The
Killer-in-ChiefBy Tom Engelhardt
April 30, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
“Be assured
of one thing: whichever candidate you choose at the
polls in November, you aren’t just electing a president
of the United States; you are also electing an
assassin-in-chief.” So I
wrote back in June
2012, with a presidential election approaching.
I was
referring then to the war on terror’s CIA and military
drone assassination programs, which first revved up in
parts of the Greater Middle East in the years of George
W. Bush’s presidency and only spread thereafter. In the
process, such “targeted killings” became, as I wrote at
the time, “thoroughly institutionalized, normalized, and
bureaucratized around the figure of the president.” In
Barack Obama’s years in the Oval Office, they were
ramped up further as he joined White House “Terror
Tuesday” meetings to
choose individual targets for those attacks. They often
enough turned out to
involve “collateral
damage”; that is, the deaths of innocent civilians,
including children. In
other words, “commander-in-chief” had, by then, gained a
deadly new meaning, as the president personally took on
the role of a global assassin.
I had
little doubt eight years ago that this wouldn't end soon
-- and on that I wasn’t wrong. Admittedly, our present
commander-in-chief probably doesn’t have the time (given
how much of his day he's spent
watching Fox News,
tweeting his
millions of followers,
and,
until recently,
holding two hour
press-briefings-cum-election-rallies on the coronavirus
pandemic) or the attention span for “Terror Tuesday”
meetings. Still, in his own memorable fashion, he’s
managed to make himself America’s assassin-in-chief par
excellence.
After
all, not only have those drone programs continued to
target people in distant lands (including
innocent civilians),
but they have yet again been
ramped up in the Trump
years. Meanwhile, still in our pre-Covid-19 American
world, President Trump embraced the role of
assassin-in-chief in a newly public, deeply enthusiastic
way. Previously, such drones had killed non-state
actors, but he
openly ordered the
drone assassination of Major General Qassim Suleimani,
the top military figure and number-two man in Iran, as
he left Baghdad International Airport for a meeting with
the prime minister of Iraq.
Of
course, for American presidents such a role was not
unknown even before the development of
Hellfire-missile-armed drones. Think of John F. Kennedy
and the CIA’s (failed) attempts on the life of Cuban
leader
Fidel Castro or the
successful killings of Congolese leader
Patrice Lumumba, South
Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem, and Dominican Republic
head
Rafael Trujillo. Or,
for a change of pace, consider the Vietnam War-era CIA
assassination campaign known as the
Phoenix Program in
which tens of thousands of supposed “Vietcong”
supporters (often enough, civilians swept up in the
murderous chaos of the moment) were murdered in that
country, a program that was no secret to President
Lyndon Johnson.
And it’s
true as well that, in this century, our
commanders-in-chief have overseen endless conflicts in
distant lands from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria to
Yemen, Somalia, Niger, and beyond, none of them
congressionally declared wars. As a result, they had the
ultimate responsibility for the deaths of, at a minimum,
tens of thousands of
civilians, as well as for the uprooting of millions of
their compatriots from settled lives and their flight,
as desperate refugees, across significant parts of the
planet. It’s a grim record of death and destruction.
Until recently, however, it remained a matter of distant
deaths, not much noted here.