Papering Over Extra-Judicial Killings
The Obama administration, like its predecessor, holds that the “exceptional”
U.S. has the right to enter other countries to kill “terrorists,” but it would
never tolerate, say, Cuba targeting CIA-trained terrorists harbored in Miami,
one of many double standards posing as international law, as Coleen Rowley
notes.
By Coleen RowleyMay 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News" - Law professor Harold Koh, a former Yale
Law School Dean and former Legal Adviser to Hillary Clinton’s State Department,
hired by New York University to teach human rights and international law,
recently found
himself in the crosshairs when NYU law students posted a “statement
of no confidence” in him based on the prior actions he undertook to
justify, enable and expand the use of Obama’s “extrajudicial killing program.”
A harsh critic of the Bush Administration, Koh is obviously
well liked among those who consider themselves in the liberal legal
intelligentsia. Unfortunately, instead of defending Koh’s legal rationales for
drone killing on the merits, a number of the pro-Koh law professors, led by
Koh’s cronies at the State Department, pilloried the NYU students. His backers
chose to defend and praise Koh on mostly personal grounds, or for his other
legal contributions, almost entirely avoiding discussion of the issues
surrounding U.S. high-tech targeted killing.
However, at least two respected law professors, Fionnuala
Ní Aoláin (at University of Minnesota Law School) and Philip
Alston (Professor of Law at NYU’s Law School, and former UN Special
Rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, 2004-10) criticized their fellow
academics’ glossing-over approach since “one can reasonably take the position
that the US government and its targeted killing programs breach international
and human rights law standards.”
Both lamented their fellow professors’ avoidance of discussing
the important issues and sending “a real chill to an important open debate.”
In our op-ed (below) published on April 29, 2015 by the Brainerd
Dispatch newspaper (which built upon a related one
we wrote in 2012), Robin Hensel and I decided, by contrast, to focus on
the illegality of the U.S. high-tech “warfare.” Brainerd, Minnesota, is not far
from the Camp Ripley National Guard base that trains military personnel on the
“Shadow” and other smaller drones that started out being used for surveillance
but have now become weaponized.
Naturally our comments attracted some dissent, a substantive
critique coming from Attorney Larry Frost of Paladin Law PLLC, Bloomington,
Minnesota, which in furtherance of a robust debate, I’m reposting directly below
our piece with Mr. Frost’s permission:
Guest Opinion: The illegality of high tech war
By Robin Hensel and Coleen Rowley on April 29, 2015
Why has the United Nations Special Rapporteur called drone
strikes extrajudicial killing?
Why has a Pakistani
judge recently filed criminal charges against a former top CIA lawyer
who oversaw its drone program and a former station chief in Islamabad over a
2009 strike that killed two people? The Islamabad High Court ruled CIA officials
must face charges including murder, conspiracy, waging war against Pakistan and
terrorism.
Why is a case being heard in May against the German government
on behalf of three Yemeni survivors of a U.S. drone strike? The lawsuit argues
it is illegal for the German government to allow the U.S. air base at Ramstein
to be used for drone murders abroad, especially after the passage of a
resolution in the European Parliament in February 2014 urging European nations
to “oppose and ban the practice of extrajudicial targeted killings” and to
“ensure that Member States, in conformity with their legal obligations, do not
perpetrate unlawful targeted killings or facilitate such killings by other
states.”
Why have Sicilians been protesting construction – which in
2013 led to the President of the Region of Sicily temporarily revoking
construction authorization – of a US Navy base in their desert which would house
Lockheed Martin’s new satellite communications system? Part of the effort to
automate war, to entrust the choice of targets to machines, a principal function
of the system would be to remotely pilot drones all over the world, ultimately
reaching the North Pole.
Closer to home, why have protests arisen of Camp Ripley’s
drone training? When Col. St. Sauver, the commander at Camp Ripley, weighed in
on the beginning controversy in September 2012, he lauded unmanned aircraft
systems (UAS) as being used “to increase efficiency, save money, enhance safety
and even save lives.” He hit all the Pentagon talking points. The smaller
“Shadow” drones at Camp Ripley were initially used to conduct surveillance and
identify people (targets) for the lethal punch of the larger “Reaper” and
“Predators.” The smaller drones then served merely as an accomplice in the
illegal drone assassination program, also termed President Obama’s “Disposition
Matrix” kill list.
The goal of the U.S. State Department was, however, to arm the
Shadows with guided bombs weighing under 25 pounds. Cleared for treaty
compliance in 2011, Raytheon successfully tested a new 5 pound warhead developed
for the Shadow that same year and in 2012, tested a 13 pound warhead. The Marine
Corps thereafter sent armed Shadows to Afghanistan as a combat demonstration
program.
As a result of this high tech trend, some military officials
have become even more effusive in their praise of “federated airpower as small
UAVs (like the Shadow) can be bought and operated in numbers that provide far
wider battlefield coverage. … When smart networks communicate, almost brain-like
systems will emerge.”
Down on earth, however, the short answer to all the questions
posed above is that the law may be catching up with the stars in militarists’
eyes. While commentators generally agree UAS technology is not illegal per se
(which people often confuse the drone debate as being), when and how it’s being
used to extra-judicially kill in our self-declared “global war” is another
story.
The following constitutes a consensus of legal opinion:
Outside a war zone, a State can legally kill only where (1)
necessary to save a life, and no other option is available, or alternatively (2)
it’s the result of fair judicial process [e.g., death penalty after decent
adjudication].
So drones – at least those used for targeting killing – are
basically not legal unless the looser “law of armed conflicts” (aka
international humanitarian law, IHL) applies. IHL only governs in unique,
geographically constrained and limited situations, not in a “war of choice” or a
“global war.” Even under IHL, you can’t kill civilians (those not operating as
forces of a warring State) unless they’re directly participating in hostilities,
or in a “continuous combat function.” This may explain why the U.S. has thus far
refused to provide information about its strikes. Lastly, under IHL, even if you
have a valid target, you still can’t kill that target if the civilian casualties
would be disproportionate to the particular objective.
A final problem with how we use our drones is more a problem
of angering other nations, increasing enemies and setting bad precedent.
Obviously, a foreign country does not have the right to come into the United
States and kill people. The guiding document is the U.N. Charter, which doesn’t
allow force against a State unless it’s self-defense, or the Security Council
authorizes it. So consider if a country, take China for example, decided to
someday post drones over U.S. cities and execute people when it determined that
people here were fighting against it, knowing civilian casualties are to be
accepted, as long as China doesn’t consider our casualties disproportionate to
its military objectives.
You don’t have to be a legal expert to understand the
terrifying precedent the U.S. is setting.
Robin Hensel is a free speech and peace activist in Little
Falls who organizes the annual “Peace Fair” and anti-drone warfare protests
there.
Coleen Rowley is a retired FBI agent in Apple Valley who served as Minneapolis
Division Legal Counsel from 1990 to 2003.
Counter-argument by Attorney Larry Frost, Paladin Law
PLLC, Bloomington, MN
What one ‘spikes’ – leaves out or does not report – is usually
far more important than what one says. Colleen Rowley left out two very
significant legal points without which the debate is not complete. That leaves
us as far or farther from the truth than a complete exposition would.
First, any nation “A” that harbors forces “F” which attack
state “B” has an obligation under traditional international law to stop such
attacks. If it cannot, or will not stop “F”, then state B may choose either to
declare war on state A, or to enter state A’s territory to attack and destroy
the hostile forces “F”. The normal rules of war apply (except with respect to
the forces of F, more on which in a moment).
That means that if citizens of A are killed during operations
against hostile forces F, nation B is not legally in the wrong (if the general
rules of due care, proportionality etc are observed). So in many cases, drone
attacks are legally justified. Note, state A does not have to know specifically
that the target hit was there – it is enough that A knows that forces F are
there and is not stopping them. If A even allows F to recruit in its territory,
this law applies. This is not new law; it is in fact very old customary
international law. A simplified but readable explanation can be found at http://www.aware.org/legal-articles/11-karen-macnutt/78-the-law-of-war.
Second, Rowley uses the term ‘war zone’. The problem is that
legal definitions of war, and ‘war zone’, arose in the context of war between
states. War between a state and a non-state actor (in our case terrorists,
‘terrs’) is utterly different, and very poorly covered by either traditional
international law. For the terrs, the ‘war zone’ is everywhere their targets
exist. If their targets are citizens of a certain state, then the terrs will
attack them even in the territory of other nations. The traditional notion of
‘war zone’ simply does not even address the reality of the situation of a war
against terrs.
Failing to address this issue – to change the traditional
definitions of war to fit a war against global terrs – would be fatal to the
civilized West if we followed traditional international law. That is
unacceptable. The flip side is that mis-applying traditional law of war concepts
leads to declaring the whole world a war zone – and that leads to results we
don’t want.
For example, establishing a precedent that China could use to
attack targets in the United States – if China decided we were ideologically
hostile to the Dictatorship of the Proletariat in China, for example (we are)
and that constituted valid cause to attack us. In fact, China is attacking us –
by computer – so this is not a foolish example.
Technical war – internet attacks and others, including EMP
attacks which can be carried out by detonating high-yield nuclear weapons
outside the territory of the target – also fall outside the competence of
traditional and current treaty international law. When terrorists are driven by
the savage, uncivilized doctrines of a seventh-century mentality, doctrine has
to change to deal with that reality. And yes, current US practice is generating
ill-will, and that too is a factor to consider in reshaping our policy and the
law which governs it.
End of Exchange
Attorney Frost and I actually share some agreement that U.S.
drone strikes are generating both bad politics and bad precedent internationally
and that the law has not caught up with development of high-tech modes of
warfare. I will note, however, that following the McNutt interpretation,
outlined by Frost, would allow Cuba to “legally” drone bomb Miami to target for
killing those CIA-supported “Bay of Pigs” Cuban-American survivors and other
anti-Castro terrorists.
Cuba’s “legal” targets would certainly include Miami resident Luis
Clemente Faustino Posada Carriles, a well-known terrorist and former
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) agent who was convicted in absentia of various
terrorist attacks and of having brought down a Cuban airliner killing 73
innocent civilians.
The bottom line is that all law, but most importantly international law, which
is sometimes called “soft law” due to its lack of formalized international
police enforcement, derives its legitimacy and power from principles of
reciprocity and equality, not from the double standards that Harold Koh, John
Yoo and other war enablers have worked at legalizing inside and outside our
government.
International legal principles must therefore not only be
rooted in universal Kantian ethics but must also be efficacious and pragmatic,
not counterproductive as more and more research
is showing is the case with U.S. drone assassination policy that serves
to promote and increase terrorism worldwide. To stand the test of time
regardless of evolving technology, international law must “work” from all
participants’ standpoints, not just those nations which view themselves as most
militarily powerful at the moment.
Unfortunately the Nuremberg Principle has largely been
forgotten that wars of aggression, aka wars of choice, are the supreme crime
because they encompass and lead to all other war crimes, regardless of whether
utilizing low-end box cutters or high-end drone and satellite technology.
That is why, when examining how to fix our mistakes, as
President Obama rightly urged in recently acknowledging and apologizing for the
mistaken drone killing of American and Italian aid workers, he was wrong to call
attention, in the same breath, to America’s exceptionalism. Setting ourselves
above the law, as Nixon believed he was entitled to do domestically, will only
open Pandora’s Box and establish bad legal precedents that will come back to
haunt the U.S.
Coleen
Rowley is a retired FBI agent and former chief division counsel in
Minneapolis. She’s now a dedicated peace and justice activist and board member
of the Women Against
Military Madness and works with the Veterans
for Peace chapter in Minneapolis, Minnesota.