President Obama has no power to order drone killings of non-combatants on American soil, the Justice Department admitted. But one may be surprised by how much flexibility the White House has on semantics when it comes to drones.
Confirmation hearings for John Brennan, the new CIA chief, were a political wrestling match, in which lawmakers were trying to pry from the White House an explanation of where the executive draws the line in its drone strike powers.
The fight culminated in a 13-hour filibustering marathon by Senator Rand Paul, who managed to get an answer from the attorney general. The letter from Eric Holder said the president doesn’t have the authority "to use a weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on American soil."
RT spoke with Col. Morris Davis, former chief prosecutor for terrorism trials at Guantanamo Bay, who says even this reluctant public limitation of presidential powers over drone killings may prove less restrictive than the general public may believe.
RT:Now that Brennan is confirmed, what impact will he have on the CIA? Will we see much change or just business as usual?
Morris Davis: It remains to be seen. He played a part in the Bush administration during the torture program. He’s been in the White House under the Obama administration and at the heart of the drone program, which doesn’t bode well. But during his confirmation hearings he said that he’d like to get the CIA out of what looks like really military operations, turn it back to the Pentagon. If he follows through on what he said, then, I think, it could be a good thing, but his track record doesn’t bode well.
RT:The White House response was quite unusual: just a very short statement about drones. Did it in any way address concerns about the program or was it just to let the confirmation go ahead?
MD: The letter was from the attorney general. If you recall back during the Libyan conflict – the War Powers Act here in the US says the president has to get permission from Congress after a certain period of time. The Justice Department wouldn’t give the White House the cover they wanted. The Defense Department ultimately shoved it around to the State Department, to Harold Koh, to get an opinion that our operations in Libya didn’t amount to hostilities. The fact that the attorney general in his written letter said that the answer is ‘no’ to Rand Paul’s question is the attorney general’s opinion. But you haven’t seen Barack Obama standing up and saying “No, I promise, I’m not going to use drones in America.”
RT:The administration said it could only kill Americans if they were engaged in combat on American soil. So do they decide who is and who is not a combatant? Should gun owners in Texas worry?
MD: It remains to be seen again. The administration has had a pretty loose use of the English language. You saw it with the white paper that leaked out awhile back where they talked about ‘the threat of imminent attack’. Some people said their definition of ‘imminent’ defied all logic. So how they define ‘combat’ may not be the definition that most ordinary human beings would think of when they think of the term ‘combat’.
RT:Does the statement imply that it can carry out strikes against Americans elsewhere then?
MD: The way it is worded leaves room for interpretation. It clearly is only limited to the US and to the American citizens. I think they left a lot of wriggle room in the way they worded the statement. And they certainly have the past history of being pretty liberal in how they choose to define terms when it suits their interests. The law permits the president to carry out attacks basically whenever and wherever he chooses on anyone. But they refused to release the legal analysis that explains how they interpret the law.
I commend Rand Paul – and I never thought that I’d see the day when I’d commend Rand Paul for standing up for liberty – but certainly yesterday’s 13-hour marathon gave me hope that at least not everyone on Capitol Hill is just bending over and giving up on national security and lets the president do anything he wants.
One of the criticisms of the drone program is that we’ve used it too liberally. Rather than capture people and go through the hassles that we’ve had in Guantanamo, we’ve just chosen to kill people instead. They recently captured Osama Bin Laden’s son-in-law, Suleiman Abu Ghaith. We have him in New York City, where apparently he has been cooperating without being tortured. And he is to be prosecuted in a federal court using the tried-and-true method of giving people a fair trial before the sentence. I am pleased we didn’t use the drone program on him.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.