By Eric Lewis
October 04, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Does
the US Constitution allow President Donald Trump to
order the assassination of innocent Americans in
total secrecy? Such a question seems absurd;
unfortunately, a US District judge has just answered
in the affirmative.
Bilal Kareem is a US citizen of
Syrian origin, who was living in Brooklyn and
working as a stand-up comedian. Frustrated by the
news coverage of the conflict in
Syria and especially the failure of journalists
to interview and try to understand the experience of
the people actually involved in the conflict, Kareem
moved to Aleppo and established the YouTube channel
On the Ground News TV, which provided content to
news outlets around the world.
Suddenly, drones started firing
missiles at him. In the summer of 2016, he was
nearly killed by Hellfire missiles fired by Predator
drones five times.
Nobody but the US had weaponized
drones in the region at the time. Based on publicly
available information about how the US uses
cellphone data to identify targets, it seemed likely
that the US government had concluded, probably based
upon its algorithms, that because Bilal Kareem was
spending time interviewing rebels, he was a rebel
himself. The result of using software to determine
who to kill resulted in the US targeting one of its
own, who was actually engaging in a deeply important
First Amendment activity.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
In 2017, Reprieve and
my law firm filed a suit on behalf of
Kareem and another Syria-based
journalist in Washington DC, arguing
that they had a due process right not to
be placed on a
Kill List and targeted for execution
without being able to challenge the
basis for that decision.
“He seeks his birthright,” wrote
Judge Rosemary Collyer, a George W Bush appointee,
“…a timely assertion of his due process rights under
the Constitution to be heard before he might be
included on the Kill List and his First Amendment
rights to free speech before he might be targeted
for lethal action due to his profession.”
This was a landmark ruling, and to
most readers it would seem like common sense.
However, the government then sought to dismiss it on
the grounds that the government would have to reveal
“state secrets” in telling Kareem whether or not he
had been targeted and why.
This was a case in which the state
secrets privilege would be tested against a US
citizen’s right not to be killed by his government
without some form of due process, and perhaps an
opportunity to suggest why killing him was a
mistake. The motion was accompanied by affidavits,
largely classified, from the Director of National
Intelligence and the Acting Secretary of Defense.
We argued that the government’s
claim to be able to inflict death by drone strike
made Bilal Kareem akin to a criminal defendant in a
capital case, albeit facing execution without trial.
In cases where the government relies on state
secrets to prosecute a crime, and refuses to
disclose them, the government must dismiss the case.
Here, the government could simply have stated that
whether or not Kareem had ever been on the Kill
List, or could promise to take no efforts to try to
kill him. But the government was unwilling to do
that. It sought to prevent any from any judicial
oversight of its decision.
The court found that the state
secrets privilege was absolute; that the government
had shown there was a national security concern that
protected it from providing any information, even in
a classified setting; and so any legal objection to
Bilal Kareem’s assassination would be summarily
dismissed.
No doubt there are secrets that a
government needs to protect. But as recent events
have shown, the government’s penchant for secrecy is
reflexive and its claims are categorical.
As someone who has had Top Secret
clearances, I have found it remarkable how easy it
is to classify the most banal or embarrassing
material. Edward Snowden faces the rest of his life
in his prison for publishing secrets, most of which
might better be debated in the public domain — after
all, his revelations prompted German Chancellor
Angela Merkel to compare the CIA to the Stasi for
spying on their friends.
In the last week, we have seen
reports of the classification of inculpatory
telephone transcripts under the highest level of
security, not to protect national security but to
prevent a president’s corruption from seeing the
light of day. The judiciary has a critical role to
play in scrutinizing claims of secrecy, especially
when it is invoked to prevent core First Amendment
activity and someone’s life is at stake.
Some of us may be horrified that
the US engages in assassination — execution without
trial — at all. Regardless, surely when someone who
claims to be innocent has compelling reason to think
he is being targeted, the least we can expect in a
democracy is a modicum of due process?
This article was originally published by "The
Independent "-
-
Do you agree or disagree? Post
your comment here
==See Also==
Note To ICH Community
We ask that you assist us in
dissemination of the article published by
ICH to your social media accounts and post
links to the article from other websites.
Thank you for your support.
Peace and joy