(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of
India (Marxist)
Vol. XXXV
No. 44
October 30, 2011
America Targets Its Own Citizens
Yohannan Chemarapally
ANWAR al
Awlaki was living
on borrowed time after president Barack Obama sanctioned his
killing in April
2010. The fact that Awlaki was an American citizen seemed to be
a secondary
issue. There were two previous reported attempts to target
Awlaki a known al
Qaeda activist. This time, his luck ran out as a Predator drone
armed with
Hellfire missiles caught up with his convoy. Awlaki along with
another American
citizen, Samir Khan, perished in a US
drone attack in the last week of September in a remote
mountainous region of Yemen. Khan was
a computer specialist and was co-editor of al Qaeda’s online
magazine Inspire. In
the second week of October,
one of Awlaki’s sons too perished in a drone attack
President
Barack Obama was
quick to claim that Awlaki’s death constituted “a major blow to
al Qaeda’s most
active affiliate” – the al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
(AQAP). The Obama
administration has tried to portray Awlaki’s killing as their
biggest success
in the war against terror since the extermination of Osama bin
Laden in the
middle of this year. The operation that killed Awlaki was
supervised by the
same unit that raided Osama’s hideout in Abbotabad.
The
American president
offered no apologies for the killing of two American citizens in
cold blood
insisting that Awlaki was the “leader of external operations” of
the AQAP.
Legal opinion in the US
is sharply divided about extra-judicial killing of their own
citizens. Many
other nationalities have become cannon fodder in the ten year
long war on
terror. The Israeli defence forces have been targeting
Palestinians and others
opposed to them for assassination with immunity even before the
war on terror
began. The American Civil Liberties Union has been sharply
critical of the US government’s
decision of “imposing the death penalty without a trial”. The US
justice department
has refused to provide any legal justifications for the killing.
President
Obama however has stressed that his administration will “be
resolute in its
commitment to destroy terrorist networks that aim to kill
Americans”.
Awlaki
was a 40 year old
Islamic cleric, born and educated in the US.
After the events of the
September 9, 2001, he was among the small group of radicalised
American Muslims
who openly threw in their lot with al Qaeda. Awlaki’s sermons in
American
accented English urging Muslims to wage “jihad” against the West
reputedly had
a wide fan following on the YouTube and other websites. After a
US army
officer of Palestinian origin, Major
Nidal Mallik Hassan went on a killing spree in an American
military base of FortHood
in November 2009, Awlaki’s name hit the headlines in the
American media. It was
reported that the US
army veteran was in touch with Awlaki before he went on his
rampage which
killed 13 people. Awlaki had denied that he had in any way
encouraged Hassan
but later on praised his act saying that it had prevented the
American soldiers
who were killed from being deployed in Afghanistan
or Iraq
where they “would have killed Muslims”.
UNLAWFUL
ASSASSINATION
Awlaki
was also blamed by
the US
government for the abortive attempts at blowing up American
passenger planes,
though no proof has been produced to substantiate the claims.
The Obama
administration linked Awlaki to the failed Christmas 2009
attempt of Umar
Farrouk Abdulmutallib, the “underwear bomber” to bring down a
plane heading for
Detroit.
He was
also accused of playing a key role in the October 2010 “mail
bomb” plot.
Packets containing bombs originating from Yemen
bound for the US
were
intercepted in Dubai and Europe.
In May 2010, a Pakistani-American who tried to detonate a car
bomb in Manhattan, told the US
authorities that he was inspired
by Awlaki’s sermons. In one of his sermons recorded in early
2010, he had urged
American Muslims to stage attacks. “Jihad against America
is binding upon myself just
as it is binding on every other able Muslim”.
But if
reports in the Arab
media are anything to go by, Awlaki was only a minor cog in the
al Qaeda
network, used mainly for propaganda purposes. His fluency in
both English and
Arabic coupled with his knowledge of the Koran had helped him
gather a big fan
following, especially among the youth. Experts on Yemen
have said that he had no operational
role in al Qaeda. The top commanders are Yemenis and Saudis who
have been leading
the fight against the American presence in the region for many
years. AQAP’s
main leadership continues to be intact and is no doubt busy
hatching new terror
plans. Awlaki was forced to flee into the desolate mountain
region where his
tribe is located and where the al Qaeda has a presence, only to
escape from the
Americans who had put a bounty on his head.
His
father, who was at one
time, the minister of agriculture in the central government in Yemen, had issued a public
appeal to the US
administration to drop the death warrant. The senior Awlaki went
to the extent
of describing his son as an “all American boy” who had studied
at some of the
finest universities, including doing doctoral work at the GeorgeWashingtonUniversity. American
media reports say that the young Awlaki actually worked for the
Pentagon for a
few years helping it to counter the view that the US
was against the Islamic world.
In the US, the Centre for
Constitutional Rights and the
ACLU along with Awlaki’s father had filed a case in the Federal
Court to
prevent the assassination of a US
citizen outside of a war zone. The US district judge, John
Bates, presiding
over the hearing had pertinently raised a question on the
justification of the
executive branch of the government ordering the “assassination
of a US citizen
without first affording him any form of judicial process
whatsoever, based on
the mere assertion that he is a member of a terrorist
organisation”. Ron
Paul, an American Congressman from Texas and a candidate in
Republican presidential primaries has described Awlaki’s killing
as an unlawful
assassination. “To start assassinating American citizens without
charges—we
must think very seriously about this”, Paul said. The Fifth
Amendment in the US constitution
states: “No person shall be – deprived of life, liberty, or
property without
the due process of law”.
STARK & PERPLEXING
QUESTIONS
Bates
eventually in an 83
page judgement in December last year dismissed the petition to
block Awlaki’s
assassination by executive fiat. “There are circumstances which
the (president’s)
unilateral decision to kill a US
citizen overseas is constitutionally committed to the political
branches and is
judicially unreviewable”, the judge concluded. He however did
admit that many
“stark and perplexing questions” remain to be answered following
president
Obama’s decision to put Awlaki on the “kill list”. The Obama
administration
claims the right for targeted killings from the bill signed by
George W Bush
immediately after the events of September 11. The bill
authorised action
against those who “planned, authorised, committed or aided the
9/11 terrorist
attacks”. White House officials have confirmed about the
existence of a “secret
panel” that can order the execution of American citizens without
judicial
oversight.
The
former vice president,
Dick Cheney, was among those who praised the Obama
administration for ordering
the drone strike against Awlaki. Cheney who has been otherwise
very critical of
Obama called it a “very good strike” and “justified”. But Cheney
was also quick
to demand an apology from Obama for earlier criticising the
harsh interrogation
measures the Bush administration had used to extract information
from terror
suspects, incarcerated in GuantanamoBay and secret CIA
prisons all over the world. “The thing I am waiting for is for
the
administration to go back and correct something they said two
years ago, when
they criticised us for overreacting to the events of 9/11”,
Cheney said on
television. He said that recent events have shown that the Obama
administration
is using the same techniques favoured by the previous
administration.
The
killing of Awlaki had
occurred a few days after the return of president Abdullah Saleh
to Yemen
after months of treatment in Saudi Arabia.
Saleh had narrowly escaped death but had suffered serious burn
injuries when
his palace was attacked by forces loyal to the opposition. His
return was
unexpected as talks for a peaceful settlement of the political
crisis were
delicately poised. After Awlaki’s death was announced, Saleh was
quick to
highlight the close security cooperation between forces loyal to
him and the
American military. In fact, the first news about Awlaki’s
killing came through
Yemeni government sources. In all probability, the drones used
in the attack
came from a base in Yemen.
Wikileaks documents have revealed the close security links
between the two
governments. Saleh had offered the US
“unfettered access” to carry out
hits against the al Qaeda from Yemeni soil. The cables also
reveal that Saleh
outsourced Yemen’s
counter-terrorism
efforts to the US. In the second
week of October, US
drone attacks killed five Yemeni militants
near the town of Zinjibar,
which has been under al Qaeda influence since May this year.
US
officials are only
confirming that the drones took off from a newly operational
base in the Arabian Peninsula.
US
drones also fly into the region from known bases in Ethiopia,
Djibouti and
the Seychelles.
White House counter-terrorism advisor, John Brennan, said
recently that
counter-terrorism cooperation with Yemen
“is better than it’s been
during my whole tenure”. Saleh, no doubt, expects the Obama
administration to
back him in his efforts to cling on to power. The
anti-government protests in Yemen
have been far bloodier than the ones
occurring in Syria.