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Posts Tagged ‘Obama’

Drawdown in Afghanistan

Friday, June 24th, 2011

Exactly WHEN were we going to get out of Afghanistan,again?

Tags: 9gag, afghanistan, certaindoubt, doubtful1, doubtful11, Draw Down, Drawdown, freakingnews, imgur, Obama, Politics, reddit, speech, surge, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, war
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Where Does It End?

Saturday, May 7th, 2011

Okay, now it’s official. Pandora’s box has been opened; the cat’s out of the bag; pick your cliché.

The United States is now officially at war with its own citizens. The following headline in today’s New York Times says it all:

Drone Strike in Yemen Was Aimed at Awlaki

By Mark Mazzetti
Published: May 6, 2011

WASHINGTON — A missile strike from an American military drone in a remote region of Yemen on Thursday was aimed at killing Anwar al-Awlaki, the radical American-born cleric believed to be hiding in the country, American officials said Friday.

The recent military action against Osama bin Laden which resulted in his death at least could plausibly be interpreted as an attempt to “capture or kill” the al Qaeda leader. At least that’s the official story, though it is appearing more and more like the capture part of the equation was little more than an after-thought.

“Specific orders were issued to the SEALs… Bin Laden was to be captured, one official said, if he “conspicuously surrendered.”" 1

Opinions may differ about the definition of what constitutes conspicuous surrender. But there can be no doubt about the attack in Yemen. The United States didn’t give Awlaki even the illusion of a chance to surrender. The US flew a military mission over a sovereign nation – a nation with which we are not at war – to attempt to seek out and destroy an American citizen.

The ramifications of this are truly disturbing. It’s one thing to send in commandos to kill/capture a foreign national who has openly declared war on America and who himself claimed responsibility for the most heinous terrorist attack on our soil. It is another thing entirely to fire missiles at one of your own citizens.

I don’t know whether the US actually meant to kill Mr. al Awlaki or merely to send a message. The success rate of drone attacks in targeting individuals is, to date, rather poor. But the fact that they fired missiles at Awlai, a man whose “crimes” appear mainly to center on the fact that he gives fiery and influential sermons, only highlights the increasing willingness of the United States to use extra judicial killing as a means of dealing with its problems.

The attack on Thursday was part of a clandestine Pentagon program to hunt members of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, the group believed responsible for a number of failed attempts to strike the United States, including the thwarted plot to blow up a transatlantic jet on Dec. 25, 2009, as it was preparing to land in Detroit.

The blatant speciousness of this paragraph – how can a program be “clandestine” if it appears on the front page of the New York Times – is only overshadowed by what it fails to say. Having identified Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula as a recognizable group, one that is “believed responsible” for various and sundry thwarted plots against this nation, the Pentagon now asserts its right to launch seek and destroy missions to, in essence, kill anyone who is even “believed to be an operative of Al Qaeda” – even Americans.

As I have said before on this blog, if a president has cause to believe this nation is under attack he is duty bound to remove the threat. But there is a huge unspoken elephant in the room with regard to the actions against Mr. Awlaki: If the President feels he has the power to assassinate anyone he believes to be a threat to the United States, where does it end?

If the President feels comfortable enough with the idea of extra judicial killing that he will authorize its use to go after an American citizen in Yemen, could not future presidents use this precedent to go outside the law in dealing with other “threats” to the U.S.A.?
At the dawn of our nation, the federalists instituted the Alien and Sedition Act which imprisoned citizens for even criticizing the government. With the killing of bin Laden and the targeting of Awlaki, the Obama Administration seems to be upping the ante. If you give fiery anti-American sermons and incite others to fight violent acts, we will not even bother to capture you, try you, and incarcerate you; we will simply incinerate you.

Obama is a thoughtful man. I have no doubt that he exercised due caution before making this decision to send in a team of Seals to “capture” bin Laden. I wonder, however, if an equal amount of thought went into the drone attack on Awlaki – an act that could conceivably have more far reaching impact on foreign policy than the attack on bin Laden.

The killing of bin Laden was not a surprise to anyone. Even bin Laden himself acknowledged the reality of his situation – as witnessed by the measures he took to remain un-discovered. But the actions against Awlaki represent a huge leap towards the complete abandonment of anything remotely resembling a peaceful, lawful American foreign policy. It says to the rest of the world: if there is anyone in your country – including our own citizens – who we even think may be dangerous, we will kill them by any means at our disposal.

Gone is the illusion of the rule of law. Good bye is due process, Habeas corpus. Forget about Innocent until proven guilty? Fuggedaboutit! If we say you’re dangerous, we will kill you.

Under this policy, there is no limit to the killings that could occur. So I ask again,

Where Does it End?

Tags: Assassination, Awlaki, bin Laden, certaindoubt, drone, extrajudicial, government, Military, Obama, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, war, Yemen
Posted in Daily Rant, Ethics, Politics, government, law, warfare | No Comments »

Justice?

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Justice: “the administration of law according to prescribed and accepted principles.”

In his speech to the nation following the raid and subsequent killing of Osama bin Laden, President Barack Obama was – perhaps for the first time in his presidency – seriously injudicious with his words.

His mistake? In referring to the death of bin Laden at the hands of a Seal Commando team, several times Obama used the word: “Justice.”

Was it relief after a tense situation? Was it elation that the mission had not blown up in his face, caused an international incident and possibly doomed his chances for re-election? Who knows. Whatever it was, it was an uncharacteristic mistake by a man who is usually very careful with his choice of words.

As Commander in Chief, the President is well within his rights to take any action he feels necessary to protect the citizens of his country from any real and present dangers to America and its citizens. This includes authorizing troops to use lethal force. Killing your enemy in battle, even a one sided surprise commando raid, may be considered necessary. But it is a huge mistake to consider such killing as “justice.”

Thinking of any military action as right and just sets a very dangerous precedent. In its own way, Obama’s calling the killing of bin Laden justice could ultimately be just as dangerous and inflammatory as his predecessor’s injudicious use of the word “crusade” to describe our invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. If the Muslim world – and the rest of the world – perceives Obama as one who excuses all military actions as “just,” and even righteous, what is to keep him from sending helicopters full of soldiers into other countries and executing their citizens?

My favorite definition of the word justice is: “the administration of law according to prescribed and accepted principles.” As a Constitutional law scholar the President should know better than to wave around the “J” word when talking about military or para-military operations. Wars are messy. There is always collateral damage. Innocents get killed in the cross fire. Because of this, wars are, by definition, never about justice. You don’t send in a highly trained group of professional killers to mete out justice. No matter how bad a guy bin Laden was, storming into his house, shooting him twice in the head and dumping his body in the ocean cannot be thought of as the administration or even the enforcement of law.

Revenge? Maybe. Retribution? Certainly. But justice? I don’t think so.

When you can’t bring the accused back to face charges because of the outcry it would cause and the possible embarrassing things that might come out of a trial; when the results of your military action is so gruesome you can’t even release pictures of the accused man’s corpse for fear that it will inflame riots; when every aspect of said operation is secret and confidential, it may be the most expedient way to remove a threat to your country.

But it’s not justice.

I’m aware of the challenges of trying to neutralize a crazed religious zealot bent on martyrdom. It may well be that shooting bin Laden and making his body disappear was the only way to prevent his death from becoming a focal point for those bent on terrorism against the United States. No shrine, no body, no martyr. And, as I’ve said before, if one defines one’s actions as a “war on terror,” then taking out the enemy is a perfectly acceptable thing to do.

But you can’t call it justice.

In a perverse way, if we truly wanted to visit justice on Osama bin Laden, if we really wanted the punishment to fit the crime, we should try him, convict him, then pack a 747 full of jet fuel and fly it into his house. Better still, we should systematically identify all members of his family and fly planes into their houses.

I am sufficiently convinced that the President exerted due diligence before making the decision to send in the SEAL team. Unlike his predecessor, he pondered long and hard over the ramifications, weighed the pros and cons and ultimately decided that a commando strike was the best course to take. I don’t fault him for making the decision to go ahead. I do wish, however, that he’d been a little more careful in his choice of language.

There are enough people in the military who think surgical pre-emptive para-military strikes are righteous and just should be a regular part of our foreign policy. I don’t think they need any encouragement from the commander-in-chief.

Tags: Assassination, bin Laden, certaindoubt, governement, just, justice, Military, Obama, Osama bin Laden, right, SEAL, Thomas Vincent, Vincent
Posted in Daily Rant, Ethics, Politics, government, law, warfare | No Comments »

Believe

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

In every good presidential speech there is a theme, a meme, or a basic idea. Usually it is typified by a catchy phrase: From Gerald Ford’s lame “Whip inflation Now,” to JFK’s “Ask not what your country can do for you…,” to even Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream.”

In every one of his speeches President Obama has tried to emulate this. But I very much fear that his rhetorical efforts are starting to ring hollow. After rallying the electoral troops with his one word slogan “Hope” and the inspirational, “Change is coming to America,” Obama’s recent efforts such as the tepid “Win The Future,” make President Obama sound like a caricature of candidate Obama.

Now we have his latest speech. Given ostensibly to address the budget deficit, the national debt, and what to do about it it has been hailed by many as a “watershed moment in his presidency. If his choice of tagline was any indication, however, we are all in a lot of trouble.

Believe.

That’s it. That’s the whole speech. That’s what his whole economic plan comes down to.

Believe.

In the speech at George Washington University the President used the word twenty-seven times. I believe, you believe, we believe, most Americans believe. It’s almost as if he was lecturing on grammar and not economics.

The main thing wrong with Mr. Obama’s choice of catch phrase is it requires the American people to believe, not in their country, not in an ideal of freedom and justice, but rather in their President’s desire, strength, and toughness to defend those ideals from the greed of big business and multi-millionaires. Unfortunately, given his record since entering office I no longer believe he has the stuff necessary to stand up for the little guy and fight for the “kind of country that we believe in.”

It was bad enough that Mr. Obama use of the word “believe” to try and rally people to his cause. “But we do not have to sacrifice the America we believe in.” However, his application of the word to the very people he intends to ask for sacrifice is downright pitiful: “I believe reform should protect the middle class, promote economic growth, and build on the fiscal commission’s model of reducing tax expenditures so that there’s enough savings to both lower rates and lower the deficit…. I believe that most wealthy Americans would agree with me. They want to give back to their country, a country that’s done so much for them.”

My God, on the one hand he’s telling us that rich folk have made out like bandits due to tax breaks (which he admits he voted for) and on the other hand he’s trying to convince us that aw shucks, in their heart of hearts, corporate CEOs really “…want to give back to their country, a country that’s done so much for them.” Not to put too fine a point on it but if President Obama truly believes that the super wealthy want to give back to their country, I have some ocean front property in Death Valley to show him. ”

If Obama had any cajones at all, he wouldn’t be wheedling and cajoling and trying to convince us that the “American dream” is still alive and well, if only we believe. He wouldn’t be exhorting us all to believe that republicans and their wealthy overlords are really decent people at heart who want what’s best for the country.

Baloney!

The Koch Brothers could care less about America, democracy, or caring for the poor and indigent. Rupert Murdoch certainly does not believe in the vision of America that Obama tries to lay out in his speech. At times in his speech, Obama seems almost as if he’s trying to convince himself to believe that “… somewhere lost in this quagmire of petty bickering on every news station, the ‘American Dream’ is still alive…”

If Mr. Obama truly believed in the vision that he was trying to sell the American people, he could do much for his believability by choosing to surround himself with a different crew of advisors. As Glenn Greenwald so pithily put it: “…does anyone think that Bill Daley, Tim Geithner and his army of Rubin acolytes and former Goldman Sachs executives are sitting around in rooms desperately trying to prevent budget cuts and entitlement “reforms”?”

I make no excuses for the fact that I don’t believe the American Dream is alive and well. Sadly,judging from his economic team and his record of caving anytime the Republicans’ millionaire masters order up more tax breaks for themselves, I don’t really think Obama believes it himself.

The country is being screwed by the rich. Until such time as President Obama acknowledges this fact and institutes policies designed to prevent it, I’m afraid I have little hope that that anything he does will make average Americans’ lives better…

That’s what I believe… and I’m sticking to it.

Tags: believe, certaindoubt, deficit, doubt, economy, Ethics, Greenwald, Obama, poor, republican, rich, Ryan, Thomas Vincent, Vincent
Posted in Daily Doubt, Ethics, Politics, economics, government, media | No Comments »

Re-election Memes

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

SCOTUS thoughts.

The recent kick-off of President Barak Obama’s re-election campaign has unleashed a flood of pundits trying to drum up support – I fear it’s too late to hope for enthusiasm – about the idea of Obama getting another 4 years at the helm. One of the more prominent memes I’m hearing is: we have to re-elect Obama so that the next Supreme Court Justice that retires won’t be replaced by another right winger.

From a progressive’s standpoint I think this idea is silly for a number of reasons.

First of all, the most likely next candidate for retirement – or worse – is Justice Ginsberg. At 78 she is the oldest Justice on the court and her health has been an issue for some time. As she is considered one of the “liberal” judges, one of the four non-conservatives on the court, replacing her with even a moderate would not change the make-up of the court. There would still remain the five Justices responsible for the Citizen’s United ruling. The only way to redress that wrong would be for one of the five conservatives, Roberts, Alito, Thomas, Scalia, and Kennedy, (I consider Kennedy a conservative on this issue) to either retire or pop off. As none of these Justices have shown any sign of either condition anytime soon, the odds that Obama will be faced with a chance to replace a conservative during his next term don’t seem very likely. Or rather, it’s just as likely that one of the four moderates on the court will need to be replaced than one of the conservatives.

Even if the unimaginable happens and Obama does get a chance to appoint another Justice, what leads anyone to believe that he will replace a Thomas, a Scalia, or an Alito with anyone less onerous? Look at his record. Virtually every time Obama has had the opportunity to take a stand against corporatism he has demurred. Anytime bankers, or wealthy business tycoons have come calling, Obama has fallen all over himself to try and appease them. From naming GE chairman Jeffery Immelt as Chairman of the “competitiveness council, to appointing the business friendly William M. Daley as his chief of Staff Obama has shown no inclination to tackle big business on any important issue. What makes anyone think he’ll start growing a spine in his second term?

And even if he were to somehow be fortunate to get the opportunity to affect the make-up of the court and he somehow grew a pair, what makes anyone think that conservatives in the Senate would go along with any nominee who showed any signs of overturning Citizen’s United? Or affirming Roe vs Wade? Republicans have been obstructionists, sitting on Judicial confirmations ever since Obama came into office. What makes anyone think they’ll suddenly change their spots and start playing nice?

No, there may be other reasons to vote for Obama in 2012…. But I’m afraid appointing Supreme Court Justices is not one of them.

Tags: 2012, campaign, election, government, Obama, Politics, re-election, reelection, SCOTUS, supreme court, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, vote
Posted in Daily Doubt, Ethics, Politics, government, law | No Comments »

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