Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by MarshalPurnell »

Thanas wrote:What is the evidence that he took up arms? All that is available says that he was a propagandist for Al-Quaida. Is that "taking up arms" in a war now? He never fired a single shot.
A REMF is still a "combatant," especially if he had some kind of command or operational authority. If all al-Awlaki was doing was providing propaganda, that isn't even illegal in the United States. No, he went to Yemen explicitly to support Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, providing valuable contacts and assistance in dealing with his father's tribe in the process. There was no formal indictment levied against him in connection with terrorist attacks, but he openly admitted having "taught" Nidal Hassan and Umar Abdulmutallab, with further evidence of connections provided by Abdulmutallab's interrogation, where he placed al-Awlaki at the Al Qaeda training camp he was prepared in. If he was simply a "propagandist" he could have operated from any other country in the world; instead he went to Yemen, where terrorist attacks against the US had been originating for some time, where Al Qaeda was operating openly, where he could help lead his father's tribe into collaboration with the Al Qaeda insurgency, and where he openly proclaimed himself an enemy of the United States at war with America.

Do you have any particular reason to not believe the man's own words? Is it rational to assume he was not at all involved in providing material support for the Islamic insurgency that he was sheltering with, encouraging others to join, and fighting an enemy he proclaimed himself to be at war with?
None of that applies here because this was a specific targeting of one individual.
The drone strikes are a new element, but trying to decapitate enemy command and control is an old, old tactics in warfare.
If the United States was right about his operational role, then drone-striking him was absolutely the right thing to do. If it was wrong, so what, he was still a legitimate military target as a member of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
Because clearly he was in a combat role on a battlefield? Are you that dense that your only argument here is "he went to Yemen, so he was a combatant"? Being a combatant requires one being actively involved in combat. He was not.
Being a combatant involves membership in a military or paramilitary force. Logistics personnel are just as much fair game for killing as are frontline combatants. Just how much operational authority al-Awlaki exercised is an academic concern, but it is clear the US government considered him a serious threat. Publicly available evidence, namely al-Awlaki's own statements and actions, substantiate that he was a radical Islamist who considered himself at war with the United States and sheltered with the paramilitary Al Qaeda insurgency in Yemen. There are no serious ground for skepticism that al-Awlaki was a legitimate target.

And seriously, the efforts to turn a self-declared traitor who operated with the most infamous terrorist organization in the world into some kind of martyr against a sinister national-security state is ridiculous. He was placed on a list of legitimate military targets, not an "assassination list" arbitrarily compiled by Obama. He was not "murdered without due process" but rather killed as a consequence of his own actions, whether metaphorical or literal, in actively taking up arms against America. The "slippery slope" is pretty much limited to any other Americans who run off to Yemen or Afghanistan/Pakistan to join Al Qaeda or the Taliban. Al-Awlaki simply got what he deserved, and attempts to argue against it based on procedural grounds which do not exist, or worse by distorting the strike list into some kind of "state enemies to be liquidated anywhere in the world by any means without any kind of review or justification" list, come off as supercilious whining utterly disconnected from the actual circumstances of al-Awlaki's killing.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Ryan Thunder »

Simon_Jester wrote:
Ryan Thunder wrote:
Darksider wrote:Exactly what "combat function" did he provide? Everything I've seen suggests he was nothing more than a propagandist. Is there any confirmed evidence that he was active in a combat or leadership role?
Psychological warfare. :v
It's tricky- do we call al-Awlaki a member of (in some sense) an 'armed force' who just happens not to carry weapons? Or is he a civilian member of a movement with a militant arm?
I think we (and that's a general 'we') should treat him the same way we'd expect an 'honourable' enemy to treat our psyops personnel.

I'm not sure what that is, though. Are psyops personnel considered combatants?
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Samuel »

PS: Prove that the US would be unable to capture him.
We could capture lots of people. The US generally doesn't bother in many cases because that would warrent risking American lives, takes a long time and lets other people get away.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by TheHammer »

Bakustra wrote:I actually don't know where to start, really. I think I'll begin with a little question. Do you sincerely believe that the US can murder people without due process of law as long as they are not US citizens, under US law? Because you may need to read the actual Bill of Rights again.
Firstly, I don't consider the killing of Alwaki as "murder". The Administration clearly feels they can justify his killing under current laws, thus "due process of law" is satisfied. It make take some legal wrangling, but that is due more in part to a failing of current laws to address situations such as this.
My problem is, in fact, with the very idea of a death list when the US is not at war. I would not support it if it were solely filled with active neo-Nazis, because I don't believe that this is compatible with the principles we think we ought to uphold. And if we throw out one under the grounds of "ideals are not a thing this country can afford", then- well, let me put it to you this way. I believe, for the sake of argument only, that this whole idea of "getting along with other people" and "not robbing them blind" is idealism I cannot afford to uphold. Should I meet you in person, I would beat the shit out of you and take your wallet, and this ought to be perfectly acceptable to you. But it isn't, because you believe that (arbitrarily-designated) groups of people don't have any sort of morality that they should uphold whereas individuals do. Would you support genocide if a group of talking heads declared that not killing millions of people was "idealism the President cannot afford"?
The problem with ideals are that they simply don't always work in the real world. They are something we should strive for, but not at the expense of the greater good. Clearly, eliminating Alwaki, and any other members of Al Qaeda was for the greater good. It does not mean that it is suddenly "open season" on anyone and everyone at the President's whim. Everything else you wrote is clear descent down that slippery slope to crazy town and I'm not going along for the ride.
But the point of my statements is that Anwar al-Awlaki has not been proven to be a member of al-Qaeda of any sort, and although the evidence may be in favor of that, there is no accountability. Obama could have just declared him to be one and killed him with no reason. If he had been indicted, that at least would have required convincing a grand jury that he was a member. But either the US government was unable to do so, or unwilling to do so, and neither speaks highly of them.
You are honestly going to play that card? Really? He was in fact tried in absentia and found guilty of being a member of Al Qaeda in Yemin - the OTHER country he was a citizen of that wanted him dead. He was placed on UN Security Council Resolution 1267 list of individuals associated with al-Qaeda. Finally, If you aren't convinced by Awlaki's own statements of his being a member of Al Qaeda I don't know what to tell you. There really is no reasonable doubt that he was a member of Al Qaeda...
Even if they had proved that, I still would oppose assassination on the grounds that I believe that al-Qaeda is not an entity that can reasonably be said to be at war with the US and treating them as though they were is self-defeating and is a strategy that concedes shitloads of important ground to terrorist and guerrilla organizations. My point about US military servicemembers serving as propagandists for terrorist organizations was meant to highlight one cost of this strategy, and one of the largest reasons why it's self-defeating.

PS: Prove that the US would be unable to capture him.
Honestly, I don't know where you are going with the "Al-Qaeda can't be reasonably at war with the US" because quite frankly that statement is complete bullshit. I can understand having problems with how the war on terror has been conducted, but that doesn't mean that it shouldn't be fought at all. And actually, it would seem that our current strategy of targeted killings such as this seem to be very effective with less loss of innocent life than our previous strategies of invading entire countries in order to root out terrorism. And quite frankly it doesn't matter what the U.S. does. Terrorist propogandists will find a way to paint us as the "great Satan" regardless. So "not trying so we dont' give them propoganda" isn't a realistic reason to not go after people like awlaki.

And you want me to PROVE the US would be unable to capture him? Clearly under the write circumstances the U.S. would have been able to capture him. Under the right circumstances you could capture anyone. But clearly NO ONE thinks it was likely. Yemen had already sentenced him to 10 years and wanted him dead or alive. Apparently they couldn't get the job done. One of the reasons, obviously, is that he was doing his best not to avoid opportunities to be captured - staying away from zones under government control. Further he was being helped by the rather large Awlaki tribe. Since common sense would tell us that capturing him and interrogating him would have been extremely useful, we must conclude that capture was deemed to be not feasible. Depending on who you talk to Awlaki was either a midlevel Al Qaeda propogandist, or the next Bin Laden. Given our history with Bin Laden, and the fact that there were multiple missed opportunities to get him, one can certainly understand why we didn't want to wait around for all the stars and planets to align to allow us to capture Awlaki.

Finally, I'll point out that ultimately all the U.S. did was carry out Awlaki's wishes. After all, Awlaki did say and I quote: "Don't consult with anyone in fighting the Americans, fighting the devil doesn't require consultation or prayers or seeking divine guidance. They are the party of the devils." And that's what everyone is complaining about right? That we killed an American Citizen?

Mr. Awlaki, you sir are welcome.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Bakustra »

TheHammer wrote: Firstly, I don't consider the killing of Alwaki as "murder". The Administration clearly feels they can justify his killing under current laws, thus "due process of law" is satisfied. It make take some legal wrangling, but that is due more in part to a failing of current laws to address situations such as this.
This speaks for itself. You blindly follow the US government, assuring that if they feel that they can justify his killing, then that means that it's A-OK. I believe that a quote from Richard Nixon when he was interviewed by David Frost might explain why this is hilariously foolish.
The problem with ideals are that they simply don't always work in the real world. They are something we should strive for, but not at the expense of the greater good. Clearly, eliminating Alwaki, and any other members of Al Qaeda was for the greater good. It does not mean that it is suddenly "open season" on anyone and everyone at the President's whim. Everything else you wrote is clear descent down that slippery slope to crazy town and I'm not going along for the ride.
So you do have ideals that you're willing to uphold, but not killing people without due process of law is not one of them. So why don't you think that this is important to uphold.
You are honestly going to play that card? Really? He was in fact tried in absentia and found guilty of being a member of Al Qaeda in Yemin - the OTHER country he was a citizen of that wanted him dead. He was placed on UN Security Council Resolution 1267 list of individuals associated with al-Qaeda. Finally, If you aren't convinced by Awlaki's own statements of his being a member of Al Qaeda I don't know what to tell you. There really is no reasonable doubt that he was a member of Al Qaeda...
He made that statement after the US announced that it had decided he was a leader of al-Qaeda and would therefore be attempting to kill him from now on. Meanwhile, you're using the Yemeni government as some sort of pillar of rational, justified detentions and sentencing. Good lord.
Honestly, I don't know where you are going with the "Al-Qaeda can't be reasonably at war with the US" because quite frankly that statement is complete bullshit. I can understand having problems with how the war on terror has been conducted, but that doesn't mean that it shouldn't be fought at all. And actually, it would seem that our current strategy of targeted killings such as this seem to be very effective with less loss of innocent life than our previous strategies of invading entire countries in order to root out terrorism. And quite frankly it doesn't matter what the U.S. does. Terrorist propogandists will find a way to paint us as the "great Satan" regardless. So "not trying so we dont' give them propoganda" isn't a realistic reason to not go after people like awlaki.
If we're fighting a War On Terror, we should stop killing people then. It's distracting from the real enemy, the philosophical concept. Clearly, we should redirect our choice of weapons from bombs to attempts to engineer the concept out of the human consciousness. Doomed to fail as this would be, it would still be better than the war we're fighting now. Meanwhile, I suppose I should join in on fighting the War On Drugs by burning some enemy forces, if you know what I mean. (PS: This is a joke.) Or maybe I should continue the War on Poverty by punching a few homeless people. (PPS: This is also a joke.)

But the problem is that guerrilla forces, and terrorists are a kind of guerrilla, rely on public support in order to act. That is, they need popular opinion to favor them. One of the best ways to get that opinion is to provoke disproportionate responses from whoever it is they are fighting, causing the public to be hurt and oppose the enemies of the guerrilla forces, leading to a sense of solidarity and increased support. Indeed, the guerrillas are better able to draw troops from the public too. This is how Vietnam became such a quagmire, this is how every resistance movement has operated, and the way to fight it is to attack the guerrillas at their source of supply. That is to say, you need to convince the public that the terrorists are not their friends or their allies. This is the "hearts and minds" dimension of warfare. Doing shit like ordering assassinations of people, blowing up weddings, and invading countries strengthens terrorist organizations. Indeed, al-Qaeda got precisely the reaction they wanted out of the US, and we are continuing to fight a losing war by treating this as a shooting war.

But you are convinced that the US cannot actually convince people in the Middle East that it has good intentions under any circumstances ever. So I guess that that was wasted on you, because you have such a low opinion of the USA. What a shame. This is a great country, hippie.
And you want me to PROVE the US would be unable to capture him? Clearly under the write circumstances the U.S. would have been able to capture him. Under the right circumstances you could capture anyone. But clearly NO ONE thinks it was likely. Yemen had already sentenced him to 10 years and wanted him dead or alive. Apparently they couldn't get the job done. One of the reasons, obviously, is that he was doing his best not to avoid opportunities to be captured - staying away from zones under government control. Further he was being helped by the rather large Awlaki tribe. Since common sense would tell us that capturing him and interrogating him would have been extremely useful, we must conclude that capture was deemed to be not feasible. Depending on who you talk to Awlaki was either a midlevel Al Qaeda propogandist, or the next Bin Laden. Given our history with Bin Laden, and the fact that there were multiple missed opportunities to get him, one can certainly understand why we didn't want to wait around for all the stars and planets to align to allow us to capture Awlaki.
Common sense would have told us that putting Bin Laden on trial when you had the ability to capture him would be the best solution. The US does not often operate on "common sense" and so appealing to it to determine that the Obama administration, relying on years of FBI investigations that turned up nothing actionable about his relationships to terrorist groups (indeed, he was considered a "moderate" imam in 2001 and 2002!) until magically, one day in 2010, the US declared that it would do its best to kill the shit out of him because he was the next bin Laden, was acting purely rationally, is not a leap I am willing to take.

Meanwhile, US forces had to land right next to the fucking car of his that we blew up so that we could sift through a couple shattered bodies for fingers and jaws for analysis. Somehow, they didn't all fucking die. Imagine that.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Zinegata »

You know that part in the American oath of allegiance where you promise to defend your country against enemies both foreign and domestic?

Killing Awlaki falls under that latter category. Those who claim he was not a domestic enemy are deliberately ignoring the mountain of evidence posted against him, and should bluntly be hit with the "no lies allowed" clause in the SDN forum rules already.

TheHammer has pretty much massacred everyone else on the legal specifics of this case however.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

And seriously, the efforts to turn a self-declared traitor who operated with the most infamous terrorist organization in the world into some kind of martyr against a sinister national-security state is ridiculous. He was placed on a list of legitimate military targets, not an "assassination list" arbitrarily compiled by Obama.
This is the central point you are missing.

If he was killed in the process of attacking a US military target, there would be no legal or moral issue. However, he was specifically targeted for elimination. A special directive was handed out to kill him. Our government CANNOT legally do this. It MAY NOT remove life or liberty without due process, on the president's say so. The fact that this is now possible; that there is a secret death list compiled by our government, the listing process is a secret, and there is no legal appeals process, is very worrying. Our government has ALREADY tortured US citizens, illegally used Extraordinary Rendition and torture by proxy. What exactly makes the idea that our government can kill a US citizen using a secret process with no due process and no appeals not worrying?

What is to stop the executive branch from placing a peaceful dissident on the list and killing them? It is a state secret, it cannot be challenged in court, afterall.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by TheHammer »

Bakustra wrote:
TheHammer wrote: Firstly, I don't consider the killing of Alwaki as "murder". The Administration clearly feels they can justify his killing under current laws, thus "due process of law" is satisfied. It make take some legal wrangling, but that is due more in part to a failing of current laws to address situations such as this.
This speaks for itself. You blindly follow the US government, assuring that if they feel that they can justify his killing, then that means that it's A-OK. I believe that a quote from Richard Nixon when he was interviewed by David Frost might explain why this is hilariously foolish.
Realizing that this particular killing was justified = blindily following the US government? No my friend, it is you how are blindly clinging to an ideal. I'm satisfied with how Awlaki was dealt with. That's not a blank check for the government to do whatever it wants, merely that it has my approval for its actions in this regard. I'll judge the next case on its own merits.

A dangerous enemy is now dead. You seemingly would rather have him alive recruiting more suicide bombers and soldiers for Al Qaeda. Who knows? Give him a few more weeks, maybe one of his disciples has an underwear bomb that actually works and takes out a bus. Or just goes low-tech and opens fire in a marketplace killing truly innocent people. But you could still wrap yourself in your idealism and sleep well at night right?
The problem with ideals are that they simply don't always work in the real world. They are something we should strive for, but not at the expense of the greater good. Clearly, eliminating Alwaki, and any other members of Al Qaeda was for the greater good. It does not mean that it is suddenly "open season" on anyone and everyone at the President's whim. Everything else you wrote is clear descent down that slippery slope to crazy town and I'm not going along for the ride.
So you do have ideals that you're willing to uphold, but not killing people without due process of law is not one of them. So why don't you think that this is important to uphold.
I think where we differ is that I feel due process of law has been completed. I've openly admitted its not as clean as I may have preferred. However, in lieu of there being more specific laws to handle situations like Awlaki, I feel that what was done was neccessary and for the greater good.
You are honestly going to play that card? Really? He was in fact tried in absentia and found guilty of being a member of Al Qaeda in Yemin - the OTHER country he was a citizen of that wanted him dead. He was placed on UN Security Council Resolution 1267 list of individuals associated with al-Qaeda. Finally, If you aren't convinced by Awlaki's own statements of his being a member of Al Qaeda I don't know what to tell you. There really is no reasonable doubt that he was a member of Al Qaeda...
He made that statement after the US announced that it had decided he was a leader of al-Qaeda and would therefore be attempting to kill him from now on. Meanwhile, you're using the Yemeni government as some sort of pillar of rational, justified detentions and sentencing. Good lord.
Oh ok, so instead of defending himself by saying what the U.S. government was saying wasn't true, he decided the best course of action was to behave exactly like a terrorist member of Al Qaeda would. Yeah that makes sense, if he was in fact a member of Al Qaeda. You also forgot to say that the UN security council is Obama's puppet and that any declarations it makes shouldn't be trusted either. And Quite frankly, the Yemeni government's record on human rights is irrelevent. I'm no more calling them a "pillar of free nations" anymore than you are calling Alwaki a "pillar of the community". The point was that this wasn't merely a "declaration by the President" with no cooberating evidence.
If we're fighting a War On Terror, we should stop killing people then. It's distracting from the real enemy, the philosophical concept. Clearly, we should redirect our choice of weapons from bombs to attempts to engineer the concept out of the human consciousness. Doomed to fail as this would be, it would still be better than the war we're fighting now. Meanwhile, I suppose I should join in on fighting the War On Drugs by burning some enemy forces, if you know what I mean. (PS: This is a joke.) Or maybe I should continue the War on Poverty by punching a few homeless people. (PPS: This is also a joke.)
:roll:
But the problem is that guerrilla forces, and terrorists are a kind of guerrilla, rely on public support in order to act. That is, they need popular opinion to favor them. One of the best ways to get that opinion is to provoke disproportionate responses from whoever it is they are fighting, causing the public to be hurt and oppose the enemies of the guerrilla forces, leading to a sense of solidarity and increased support. Indeed, the guerrillas are better able to draw troops from the public too. This is how Vietnam became such a quagmire, this is how every resistance movement has operated, and the way to fight it is to attack the guerrillas at their source of supply. That is to say, you need to convince the public that the terrorists are not their friends or their allies. This is the "hearts and minds" dimension of warfare. Doing shit like ordering assassinations of people, blowing up weddings, and invading countries strengthens terrorist organizations. Indeed, al-Qaeda got precisely the reaction they wanted out of the US, and we are continuing to fight a losing war by treating this as a shooting war.
Al Qaeda may have gotten what it thought it wanted. But believe me, with Bin Laden dead and numerous other high levels dead with him lately I guarantee they are re-thinking that strategy. Sure there have been numerous "hearts and minds" fuckups. But targeted assassinations keep civilian casualties down and make full on invasions of other countries unneccessary. We found Bin Laden in Pakistan but we didn't invade the country to get him. Nor did we invide Yemen to get Awlaki. For all this fear about "making martyrs" I really don't buy it. Clearly, the terrorist leaders have been in no hurry to make martyrs of themselves. If doing such a thing really helped their cause more than keeping them alive, why aren't they lining up to be the next suicide bomber? Because its all a load of bullshit.
But you are convinced that the US cannot actually convince people in the Middle East that it has good intentions under any circumstances ever. So I guess that that was wasted on you, because you have such a low opinion of the USA. What a shame. This is a great country, hippie.
Of course it can't convince the people of the Middle East of its good intentions, not as it is presently populated. It has been too ingrained in the culture. No matter how hard we work to rebuild Iraq we will be looked at as the decadent west. No matter how hard we try to create a Palestinian state we will be looked at as Zionist puppets. Until the textbooks and what they are taught in schools and mosques changes, their attitudes towards us will never change. But quite frankly, the leadership over there, both religious and political, wants it that way so I wouldn't hold my breath.
Common sense would have told us that putting Bin Laden on trial when you had the ability to capture him would be the best solution. The US does not often operate on "common sense" and so appealing to it to determine that the Obama administration, relying on years of FBI investigations that turned up nothing actionable about his relationships to terrorist groups (indeed, he was considered a "moderate" imam in 2001 and 2002!) until magically, one day in 2010, the US declared that it would do its best to kill the shit out of him because he was the next bin Laden, was acting purely rationally, is not a leap I am willing to take.
Actually it was when evidence came to light about his teachings and support for the Hassan and the underwear bomber, events he freely took credit for mind you, that his name was put up on the list. No magic required.

And who gives a shit if he was a "moderate" in 2001 and 2002? Either his attitudes evolved to be more radical, or he was misidentified. Regardless, its clear he wasn't moderate at the time he was put on "the list".
Meanwhile, US forces had to land right next to the fucking car of his that we blew up so that we could sift through a couple shattered bodies for fingers and jaws for analysis. Somehow, they didn't all fucking die. Imagine that.
What's your point? That we could land next to a destroyed vehicle well after the fact?
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by TheHammer »

Alyrium Denryle wrote:
And seriously, the efforts to turn a self-declared traitor who operated with the most infamous terrorist organization in the world into some kind of martyr against a sinister national-security state is ridiculous. He was placed on a list of legitimate military targets, not an "assassination list" arbitrarily compiled by Obama.
This is the central point you are missing.

If he was killed in the process of attacking a US military target, there would be no legal or moral issue. However, he was specifically targeted for elimination. A special directive was handed out to kill him. Our government CANNOT legally do this. It MAY NOT remove life or liberty without due process, on the president's say so. The fact that this is now possible; that there is a secret death list compiled by our government, the listing process is a secret, and there is no legal appeals process, is very worrying. Our government has ALREADY tortured US citizens, illegally used Extraordinary Rendition and torture by proxy. What exactly makes the idea that our government can kill a US citizen using a secret process with no due process and no appeals not worrying?

What is to stop the executive branch from placing a peaceful dissident on the list and killing them? It is a state secret, it cannot be challenged in court, afterall.
The same thing that stops the President currently from abusing any sort of power. Ultimately, the government is still accountable to the people. If a President couldn't justify his actions to the people and to congress then he wouldn't remain President. Killing "peaceful dissidents" would not only be political suicide, it could very well end up in impeachment.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

The same thing that stops the President currently from abusing any sort of power. Ultimately, the government is still accountable to the people. If a President couldn't justify his actions to the people and to congress then he wouldn't remain President. Killing "peaceful dissidents" would not only be political suicide, it could very well end up in impeachment
...

Torture including rape of a non-terrorist german citizen. Torture of a 19 year old american citizen under CIA orders in Kuwait. Quashing lawsuits brought by the same and others for torture and other human rights violations.

That is just under Obama.

Do want me to start with Bush? He did all that, and more/worse and GOT RE-ELECTED

What accountability is there anymore, exactly?
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Thanas »

MarshalPurnell wrote:
Thanas wrote:What is the evidence that he took up arms? All that is available says that he was a propagandist for Al-Quaida. Is that "taking up arms" in a war now? He never fired a single shot.
A REMF is still a "combatant," especially if he had some kind of command or operational authority. If all al-Awlaki was doing was providing propaganda, that isn't even illegal in the United States.
Indeed it is not. But he got killed for it nonetheless.
No, he went to Yemen explicitly to support Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, providing valuable contacts and assistance in dealing with his father's tribe in the process.
Proof that he was involved in any kind of operations? That he planned or carried out some of that? Provide it now.
Do you have any particular reason to not believe the man's own words? Is it rational to assume he was not at all involved in providing material support for the Islamic insurgency that he was sheltering with, encouraging others to join, and fighting an enemy he proclaimed himself to be at war with?
I have no reason to doubt that he was a propagandist (albeit, in the opinion of Yemen experts, a pretty bad plagiarist one). I have seen no evidence that he was involved in any kind of operational planning or execution whatsoever.

The drone strikes are a new element, but trying to decapitate enemy command and control is an old, old tactics in warfare.
Proof that he was part of command and control?
If it was wrong, so what, he was still a legitimate military target as a member of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

Bull. By that standard Fox News immediately becomes a legitimate target for the terrorists, as they also spew propaganda.

Just how much operational authority al-Awlaki exercised is an academic concern, but it is clear the US government considered him a serious threat.
The US Government also considered Hussein being in possession of WMDs.
Publicly available evidence, namely al-Awlaki's own statements and actions, substantiate that he was a radical Islamist who considered himself at war with the United States and sheltered with the paramilitary Al Qaeda insurgency in Yemen.
Many people in the USA also consider themselves at war with the Government. Do militias now become legitimate military targets?
And seriously, the efforts to turn a self-declared traitor who operated with the most infamous terrorist organization in the world into some kind of martyr against a sinister national-security state is ridiculous.
Take that strawman and light it.
He was placed on a list of legitimate military targets, not an "assassination list" arbitrarily compiled by Obama.
Correction. He was placed on a secret list for killing by the state based upon secret evidence, without judicial review and killed without having been given an opportunity to surrender to the authority.


And last I checked, the constitution does not magically evaporate once an American moves out of the country.
or worse by distorting the strike list into some kind of "state enemies to be liquidated anywhere in the world by any means without any kind of review or justification"
Well well well. Where the heck is the review and justification then? Because unless you can point to me where such a public review and public justification took place, that is exactly what it is.

TheHammer wrote:The point was that this wasn't merely a "declaration by the President" with no cooberating evidence.
Please name where said review of evidence took place in front of a judge.
TheHammer wrote:But targeted assassinations keep civilian casualties down and make full on invasions of other countries unneccessary.
Provide evidence that drone warfare limits civilian casualties.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by open_sketchbook »

Why is there so much arguing about the legality of this action? This was done by the US government. Would it be alright if they changed the laws first before assassinating this guy?

Again, I think this is a stupid argument. Do you think the Vietnamese children that Americans gleefully dropped napalm on in their quest to fight the commies got a fair trial? How about the thousands of Iraqi refugees mowed down by American planes and helicopters along highways as they desperately tried to escape oncoming US forces? All the Palestinians who've starved to death or been mowed down by Israeli soldiers armed with US weapons? Or the millions of innocent people all around the world whose fascist governments were propped up by Americans because it was politically convenient? Were all those deaths legally and morally justified? Focusing on this guy because he was a US citizen strikes as particularly twisted; the USA never cared when the governments they support murder their own people, so long as they repressed the correct side of the political spectrum in the process. Why is it any different now that the US is doing it directly?
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

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Because this is a huge step. In essence, the Government is declaring that it will ride roughshod over the most important provision in the constitution. It is abolishing the very concept of limited power.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by open_sketchbook »

But the only difference between this guy and the millions of innocent people the US has killed for money, imperialism, politics, religion and oppression is that he has a citizenship, and that makes it somehow worse? The spirit behind the concept of limited power disappeared long before this, if it ever existed in the first place. It was violated in slavery, in eugenics programs, in internment camps, and in pointless wars of aggression. Violating the letter of the law is meaningless when they've never enforced the spirit of it in the first place; it's been a sham from day 1.

Besides, do you really think this is the first time the US has assassinated a citizen? Are you really that naive? The only thing we've learned is that the US believes it can do it openly now. It's good they're finally embracing their status as an oppressive, imperialistic, murderous semi-theocratic corporate oligarchy built on fear and greed instead of trying to hide it. They weren't fooling anyone except their own citizens anyway.
Last edited by open_sketchbook on 2011-10-04 08:59am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

It's a great step, I think. It is good that the US is now an equal opportunity employer of both foreigners and it's own citizens. Now if only they stopped doing this in other people's countries and did it... somewhere else. ;)

They are now finally honest.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

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Every time Shroom agrees with me I have the unsettling feeling that I've gone terribly astray...
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

Between this, Badley Girling (Bradley Manning), and so on... trust you me, the next ten to twenty years will be the most beautiful thing ever.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Bakustra »

TheHammer wrote: Realizing that this particular killing was justified = blindily following the US government? No my friend, it is you how are blindly clinging to an ideal. I'm satisfied with how Awlaki was dealt with. That's not a blank check for the government to do whatever it wants, merely that it has my approval for its actions in this regard. I'll judge the next case on its own merits.

A dangerous enemy is now dead. You seemingly would rather have him alive recruiting more suicide bombers and soldiers for Al Qaeda. Who knows? Give him a few more weeks, maybe one of his disciples has an underwear bomb that actually works and takes out a bus. Or just goes low-tech and opens fire in a marketplace killing truly innocent people. But you could still wrap yourself in your idealism and sleep well at night right?
Who knows? Give Pat Robertson a few more weeks, maybe somebody tosses a bomb in an abortion clinic and kills a bunch of innocent people. Who knows? Give sovereign citizens a few more weeks, maybe more people resist violently to any attempts to bring them under US law. Who knows? Give James Dobson another few weeks, maybe somebody throws a bomb in a gay bar or murders a couple people he thinks are gay. Who knows? Give the KKK another few weeks, maybe they murder some innocent ethnic minorities. Who knows? Give Erik Prince another couple of weeks, maybe Xe rapes a couple more people, kills a bunch more. Who knows? Give the CIA a few more weeks, maybe they'll convince Obama to kill an innocent on suspicion of involvement with terrorism. Should all of these people be killed without a trial? After all, there is a very real chance that most of these people will continue to facilitate horrible crimes. Should they then be killed and due process of law be presumed to have been fulfilled?

But what you actually said was that you trusted, that since the President believed he could do this, that it was okay. You know what Nixon believed? "If the President does it, it's not illegal." Are you willing to gamble the foundation of this country's law on whether Obama believes the same? Well, of course you are, because you believe that it's literally impossible for this country to survive unless we can kill people without a trial if they're Really Bad People.
I think where we differ is that I feel due process of law has been completed. I've openly admitted its not as clean as I may have preferred. However, in lieu of there being more specific laws to handle situations like Awlaki, I feel that what was done was neccessary and for the greater good.
So why is US law unable to handle situations like Awlaki? You've never satisfactorily explained why it cannot do so, apart from the fact that the FBI and JTTF were unable to find enough evidence to indict and charge him, instead attempting to use unrelated charges to try and hold him so they could rifle through his belongings for evidence.
Oh ok, so instead of defending himself by saying what the U.S. government was saying wasn't true, he decided the best course of action was to behave exactly like a terrorist member of Al Qaeda would. Yeah that makes sense, if he was in fact a member of Al Qaeda. You also forgot to say that the UN security council is Obama's puppet and that any declarations it makes shouldn't be trusted either. And Quite frankly, the Yemeni government's record on human rights is irrelevent. I'm no more calling them a "pillar of free nations" anymore than you are calling Alwaki a "pillar of the community". The point was that this wasn't merely a "declaration by the President" with no cooberating evidence.
The UNSC added him to the resolution after the US declared that he was a member of al-Qaeda, which again was solely on the grounds that the government of Yemen, notoriously oppressive, declared him to be so, arrested him, and quite possibly radicalized him by detaining him with possible pressure from the US. But you think that the US government would simply have given up and stopped trying to kill him if he denied being a member of al-Qaeda. Laughable. I am reminded of Father Charles Coughlin back in the 1930s. Should the US government have just shot him? After all, I'm guessing that a lot of anti-Semitic, nativist, and pro-Fascist criminals were inspired by Coughlin's radio program.
:roll:

Al Qaeda may have gotten what it thought it wanted. But believe me, with Bin Laden dead and numerous other high levels dead with him lately I guarantee they are re-thinking that strategy. Sure there have been numerous "hearts and minds" fuckups. But targeted assassinations keep civilian casualties down and make full on invasions of other countries unneccessary. We found Bin Laden in Pakistan but we didn't invade the country to get him. Nor did we invide Yemen to get Awlaki. For all this fear about "making martyrs" I really don't buy it. Clearly, the terrorist leaders have been in no hurry to make martyrs of themselves. If doing such a thing really helped their cause more than keeping them alive, why aren't they lining up to be the next suicide bomber? Because its all a load of bullshit.
If you're going to take something as stupid as "War on Terror" seriously, then I'm afraid I have to mock you until you stop. But you think that apparently Eisenhower should have stormed the beaches in Normandy personally. You see, the leadership of al-Qaeda are the generals and strategizers of the organization. They don't risk their lives normally for the same reason generals in regular armies don't fight on the frontlines in the course of normal combat.

But it's not "making martyrs" alone. Doing things like violating Pakistani sovereignty and accusing them of supporting enemies of the USA, or making use of drone aircraft with the permission of a hated Yemeni government, or declaring a general "War on Terror" rather than a specific effort to capture the people responsible for the September 11th attacks, or propping up repressive governments in the Middle East and North Africa- all these things contribute to that.

Meanwhile, why would they be "rethinking their strategy" now? Their goal was to get the US drained from having to maintain invasion
forces in multiple countries, make the US conduct raids and attacks in dozens more, and get the public of the Arab and North African worlds turned more against the US. That is what is happening right now. They've pretty much completed most of their goals against the US- we're in an artificial debt crisis being used as shock therapy to kill social welfare thanks to deficit spending to fund our "War on Terror". They've lost their goal of spreading repressive theocratic governments, but that was almost certainly secondary to striking a blow against the US and either way it's limited our power in the region.
Of course it can't convince the people of the Middle East of its good intentions, not as it is presently populated. It has been too ingrained in the culture. No matter how hard we work to rebuild Iraq we will be looked at as the decadent west. No matter how hard we try to create a Palestinian state we will be looked at as Zionist puppets. Until the textbooks and what they are taught in schools and mosques changes, their attitudes towards us will never change. But quite frankly, the leadership over there, both religious and political, wants it that way so I wouldn't hold my breath.
You actually think that being the "decadent west" is why public opinion of the US is so low in the Middle East. You actually think that the US is trying to create a Palestinian state. You actually think that the political leadership, which is largely in bed with the US, and before the Arab spring only Iran wasn't, wants their people to dislike the US. You think that nothing the US has done could have influenced people to think negatively of us. You are contemptibly ignorant. You have swallowed "They hate us for ARE FREEDOMS" for Christ's sake!

Shut up and learn something- people in the Middle East dislike the US because we give them a lot of valid reasons to dislike us. We are complicit in the oppression of Palestinians, which is something the political leadership in the Middle East doesn't give a rat's ass about, but the public cares about. We prop up repressive governments and claim that any democratic movements are Islamist in origin and would lead to theocracy. We drop bombs on innocents, and hide behind our shield of "collateral damage". We claim to be the bearers of freedom, but we hold people without trial and torture them. We had a major debate over whether torture was wrong. Our media stereotypes Muslims, Arabs, and North Africans, generally in very negative ways. We have popular pundits who insist that Islam is inherently violent and evil. The specter of our President being a Muslim is considered a hugely negative thing by a swathe of Americans. And yet, and yet, the overall perception is that America is inspirational, but has essentially lost its way. It's not too late, and it's never too late, to turn things around and start living up to the things we claim to hold dear.
Actually it was when evidence came to light about his teachings and support for the Hassan and the underwear bomber, events he freely took credit for mind you, that his name was put up on the list. No magic required.

And who gives a shit if he was a "moderate" in 2001 and 2002? Either his attitudes evolved to be more radical, or he was misidentified. Regardless, its clear he wasn't moderate at the time he was put on "the list".
He freely took credit for communicating with them, and he said that he supported the attacks, but he specifically repudiated ordering them to kill people and he pointed out that the emails he sent to the Fort Hood shooter were never released (and I doubt they ever will be released, to be frank), and he never said anything to contradict that. Even US officials believed that he didn't plan operations until after they ordered his killing.
What's your point? That we could land next to a destroyed vehicle well after the fact?
That US forces could have, you know, captured him without risking assaulting his place of residence by simply waiting until he was moving and dropping a helicopter full of troops right in his path. Unless you think that he was actually guarded by an elite team of killer cyborgs that would have slaughtered any American troops trying to capture him, reciting wildly inappropriate hadiths all the while. Risky, to be sure. But so is pulling over someone speeding or driving erratically, and we don't throw our hands up and equip cop cars with missile launchers to blow those potentially-firearms-carrying bastards up when they go 15 above.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Broken »

So essentially, US citizens can now via a secret, non-judicial process, be put on an assassination list (is the whole list secret, I know some of it at least was public) but that's OK because the one citizen we know was on the list joined the enemy during wartime. Of course, for that to hold water, then all those folks down in Gitmo, Bagram, and our other black sites are really prisoners of war with all the protections and rights connected to that concept not "Unlawful Combatants". Unless we are only at war with certain elements of Al Qaeda and by happy fortune, all the guys we captured alive were from the parts that we are not at war with.

Yes, this cleric was a dick, and I'm not particularly bothered that he's dead. But secret committees drawing up hit lists for people not charged with any crimes (off the top of my head, Anwar al-Awlaki had not been formally charged with anything, much less capital crimes, unless it was by another secret court) but joined groups we are, but we are not, at war with. I'm just not happy with the rule of law being treated as a burden to be disposed of as quickly as possible.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by MarshalPurnell »

Thanas wrote:Indeed it is not. But he got killed for it nonetheless.
You keep repeating that. That does not make it true. He was killed because he joined Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
Proof that he was involved in any kind of operations? That he planned or carried out some of that? Provide it now.
You have already made clear you will ignore or outright dismiss anything put forward by the American government, which is the only possible source of information - well, outside of al-Awlaki's own statements, which I linked to and which you ignore. If al-Awlaki claims that Nidal Hassan was a "student" of his and that he wants more such "students," if Abdulmattalb claimed he was serving at an Al Qaeda training camp, and al-Awlaki again admits that the guy was a "student," and then repeatedly goes on to proclaim himself at war with the United States while sheltering with an armed Al Qaeda militia, if his father's tribe turns hostile to the government and vows to fight any attempt to capture al-Awlaki...

Yeah, there's no fucking public evidence at all that al-Awlaki was anything but a misguided young man spewing bile on youtube, right?
I have no reason to doubt that he was a propagandist (albeit, in the opinion of Yemen experts, a pretty bad plagiarist one). I have seen no evidence that he was involved in any kind of operational planning or execution whatsoever.
Because you're already decided the US Government is lying, and thus don't even bother to look at the connections pointed out in the Nidal Hassan and Umar Abdulmattalb cases. And also apparently refuse to actually look to Yemen, either, since you needed me to "prove" it was in a state of insurgency. And refuse to pay any credibility to al-Awlaki's own public statements or to notice the obvious implication of his actions in going to Yemen and joining Al Qaeda in the first place.
Proof that he was part of command and control?
That he exercised some operational authority is strongly suggested by his ties to Nidal Hassan and Umar Abdulmattalb. The US government has asserted other evidence linking him to the cargo plane plot and other actions, most probably communication intercepts which are not public. He certainly had enough authority to sway his father's tribe into taking part in hostilities against the Yemeni government. The prominence granted to him by Al Qaeda is another such indication, but np, there is no public "smoking gun" that he was a key operational commander.

Which is all 100% irrelevant because he was still a legitimate military target subject to summary destruction.
Bull. By that standard Fox News immediately becomes a legitimate target for the terrorists, as they also spew propaganda.
If Al Qaeda could bomb Fox News I have no doubt they would. That said, do Fox News reporters operate as members of the American armed forces? Do they use their tribal connections to sway large blocks of armed men against Al Qaeda? Has Al Qaeda linked them to the planning of American military operations? Did they owe allegiance to Al Qaeda, forsake that allegiance publicly, declare themselves at war with Al Qaeda, and seek the shelter of the US military in the middle of a warzone?
The US Government also considered Hussein being in possession of WMDs.
Because there were absolutely no grounds for that. I mean, it's not like Hussein had previously been in possession of WMDs. It's not like he had repeatedly played games with UN inspectors and refused to cooperate with the disarmament procedures. It's definitely not like Hussein had been running a bluff on the issue to try to deter Iran. And God knows there were plenty of voices at the time who openly dissented from the view Hussein had the weapons, rather than just pleading for more time for the inspectors.

No, the US just made this shit up from nothing to justify it's imperialist war for oil, just like poor al-Awlaki has been framed for murder because... well, he was Arab and we all know how much the bloodthirsty American government wants to spill the blood of brown people. You're absolutely right to completely disregard everything that comes from an official American source and aside from that, and of course al-Awlaki's own statements and actions, there's no evidence he joined Al Qaeda to wage war on the United States.
Many people in the USA also consider themselves at war with the Government. Do militias now become legitimate military targets?
Are those militias operating in some part of Northern Mexico beyond the control of the Mexican government, with the avowed aim of overthrowing the Mexican government to turn the country into a base for war against the United States, and periodically attempting terrorist actions in America?

This is just slippery slope nonsense. Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is operating overseas as an actual combatant. When the militias stop playing war games and bitching about the government over beer and actually do something, then it might become a reasonable comparison.
Correction. He was placed on a secret list for killing by the state based upon secret evidence, without judicial review and killed without having been given an opportunity to surrender to the authority.
Again, just because you assert something does not make it true. The strike list, as noted over and over again, is not secret. It is a set of priority drone targets associated with the combatant organization Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. It was specifically restricted to a particular set of targeting circumstances to get around the executive ban on assassinations. Those circumstances have been well-publicized and are highly circumscribed, limited to allowing drone-strikes on a particular set of territory for people who are legitimate military targets. To get on it you need to go to Yemen and join Al Qaeda. I have no problem with the military blowing up any more American citizens who do just that, because they have openly proclaimed themselves as military enemies of the United States and taken substantive steps to operate as such.
Well well well. Where the heck is the review and justification then? Because unless you can point to me where such a public review and public justification took place, that is exactly what it is.
I already provided an article dating back to his public placement on the list, including the government's case for it. There was no judicial review because there does not need to be one. Anyone in al-Awlaki's position on the Al Qaeda org chart is a legitimate military target, the President already has authorization to use military force on Al Qaeda, therefore al-Awlaki could be killed as a military enemy of the United States. That he was an American citizen does not matter for the purposes of warfighting.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by TheHammer »

Bakustra wrote:
TheHammer wrote: Realizing that this particular killing was justified = blindily following the US government? No my friend, it is you how are blindly clinging to an ideal. I'm satisfied with how Awlaki was dealt with. That's not a blank check for the government to do whatever it wants, merely that it has my approval for its actions in this regard. I'll judge the next case on its own merits.

A dangerous enemy is now dead. You seemingly would rather have him alive recruiting more suicide bombers and soldiers for Al Qaeda. Who knows? Give him a few more weeks, maybe one of his disciples has an underwear bomb that actually works and takes out a bus. Or just goes low-tech and opens fire in a marketplace killing truly innocent people. But you could still wrap yourself in your idealism and sleep well at night right?
Who knows? Give Pat Robertson a few more weeks, maybe somebody tosses a bomb in an abortion clinic and kills a bunch of innocent people. Who knows? Give sovereign citizens a few more weeks, maybe more people resist violently to any attempts to bring them under US law. Who knows? Give James Dobson another few weeks, maybe somebody throws a bomb in a gay bar or murders a couple people he thinks are gay. Who knows? Give the KKK another few weeks, maybe they murder some innocent ethnic minorities. Who knows? Give Erik Prince another couple of weeks, maybe Xe rapes a couple more people, kills a bunch more. Who knows? Give the CIA a few more weeks, maybe they'll convince Obama to kill an innocent on suspicion of involvement with terrorism. Should all of these people be killed without a trial? After all, there is a very real chance that most of these people will continue to facilitate horrible crimes. Should they then be killed and due process of law be presumed to have been fulfilled?
Half the people you noted didn't cross the lines that Alwaki crossed. The other half are able to be captured and put on trial. The fact is, you don't have a comparable example because this is a very unique circumstance. If, hypothetically speaking, the leadership of the KKK were operating from a safe haven in South Africa while encouraging and directing attacks against Americans, and the South African government was unable to stop them, then yes they should be killed and due process of law fulfilled.
But what you actually said was that you trusted, that since the President believed he could do this, that it was okay. You know what Nixon believed? "If the President does it, it's not illegal." Are you willing to gamble the foundation of this country's law on whether Obama believes the same? Well, of course you are, because you believe that it's literally impossible for this country to survive unless we can kill people without a trial if they're Really Bad People.
I'm well aware of Nixon's beliefs. However Nixon faced impeachment and was forced to resign because he couldn't justify his actions to the American People. And that's entirely the point I'm getting at. In this case, myself and I think you'll find the majority of Americans feel he was justified in his actions given the nature of this situation.

And quite frankly, this goes beyond "killing bad people without a trial". If awlaki was able to be captured alive and brought to trial he should have been. Although quite frankly, we'd have had to wait 10 years for him to get out of his Yemeni prison before doing so. But in all likliehood that simply wasn't going to happen.

It wasn't a choice between "trial or no-trial". It was a choice between letting a dangerous man continue to operate freely, or ending the threat once and for all. Alwaki had devoted his life's efforts to destroying America and yet we are having a debate that he should be protected because he was technically an American. An idealist might say "Well of course he should be protected!". But a realist sees how fucking stupid that notion is.
I think where we differ is that I feel due process of law has been completed. I've openly admitted its not as clean as I may have preferred. However, in lieu of there being more specific laws to handle situations like Awlaki, I feel that what was done was neccessary and for the greater good.
So why is US law unable to handle situations like Awlaki? You've never satisfactorily explained why it cannot do so, apart from the fact that the FBI and JTTF were unable to find enough evidence to indict and charge him, instead attempting to use unrelated charges to try and hold him so they could rifle through his belongings for evidence.
US law is unable to handle the situation because no such laws have been drafted to cover this situation. US law, quite understandably, is crafted around the notion that the bad guys are caught domestically. The situation with Awlaki being overseas and a member of a terrorist organization is a loophole that needs closed. However, in the interim I don't believe you can simply let Awlaki continue with his efforts to bring down the very system you are trying to protect him with.
Oh ok, so instead of defending himself by saying what the U.S. government was saying wasn't true, he decided the best course of action was to behave exactly like a terrorist member of Al Qaeda would. Yeah that makes sense, if he was in fact a member of Al Qaeda. You also forgot to say that the UN security council is Obama's puppet and that any declarations it makes shouldn't be trusted either. And Quite frankly, the Yemeni government's record on human rights is irrelevent. I'm no more calling them a "pillar of free nations" anymore than you are calling Alwaki a "pillar of the community". The point was that this wasn't merely a "declaration by the President" with no cooberating evidence.
The UNSC added him to the resolution after the US declared that he was a member of al-Qaeda, which again was solely on the grounds that the government of Yemen, notoriously oppressive, declared him to be so, arrested him, and quite possibly radicalized him by detaining him with possible pressure from the US. But you think that the US government would simply have given up and stopped trying to kill him if he denied being a member of al-Qaeda. Laughable. I am reminded of Father Charles Coughlin back in the 1930s. Should the US government have just shot him? After all, I'm guessing that a lot of anti-Semitic, nativist, and pro-Fascist criminals were inspired by Coughlin's radio program.
There you go! The UNSC is essentially at America's beck and call. Thats what I expected to hear the first time around. Would the US have stopped trying to kill him if he denied being a member of Al Qaeda or a sponsor of terrorism? I guess we'll never know, but it certainly would have helped his case far more than boasting about being the "teacher" of Hasan and the underwear bomber. It would certainly have helped his case if he wasn't writing articles for Al Qaeda's "inspire" magazine calling for Jihad against America.

Your attempt to find a similar situation fails again since Father Coughlin wasn't located on a foreign shore. Further, he didn't cross the lines awlaki crossed of specifically planning and encouraging terrorist attacks. There are plenty of "anti-American" clerics foreign and domestic out there that aren't on the list. But when you are encouraging jihad, planning jihad attacks, and recruiting others to the cause then that is a step over the line.

:roll:

Al Qaeda may have gotten what it thought it wanted. But believe me, with Bin Laden dead and numerous other high levels dead with him lately I guarantee they are re-thinking that strategy. Sure there have been numerous "hearts and minds" fuckups. But targeted assassinations keep civilian casualties down and make full on invasions of other countries unneccessary. We found Bin Laden in Pakistan but we didn't invade the country to get him. Nor did we invide Yemen to get Awlaki. For all this fear about "making martyrs" I really don't buy it. Clearly, the terrorist leaders have been in no hurry to make martyrs of themselves. If doing such a thing really helped their cause more than keeping them alive, why aren't they lining up to be the next suicide bomber? Because its all a load of bullshit.
If you're going to take something as stupid as "War on Terror" seriously, then I'm afraid I have to mock you until you stop. But you think that apparently Eisenhower should have stormed the beaches in Normandy personally. You see, the leadership of al-Qaeda are the generals and strategizers of the organization. They don't risk their lives normally for the same reason generals in regular armies don't fight on the frontlines in the course of normal combat.
You are well aware that the WoT is the commonly associated with the fight against Al Qaeda and its copy cats targeting America. Your mocking is irrelevent and distracts from the actual topic at hand.

And no, I don't think Eisnehower should have stormed the beaches. The point I was making was the notion that by killing men like Bin Laden and Awlaki that all we are doing is "making them martyrs" is ridiculous. As if should we strike them down they will become more powerful than we can possibly imagine! If anything you just proved my point that striking at the leadership via targeted assassinations makes far more sense then killing scores of their foot soldiers in battlefield skirmishes.
But it's not "making martyrs" alone. Doing things like violating Pakistani sovereignty and accusing them of supporting enemies of the USA, or making use of drone aircraft with the permission of a hated Yemeni government, or declaring a general "War on Terror" rather than a specific effort to capture the people responsible for the September 11th attacks, or propping up repressive governments in the Middle East and North Africa- all these things contribute to that.
Pakistan DOES support enemies of the USA. I'd think that much should be clear by now. If they were cooperating with us then we wouldn't have had to "violate their sovreignty". Further, your idea of the "war on terror" is a short sighted one. Getting the people responsible for 9/11 was only one aspect. The larget goal was to also destroy any other groups who would attempt anything similar. To set an example that unlike other terrorist attacks in the past where the U.S. pulled back, we would not be pulling back from this fight.
Meanwhile, why would they be "rethinking their strategy" now? Their goal was to get the US drained from having to maintain invasion forces in multiple countries, make the US conduct raids and attacks in dozens more, and get the public of the Arab and North African worlds turned more against the US. That is what is happening right now.
We are picking off their leadership like flys. Their sources of income are drying up. Admittedly, our image in the mideast still needs to be rehabed following Bush's mishandling of Iraq. But Obama's support for uprisings in libya and egypt no doubt won us a few points in our favor.

In the mean time we keep striking at the "old guard" in these terrorist groups, and eventually you will have them questioning if its worth it. In fact, there were reports that they were already questioning if it was worth it even prior to Bin Laden's death.
They've pretty much completed most of their goals against the US- we're in an artificial debt crisis being used as shock therapy to kill social welfare thanks to deficit spending to fund our "War on Terror". They've lost their goal of spreading repressive theocratic governments, but that was almost certainly secondary to striking a blow against the US and either way it's limited our power in the region.
While Afghanistan is part of the war on terror, invading Iraq was not, even if the Bush adminstration wants to paint it as such. As for the debt crisis, well that has more to do with a global recession unrelated to the WoT and the general refusal of Republicans to increase taxes of any kind on the rich - even if the rates going no higher than the "boom years" of the late 90s.
Of course it can't convince the people of the Middle East of its good intentions, not as it is presently populated. It has been too ingrained in the culture. No matter how hard we work to rebuild Iraq we will be looked at as the decadent west. No matter how hard we try to create a Palestinian state we will be looked at as Zionist puppets. Until the textbooks and what they are taught in schools and mosques changes, their attitudes towards us will never change. But quite frankly, the leadership over there, both religious and political, wants it that way so I wouldn't hold my breath.
You actually think that being the "decadent west" is why public opinion of the US is so low in the Middle East. You actually think that the US is trying to create a Palestinian state. You actually think that the political leadership, which is largely in bed with the US, and before the Arab spring only Iran wasn't, wants their people to dislike the US. You think that nothing the US has done could have influenced people to think negatively of us. You are contemptibly ignorant. You have swallowed "They hate us for ARE FREEDOMS" for Christ's sake!
Apparently you lack reading comprehension and critical thinking skills. The point I was trying to make was that even under the best circumstances there is a cultural and religious gap to overcome. Further, you should be well aware that while some of the leadership was "in bed with the US" they almost ALL pay lip service to anti-americanism. The few exceptions being Jordan, Kuwait, and to an extent Saudi Arabia. And clearly the people of Iran are incredibly happy with their anti-american government which is why they didn't have their own Arab Spring movement :roll:
Shut up and learn something- people in the Middle East dislike the US because we give them a lot of valid reasons to dislike us. We are complicit in the oppression of Palestinians, which is something the political leadership in the Middle East doesn't give a rat's ass about, but the public cares about. We prop up repressive governments and claim that any democratic movements are Islamist in origin and would lead to theocracy. We drop bombs on innocents, and hide behind our shield of "collateral damage". We claim to be the bearers of freedom, but we hold people without trial and torture them. We had a major debate over whether torture was wrong. Our media stereotypes Muslims, Arabs, and North Africans, generally in very negative ways. We have popular pundits who insist that Islam is inherently violent and evil. The specter of our President being a Muslim is considered a hugely negative thing by a swathe of Americans. And yet, and yet, the overall perception is that America is inspirational, but has essentially lost its way. It's not too late, and it's never too late, to turn things around and start living up to the things we claim to hold dear.
Fuck off. I'm neiter ignorant of how the situation got to how it is, nor do I "not understand" why many Arabs feel the way they do. I certainly don't need a lecture on it from you. This discussion isn't about every misdeed America has ever done, its about targeted assassination of Al Qaeda leadership. So set your strawman on fire please.
Actually it was when evidence came to light about his teachings and support for the Hassan and the underwear bomber, events he freely took credit for mind you, that his name was put up on the list. No magic required.

And who gives a shit if he was a "moderate" in 2001 and 2002? Either his attitudes evolved to be more radical, or he was misidentified. Regardless, its clear he wasn't moderate at the time he was put on "the list".
He freely took credit for communicating with them, and he said that he supported the attacks, but he specifically repudiated ordering them to kill people and he pointed out that the emails he sent to the Fort Hood shooter were never released (and I doubt they ever will be released, to be frank), and he never said anything to contradict that. Even US officials believed that he didn't plan operations until after they ordered his killing.
Whatever. Its clear to me no matter what evidence is presented you'll hand wave it away as being insufficient to convince you. You will note that Samir Khan, who happened be with him was not said to have had an operational role in Al Qaeda. If that were merely a label we were slapping on them, why didn't he get tagged? And so what if he didn't plan every little detail of the missions he "inspired"? Maybe he's not into micro managing his terrorist recruits.
What's your point? That we could land next to a destroyed vehicle well after the fact?
That US forces could have, you know, captured him without risking assaulting his place of residence by simply waiting until he was moving and dropping a helicopter full of troops right in his path. Unless you think that he was actually guarded by an elite team of killer cyborgs that would have slaughtered any American troops trying to capture him, reciting wildly inappropriate hadiths all the while. Risky, to be sure. But so is pulling over someone speeding or driving erratically, and we don't throw our hands up and equip cop cars with missile launchers to blow those potentially-firearms-carrying bastards up when they go 15 above.
You clearly have no fucking idea on the situation. He was in a car, meaning he was mobile. We don't have helicopters up in the air 24/7 staffed with commandos able to strike on a moments notice. However we do have predator drones for that purpose. Awlaki was on the targeted killing list for several months. Both our government and the Yemeni government were looking for him the entire time. Yet it was only recently that we actually succeeded in getting him. That alone should indicate to you the incredible difficulty of finding him. All he would have had to do in the meantime would have been to drive in to a populated area and POOF he'd be gone. I still stand by the assertion that if we could have captured him we would have done so for the intelligence boon alone.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Bakustra »

Let's sum this up; you believe that it was physically impossible to capture al-Awlaki, that the US was actively trying to capture him while announcing that he was to be killed, and that the whole situation falls outside of US law. No it does not. Manuel Noriega alone disproves that.

You also ignore that he only started writing for al-Qaeda magazines after he was put on the kill list in February 2010, and that the UNSC declaration came after this. You ignore that the US may well have ordered his arrest by the Yemen government in 2007, and everything people can reasonably try to pin on him as inspiring came after that, and that his opposition to the Yemeni government came after that. You would prefer to believe that he just hates America because he is a Bad Guy Who We Needed To Kill Before The Ticking Time Bomb Went Off.

You sincerely believe that the reason that the US has such a bad reputation in the Middle East is because of "cultural gaps", that people hate us for ARE FREEDOMS, that the majority of governments that we prop up deliberately spread anti-American propaganda, and that it is impossible for the US to have a good reputation in the Middle East unless there is a major cultural shift. You believe that the US is working for Palestinian statehood.

You believe that the US is at war with every terrorist group in existence. You believe that a war against the concept of terrorism is winnable. You believe that the War in Iraq was not related to the "War on Terror" and had no effects on that war because you say so. You believe that the USA's actions have nothing to do with why public opinion of us in the Middle East is so low, and are thus irrelevant to discussing the effectiveness of anti-terrorist groups.

You misinterpreted what I was saying to reduce it to "martyrs martyrs martyrs". I can only conclude from your other opinions that you're dumb enough to think that's what I was saying. You think that al-Qaeda is losing this war despite a great many of their objectives being completed, solely because you define winning or losing by who's dead at the end. You ignore the evidence that suggests that he only started actively working with al-Qaeda after the US marked him for death.

You are a fucking idiot. Now, prove that it was impossible, literally impossible to capture Anwar al-Awlaki. That is what you are claiming, now defend it! Don't assert it as fact by claiming that US law doesn't have any precedent for capturing indicted criminals in foreign countries!
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by TheHammer »

Bakustra wrote:Let's sum this up; you believe that it was physically impossible to capture al-Awlaki, that the US was actively trying to capture him while announcing that he was to be killed, and that the whole situation falls outside of US law. No it does not. Manuel Noriega alone disproves that.
Assertion 1 - I never said it was "physically impossible". I said it wasn't feasible given the circumstances to capture al-Awlaki. I am contending If awlaki had surrendered, or been injurered but not killed, he would have been captured because it would have benefited us more to interrogate him than to simply scoop his brains off the pavement.

Assertions 2 and 3 - Yes it does and No it doesn't. I love assertive statements.
You also ignore that he only started writing for al-Qaeda magazines after he was put on the kill list in February 2010, and that the UNSC declaration came after this. You ignore that the US may well have ordered his arrest by the Yemen government in 2007, and everything people can reasonably try to pin on him as inspiring came after that, and that his opposition to the Yemeni government came after that. You would prefer to believe that he just hates America because he is a Bad Guy Who We Needed To Kill Before The Ticking Time Bomb Went Off.
Ah the stereotypical "everyone is the U.S. puppet" argument. Combined with Awlaki was just a skapegoat. His reasoning for hating America is irrelevent at this point. The fact remains that he did hate America, and he was a member of Al Qaeda even if you want to dispute his "importance".
You sincerely believe that the reason that the US has such a bad reputation in the Middle East is because of "cultural gaps", that people hate us for ARE FREEDOMS, that the majority of governments that we prop up deliberately spread anti-American propaganda, and that it is impossible for the US to have a good reputation in the Middle East unless there is a major cultural shift. You believe that the US is working for Palestinian statehood.
First of all, I presented hypothetical scenarios to illustrate that even under the best of circumstances we would still be painted as a "great Satan" by religious and political leaders because it helps their interests to have a percieved external threat. In order for us to ever truly win "hearts and minds" its going to take a shift from within their own culture rather than anything we do from the outside.

Second of all, This is a red herring to the discussion at hand.
You believe that the US is at war with every terrorist group in existence. You believe that a war against the concept of terrorism is winnable. You believe that the War in Iraq was not related to the "War on Terror" and had no effects on that war because you say so. You believe that the USA's actions have nothing to do with why public opinion of us in the Middle East is so low, and are thus irrelevant to discussing the effectiveness of anti-terrorist groups.
Your First assertion: False - the US is at war with terrorist groups that are hostile towards America. There are plenty of others out there that are not. While we may take steps to curb the activities of those groups, we are not "at war" in the same sense that we are at war with Al Qaeda. "War on Terror" is not the litteral war on a concept. Its a war against terrorist groups hostile to the United States.

Your Second assertion: True on one count, False on the second - True Iraq wasn't about the war on terror, even if that was what was sold to the public, and really never should have been fought in the first place. False because clearly It has had a negative effect to that effort.

Your third assertion: False - As I said, I'm well aware of why the U.S. is disliked in the mideast. Some of it is our own screw ups, some of it is the political and religious cultural. Again, this is a red herring to the discussion at hand.
You misinterpreted what I was saying to reduce it to "martyrs martyrs martyrs". I can only conclude from your other opinions that you're dumb enough to think that's what I was saying. You think that al-Qaeda is losing this war despite a great many of their objectives being completed, solely because you define winning or losing by who's dead at the end. You ignore the evidence that suggests that he only started actively working with al-Qaeda after the US marked him for death.
When I was talking about the fear of making martyrs, I wasn't speaking about you specifically. I was speaking to the "martyrs" argument that many others have made and why I felt it was stupid. Sorry maybe I diverged a bit, but it was a point I wanted to illuminate. Given all the divergence you yourself have gone on I hope you'll forgive me :roll:.

The evidence is that Al Qaeda is reeling at this point. So yes, I'd say they are losing. Their leadership is crumbling. And yes, who is alive and who is dead at the end is usually a good indicator of who is winning.
You are a fucking idiot. Now, prove that it was impossible, literally impossible to capture Anwar al-Awlaki. That is what you are claiming, now defend it! Don't assert it as fact by claiming that US law doesn't have any precedent for capturing indicted criminals in foreign countries!
You do understand the difference between saying something isn't feasible and saying something is impossible don't you? Despite your best efforts to strawman my argument into it being just that (because that's the only way you could win) I'm not going to let you do it.

My argument is that it would be difficult in the extreme to capture Awlaki given his role in Al Qaeda and the protection he enjoyed from the Awlaki tribe. That waiting for an opportunity to attempt capture was an unneccessary risk that would have allowed him significant additional time to recruit more terrorists and plot more attacks.

So in short, your summary is shit.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by Bakustra »

Your contention is now that it would be too impractical to capture Anwar al-Awlaki, that the US was trying to capture him even though we announced we were going to kill him, and that his case falls outside of US law.

You are dead wrong on the last. Manuel Noriega was a foreign head of state who was arrested and tried under US law, then was tried again under French law, and is currently due to be tried under Panamanian law in 2017 when he gets out of prison. There is a major precedent for arresting people who commit crimes in the US while they are outside the reach of extradition treaties. The second is something that we may never know, but I find it highly unlikely that they were trying to capture after publicly announcing his killing. You realize that that would hurt Obama's efforts to cultivate himself as a tough president?

The first is problematic, because you're suggesting that though the US was able to track his movements enough to blow up his car, they could not do so to the extent where they could instead land a helicopter in front of his car and arrest him, and that they knew this for sure a full year and a half in advance, when they decided not to try and indict him.

You also presented a ticking time-bomb scenario, where the US had to kill him as soon as possible to prevent him from possibly launching an attack. So why didn't they flood the country with teams to storm every potential house he could be in, taking every single step they could to kill the man as quickly as possible? Because nobody thinks like that in real life.
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Re: Radical American Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed

Post by TheHammer »

Bakustra wrote:Your contention is now that it would be too impractical to capture Anwar al-Awlaki, that the US was trying to capture him even though we announced we were going to kill him, and that his case falls outside of US law.

You are dead wrong on the last. Manuel Noriega was a foreign head of state who was arrested and tried under US law, then was tried again under French law, and is currently due to be tried under Panamanian law in 2017 when he gets out of prison. There is a major precedent for arresting people who commit crimes in the US while they are outside the reach of extradition treaties. The second is something that we may never know, but I find it highly unlikely that they were trying to capture after publicly announcing his killing. You realize that that would hurt Obama's efforts to cultivate himself as a tough president?
Ah yes the capture of Noreiga is your "example"? You do realize that during that invasion 24 soldiers and 3 civilians on the US side were killed. Another 200 or so dead on the Panamanian side. Another 20,000-30,000 rendered homeless. What a shining example of what we should have done! Nevermind the fact that comparing the Noreiega situation with Awlaki's is still quite a stretch.
The first is problematic, because you're suggesting that though the US was able to track his movements enough to blow up his car, they could not do so to the extent where they could instead land a helicopter in front of his car and arrest him, and that they knew this for sure a full year and a half in advance, when they decided not to try and indict him.
Yep they could have just flown a helicopter over and arrested him. It was just that simple. I'm sure its unlikely anyone in the convoy would be armed with an RPG. And of course it comes as a given that they would have had time to get a commando force together and raid his convoy rather than a small window of opportunity to take him out.
You also presented a ticking time-bomb scenario, where the US had to kill him as soon as possible to prevent him from possibly launching an attack. So why didn't they flood the country with teams to storm every potential house he could be in, taking every single step they could to kill the man as quickly as possible? Because nobody thinks like that in real life.
Weren't you just bitch about the US taking over the top reactions to men like Awlaki? His function was as a recruiter and planner. The longer he was alive, it stands to reason the more he would have recruited to his cause. And the more attacks he would have been involved in planning. That's not really a "ticking time bomb" as much as it is a wild fire that continues to burn as long as there is fuel... Unless someone steps in to put it out.

And again, this is want Awlaki wanted. This guy called for the deaths of Americans everywhere, and we got two of them in this incident.
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