of calamity. The sky is always falling. Everything is broken. Freedoms are eroding. Tomorrow is dimmer than today.

In Republicans' world, we must tighten our belts until we crush our spines. We must take a road to prosperity that runs through the desert of austerity. We must cut to grow. Republicans are the last guardians against bad governance.

But how can they sell this message to a public that has rejected it in the last two presidential elections?

Some say keep the terms but soften the tone.

A raft of Republicans, many of them possible contenders in 2016, have been trying this approach.

Louisiana's governor, Bobby Jindal, speaking at a Republican National Committee meeting last month, chastised his party for being "the stupid party" that's "in love with zeros," even as he insisted, "I am not one of those who believe we should moderate, equivocate, or otherwise abandon our principles."

Jindal's plan, like that of many other Republicans, boils down to two words: talk differently.

Other Republicans, like Marco Rubio, seem to want to go further. They understand that the party must behave differently. He is among a group of senators who recently put forward a comprehensive immigration proposal that would offer a pathway to citizenship for the millions of undocumented immigrants in this country.

This is a position Democrats have advocated, and it's a position that Republicans have to accept if they want Hispanic support - and a chance of winning a presidential election.

The Tea Party crowd did not seem pleased with that plan. Glenn Beck, the self-described "rodeo clown" of the right, said:

"You've got John McCain, Lindsey Graham, and now Marco Rubio joining them because Marco Rubio just has to win elections. I'm done. I'm done. Learn the Constitution. Somebody has to keep a remnant of the Constitution alive."

For Beck's wing of the party, moderation is surrender, and surrender is death. It seems to want to go further out on a limb that's getting ever more narrow. For that crowd, being a Tea Party supporter is more a religion than a political philosophy. They believe so deeply and fervently in it that they see no need for either message massage or actual compromise.

While most Democrats and Independents want politicians to compromise, Republicans don't, according to a January report by the Pew Research Center. The zealots have a chokehold on that party, and they're sucking the life - and common sense - out of it.

For this brand of Republican, there is victory in self-righteous defeat.


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