TheHammer wrote:I put the "big fear" in quotes because I don't share that sentiment. The President and his advisors must feel that targeting Al-Awliki is legally justifiable. Its not as if its some big secret that he is being targeted. As previously noted, use of deadly force has been ruled reasonable under the fourth amendment for dangerous fugitives by the Supreme Court. I'd imagine that would probably be the tact they would take.
"The President and his advisors must feel that targeting Al-Awliki is legally justifiable..."
Nonsense. They don't feel it's legal to kill him. They just feel he ought to be dead.
Who will they, or their successors, take it into their heads to kill next? Law is not about your
feelings, my friend; it is about facts, determined as rigorously and thoroughly as possible.
You
feel that al-Awlaki ought to be dead, and that it is thus acceptable to kill him. Well, I feel a number of people ought to be dead, or that the interests of the world would be better served by their death than by their life. If I am president of the United States, does that give me the right and the power to order those people killed? Are you willing to write me that blank check without knowing who's on my list?
Because that's the privilege- literally
private law, the ability to make his own laws and remake them to suit his purposes- that you're giving Obama.
TheHammer wrote:No, in other words I've said all I can say on the matter. No new points are being presented its simply a rehash ad nauseum from new people wanting to jump in the discussion. If you want to know how I'll respond, just go back and read previous posts I've already put in the thread.
So, in short, let me see if I can sum up your position.
1) There is no need to worry about the idea that the president can order American citizens killed without bothering to get any warrants or other legal authorization from the court system, and without charging those citizens with any crime, because...
2) This power will not be abused, because it is unreasonable to use this power on anyone except evil murderous terrorists, and therefore it will not be used. Therefore...
3) There is no need for a general ruling, and we can trust the president and his advisors to make decisions about whether to have American citizens killed on a case-by-case basis, all by themselves, without oversight.
There. Did I get your position right?
Captain Seafort wrote:open_sketchbook wrote:I think the primary difference between your everyday criminal group and Al Qaeda or other terrorist organizations is that your average criminal group isn't usually geared entirely for violence, whereas terrorists are made up of, for lack of a better term, soldiers.
I object very strongly to the use of the term "soldier". A soldier is a paid professional fighting on behalf of a sovereign state. A terrorist is not.
[sighs]
Look, we need
some word for terrorists that recognizes that they are individuals committed to prosecuting an extended, violent campaign against a powerful opposition. Your typical thug, even a violent one, is different- their violence is predatory and sporadic; they fight and kill because they wish to steal or to uphold some sense of personal 'honor.' They're not interested in fighting a war with the police, and wouldn't do so even if you gave them the tools to do so; they're in it for money or pride, not for victory.
Terrorists fight for much more abstract goals (independence for their people, the destruction of an old order they deem corrupt, et cetera). They are willing to take much bigger risks, because fighting and killing are
part of their motives, not something incidental that they do along the way. About the only criminals who do such things for the sake of doing them are a handful of outright lunatics and serial killers... whose behavior is
totally unlike that of terrorist organizations.
Their style of thinking is much more "soldier-like" than it is like the thinking of typical criminals.
This makes an important difference in their behavior, and how to overcome the threat they present.
A group like Al Qaeda actually is out to destroy governments, to kill members of the nations they oppose for the sake of killing them, and even if there is no legal way of recognizing it, they actually are waging war in a practical sense.
No, they are not. They are committing murder, no different from any other murderer save in the number of their victims. I don't care if their motive is economic, political, or for shits and giggles.
And yet where else on Earth do we find "murder gangs" who are organized to anything like the same degree, so indifferent to profit and risk avoidance, and with so much support among certain sectors of the population?
Large terrorist organizations may be criminals, but they are
very strange criminals, a distinct subspecies of criminal and one that shares many of the traits of a rebellion, guerilla army, or other ideologically motivated armed faction. It is necessary to recognize this, and to some extent adopt the appropriate language and frame of reference for fighting such a large and capable opponent.
Criminals are usually weak relative to governments- the renegades and defectors from a large civilization, one whose values they still on some level respect and of whose authorities they are still somewhat afraid.
Terrorist organizations, once they get big enough, are more like rebel armies attempting a coup- in that they are trying to compete with the people they fight on a political level, in that they reject the entire notion that their enemy's law should apply to them. They are not trying to live within a sheltered and illegal niche inside a civilization; they're trying to change it, and are quite capable of expanding into army-sized movements given the opportunity.
Which does affect your tactics so much that you really do need some new vocabulary to describe them. At a certain point, a difference in degree becomes a difference in kind.