Another Mass Killing
U.S. Slaughters 150 People In Somalia
Nobody Knows the Identity of the 150 People
Killed by U.S. in Somalia, but Most Are
Certain They Deserved It
By Glenn Greenwald
March 09, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- The U.S. used drones and manned aircraft
yesterday to drop bombs and missiles on
Somalia,
ending the lives of at least 150 people.
As it virtually always does, the Obama
administration
instantly claimed that the people killed
were “terrorists” and militants —
members of the
Somali group al Shabaab — but provided
no evidence to support that assertion.
Nonetheless, most U.S. media
reports contained nothing more than quotes
from U.S. officials about what happened,
conveyed uncritically and with no skepticism
of their accuracy: The dead “fighters … were
assembled for what American officials
believe was a graduation ceremony and
prelude to an imminent attack against
American troops,”
pronounced the New York Times. So,
the official story goes, The Terrorists
were that very moment “graduating” —
receiving their Terrorist degrees — and
about to attack U.S. troops when the U.S.
killed them.
With that boilerplate set of claims in
place, huge numbers of people today who have
absolutely no idea who was killed are
certain that they all deserved it. As my
colleague Murtaza Hussain
said of the 150 dead people: “We don’t
know who they are, but luckily they were all
bad.” For mindless authoritarians, the words
“terrorist” and “militant” have no meaning
other than: anyone who dies when my
government drops bombs, or, at best, a
“terrorist” is anyone my government
tells me is a terrorist. Watch how many
people today are defending this strike by
claiming “terrorists” and “militants” were
killed using those definitions even though
they have literally no idea who was killed.
Other than the higher-than-normal death
toll, this mass killing is an incredibly
common event under the presidency of the
2009 Nobel Peace laureate, who has so far
bombed seven predominantly Muslim countries.
As Nick Turse
has
reported in The Intercept,
Obama has aggressively expanded the stealth
drone program and secret war in Africa.
This particular mass killing is unlikely to
get much attention in the U.S. due to (1)
the election-season obsession with
horse-race analysis and pressing matters
such as the size of Donald Trump’s hands;
(2) widespread Democratic indifference to
the killing of foreigners where there’s no
partisan advantage to be had against the GOP
from pretending to care; (3) the
invisibility of places like Somalia and the
implicit devaluing of lives there; and (4)
the complete normalization of the model
whereby the U.S. president kills whomever he
wants, wherever he wants, without regard
for any semblance of law, process,
accountability, or evidence.
The
lack of attention notwithstanding, there are
several important points highlighted by
yesterday’s bombing and the reaction to it:
1)
The U.S. is not at war in Somalia. Congress
has never declared war on Somalia, nor has
it authorized the use of military force
there. Morality and ethics to the side for
the moment: What legal authority does Obama
even possess to bomb this country? I assume
we can all agree that presidents shouldn’t
be permitted to just go around killing
people they suspect are “bad”: they need
some type of legal authority to do the
killing.
Since 2001, the U.S. government has
legally justified its
we-bomb-wherever-we-want approach by
pointing to the 2001 Authorization for Use
of Military Force (AUMF), enacted by
Congress in the wake of 9/11 to
authorize the targeting of al Qaeda and
“affiliated” forces. But al Shabaab did not
exist in 2001 and had nothing to do with
9/11. Indeed, the group has not tried to
attack the U.S. but instead, as the New
York Times’ Charlie Savage
noted in 2011, “is focused on a
parochial insurgency in Somalia.” As a
result, reported Savage, even “the [Obama]
administration does not consider the United
States to be at war with every member of the
Shabaab.”
Instead, in the Obama administration’s view,
specific senior members of al Shabaab can be
treated as enemy combatants under the AUMF
only if they adhere to al Qaeda’s ideology,
are “integrated” into its command structure,
and could conduct operations outside of
Somalia. That’s why the U.S. government
yesterday claimed that all the people
it killed were about to launch attacks on
U.S. soldiers: because, even under its own
incredibly expansive view of the AUMF, it
would be illegal to kill them
merely on the ground that they were all
members of al Shabaab, and the
government thus needs a claim of
“self-defense” to legally justify this.
But
even under the “self-defense” theory that
the U.S. government invoked, it is allowed —
under its own
policies promulgated in 2013 — to use
lethal force
away from an active war zone (e.g.,
Afghanistan) “only against a target that
poses a continuing, imminent threat to U.S.
persons.” Perhaps these Terrorists were
about to imminently attack U.S. troops
stationed in the region — immediately
after the tassel on their graduation cap was
turned at the “graduation ceremony,” they
were going on the attack — but again, there
is literally no evidence that any of that is
true.
Given what’s at stake — namely, the
conclusion that Obama’s killing of 150
people yesterday was illegal — shouldn’t we
be demanding to see evidence that
the assertions of his government are
actually true? Were these really all al
Shabaab fighters and terrorists who were
killed? Were they really about to carry out
some sort of imminent, dangerous attack on
U.S. personnel? Why would anyone be content
to blindly believe the self-serving
assertions of the U.S. government on these
questions without seeing evidence? If you
are willing to make excuses for why you
don’t want to see any evidence, why would
you possibly think you know what happened
here — who was killed and under what
circumstances — if all you have are
conclusory, evidence-free assertions from
those who carried out the killings?
2) There
are numerous compelling reasons
demanding skepticism of U.S. government
claims about who it kills in airstrikes. To
begin with, the Obama administration has
formally re-defined the term “militant”
to mean: “all military-age males in
a strike zone” unless “there is
explicit intelligence posthumously proving
them innocent.” In other words, the U.S.
government presumptively regards all adult
males it kills as “militants” unless
evidence emerges that they were not. It’s an
empty, manipulative term of propaganda and
nothing else.
Beyond that, the U.S. government’s own
documents prove that in the vast majority of
cases —
9 out of 10 in fact — it is killing
people other than its intended targets. Last
April, the New York Times published
an article under the headline “Drone
Strikes Reveal Uncomfortable Truth: U.S. Is
Often Unsure About Who Will Die.” It quoted
the scholar Micah Zenko saying, “Most
individuals killed are not on a kill list,
and the government does not know their
names.”
Moreover, the U.S. government has repeatedly
been caught lying about the identity of
its bombings victims. As that April NYT article
put it, “Every independent investigation of
the strikes has found far more civilian
casualties than administration officials
admit.”
Given that clear record of deliberate
deceit, why would any rational person
blindly swallow evidence-free assertions
from the U.S. government about who it is
killing? To put it mildly, extreme
skepticism is warranted (after being
criticized for its stenography, the final New
York Times story yesterday at least
included this phrase about the Pentagon’s
claims about who it killed: “There was no
independent way to verify the claim”).
3)
Why does the U.S. have troops
stationed in this part of Africa? Remember,
even the Obama administration says it is not
at war with al Shabaab.
Consider how circular this entire rationale
is: The U.S., like all countries, obviously
has a legitimate interest in protecting its
troops from attack. But why does it have
troops there at all in need of protection?
The answer: The troops are there to operate
drone bases and attack people they regard as
a threat to them. But if they weren’t there
in the first place, these groups could not
pose a threat to them.
In
sum: We need U.S. troops in Africa to launch
drone strikes at groups that are trying to
attack U.S. troops in Africa. It’s the
ultimate self-perpetuating circle of
imperialism: We need to deploy troops to
other countries in order to attack those who
are trying to kill U.S. troops who
are deployed there.
4) If
you’re an American who has lived under the
war on terror, it’s easy to forget how
extreme this behavior is. Most countries on
the planet don’t routinely run around
dropping bombs and killing dozens of people
in multiple other countries at once, let
alone do so in countries where
they’re not at war.
But
for Americans, this is now all perfectly
normalized. We just view our president as
vested with the intrinsic, divine right,
grounded in American exceptionalism, to deem
whomever he wants “Bad Guys” and then — with
no trial, no process, no accountability —
order them killed. He’s the roving, Global
Judge, Jury, and Executioner. And we see
nothing disturbing or dangerous or even
odd about that. We’ve been inculcated to
view the world the way a 6-year-old watches
cartoons: Bad Guys should be killed, and
that’s the end of the story.
So
yesterday the president killed roughly 150
people in a country where the U.S. is not at
war. The Pentagon issued a five-sentence
boilerplate statement declaring them all
“terrorists.” And that’s pretty much the end
of that. Within literally hours, virtually
everyone was ready to forget about the whole
thing and move on, content in the knowledge
— even without a shred of evidence or
information about the people killed — that
their government and president did the right
thing. Now that is a pacified
public and malleable media.