By Vicki Divoll
President Obama has refused to tell Congress or the American people why
he believes the Constitution gives, or fails to deny, him the authority
to secretly target and kill American citizens who he suspects are
involved in terrorist activities overseas. So far he has killed three
that we know of.
Presidents had never before, to our knowledge, targeted specific
Americans for military strikes. There are no court decisions that tell
us if he is acting lawfully. Mr. Obama tells us not to worry, though,
because his lawyers say it is fine, because experts guide the decisions
and because his advisers have set up a careful process to help him
decide whom he should kill.
He must think we should be relieved.
The three Americans known to have been killed, in two drone strikes in Yemen in the fall of 2011, are Anwar al-Awlaki, a radical Muslim cleric who was born in New Mexico; Samir Khan,
a naturalized American citizen who had lived in New York and North
Carolina, and was killed alongside Mr. Awlaki; and, in a strike two
weeks later, Mr. Awlaki’s 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, who
was born in Colorado.
Most of us think these people were probably terrorists anyway. So the
president’s reassurances have been enough to keep criticism at an
acceptable level for the White House. Democrats in Congress and in the
press have only gingerly questioned the claims by a Democratic president
that he is right about the law and careful when he orders drone attacks
on our citizens. And Republicans, who favor aggressive national
security powers for the executive branch, look forward to the day when
one of their own can wield them again.
But a few of our representatives have spoken up — sort of. Several
months ago, Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont and chairman
of the Judiciary Committee, began limply requesting the Department of
Justice memorandums that justify the targeted killing program. At a
committee hearing, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., reminded of the
request, demurred and shared a rueful chuckle with the senator. Mr.
Leahy did not want to be rude, it seems — though some of us remember him
being harder on former President George W. Bush’s attorney general,
Alberto R. Gonzales, in 2005.
So, even though Congress has the absolute power under the Constitution
to receive these documents, the Democratic-controlled Senate has not
fought this president to get them. If the senators did, and the
president held fast to his refusal, they could go to court and demand
them, and I believe they would win. Perhaps even better, they could skip
getting the legal memos and go right to the meat of the matter — using
oversight and perhaps legislating to control the president’s killing
powers. That isn’t happening either.
Thank goodness we have another branch of government to step into the
fray. It is the job of the federal courts to interpret the Constitution
and laws, and thus to define the boundaries of the powers of the
branches of government, including their own.
In reining in the branches, the courts have been toughest on themselves,
however. A long line of Supreme Court cases require that judges wait
for cases to come to them. They can take cases only from plaintiffs who
have a personal stake in the outcome; they cannot decide political
questions; they cannot rule on an issue not squarely before them.
Because of these and other limitations, no case has made it far enough
in federal court for a judge to rule on the merits of the basic
constitutional questions at stake here. A pending case filed in July by
the families of the three dead Americans does raise Fourth and Fifth
Amendment challenges to the president’s killings of their relatives. We
will see if the judge agrees to consider the constitutional questions or
dismisses the case, citing limitations on his own power.
In another case, decided two weeks ago, a federal judge in Manhattan,
Colleen McMahon, ruled, grudgingly, that the American Civil Liberties
Union and two New York Times reporters could not get access, under the
Freedom of Information Act, to classified legal memorandums that were
relied on to justify the targeted killing program. In her opinion, she
expressed serious reservations about the president’s interpretation of
the constitutional questions. But the merits of the program were not
before her, just access to the Justice Department memos, so her opinion
was, in effect, nothing but an interesting read.
So at the moment, the legislature and the courts are flummoxed by, or
don’t care about, how or whether to take on this aggressive program. But
Mr. Obama, a former constitutional law professor, should know, of all
people, what needs to be done. He was highly critical when Mr. Bush
applied new constitutional theories to justify warrantless wiretapping
and “enhanced interrogation.” In his 2008 campaign, Mr. Obama demanded
transparency, and after taking office, he released legal memos that the
Bush administration had kept secret. Once the self-serving
constitutional analysis that the Bush team had used was revealed, legal
scholars from across the spectrum studied and denounced it.
While Mr. Obama has criticized his predecessor, he has also worried
about his successors. Last fall, when the election’s outcome was still
in doubt, Mr. Obama talked about drone strikes in general and said
Congress and the courts should in some manner “rein in” presidents by
putting a “legal architecture in place.” His comments seemed to reflect
concern that future presidents should perhaps not wield alone such
awesome and unchecked power over life and death — of anyone, not just
Americans. Oddly, under current law, Congress and the courts are
involved when presidents eavesdrop on Americans, detain them or harshly
interrogate them — but not when they kill them.
It is not just the most recent president, this one and the next whom we
need to worry about when it comes to improper exercise of power. It is
every president. Mr. Obama should declassify and release, to Congress,
the press and the public, documents that set forth the detailed
constitutional and statutory analysis he relies on for targeting and
killing American citizens.
Perhaps Mr. Obama still believes that, in a democracy, the people have a
right to know the legal theories upon which the president executes his
great powers. Certainly, we can hope so. After all, his interpretation
might be wrong.
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