Samuel wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:If the decision to kill him had been carried out in some aboveboard fashion- if we had a legal system that permitted a court to try him in absentia for treason, convict him, and sentence him with death- I'd be satisfied.
Anwar al-Awlaki was not killed for treason.
No, he wasn't. I know that. That's part of my point.
He was killed because he was a dangerous radical, or an inciter of terror, or an enemy combatant, or a lawful military target, or whatever the phrase
du jour is for people the state thinks would be better off dead because they're associated with a group the state considers dangerous. There are a lot of phrases like that, and they seem to keep cycling round and round- our enemies are military targets, except when that would imply that we have to treat them as POWs in an armed conflict, at which point they become something else.
That's another thing I don't like- the way the War on Terror has acted to abolish legalities and replace them with a maze of interlocking terms that add up to "we do what we like."
But yes, I understand that al-Awlaki was not killed because he had committed a crime. He was killed because someone in the US government put him on an enemies list. We can make a pretty good guess as to
why he wound up on an enemies list. Certainly there was no lack of effort on his part to wind up on one. He worked pretty hard to define himself as an enemy.
I am still not satisfied with any answer I can recall to the basic question:
Who assures us that these enemies lists are being drawn up responsibly? Who holds the people who make the lists accountable for what amounts to signing these people's death warrants? Why are they so allergic to accountability or review?
And where are people getting the serene confidence that this will not wend its way back into our domestic politics, as has happened in so many other countries suffering from civil unrest?