This is not mere speculation; it has already happened.
Unlike Awlaki, Samir Khan could not be accused of committing
or plotting murder. He certainly published incendiary,
irrational, and evil propaganda that motivated violent
fanatics ‒ but the spreading of fanatical hatred, religious
intolerance, and authoritarian political ideas is not
equivalent to actually inflicting physical harm. Yet the CIA
had no qualms about also eliminating Khan simply because he
happened to be at Awlaki's side. On the Obama
administration's side, no more can be said in defense of
this action beyond the flimsy assertion that Khan was simply
"collateral damage" in a wartime assault.
How many other American citizens will similarly become "collateral
damage" in the future ‒ again, having done much less than
Khan to propagandize for a violent and fanatical movement? What if an American citizen who is a terror suspect happens
to be untraceable, except when he is walking through a busy
marketplace filled with several other American tourists and
tens of local civilians? If this terror suspect is deemed
sufficiently dangerous by the Obama administration or its
successors, what would be the limit on the administration's
ability to send an explosive device into the middle of the
market crowd?
"Sure, some innocent people will die," this future
administration might argue, "but that is an unfortunate
reality of war; by taking out this known terrorist (though,
of course, we will not tell you how we know), we have
prevented attacks that would have cost hundreds or thousands
of lives in the future." Once the sanctity of the right of
due process is breached, we are reduced to speculation about
the relative weight of lives saved versus lives lost due to
a given decision. And, in that world, anyone could be
sacrificed by the powerful if the speculative benefits of
the sacrifice are deemed sufficiently high.
Part of the brilliance of the United States Constitution is
its emphasis on due process of law as an absolute barrier to
outright deprivation of a person's life, liberty, or
property. The safeguards of due process are not mere
procedural encumbrances to abuses of government power or
means to attain reasonable certainty of a suspect's guilt;
they are the guardians of that very security that the Obama
administration purports to pursue but in reality undermines.
The absolutism of due process would have guaranteed that you
will not be next. That guarantee is now gone.
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