The article below refers to the New York Times as “the major voice of what passes for liberalism in
America.” That’s a very generous description – even the liberals in the US are
far to the right.
But it seems that the Times, as well as the rest of the USA,
failed to receive the memo from the rest of humanity. For the sake of
expediency, let me repeat it here:
Attention: USA
Re: The rest of us
Please be notified that you have never been, are not now, and
will never be the most important people on Earth. Get over yourselves.
Signed,
Everyone Else
If the Times thinks it
okay for the US to kill off whomever strikes its fancy, then surely the rest of
the world can do likewise. Might I suggest that the editorial board of the Times might be a candidate for a good starting point.
PRH,
Axis of Logic
The New York Times defends
assassinations
11 October 2010
Patrick Martin
In its main editorial Sunday, the New
York Times, the major voice of what passes for liberalism in America,
openly defends the right of the US government to assassinate anyone it pleases.
The only restriction the Times suggests is that the president should be
required to have his selection of murder victims rubber-stamped by a secret
court like the one that now approves 99.99 percent of all electronic eavesdropping
requests.
The apologia for killing begins with
a blatant lie about the US assassination program using missiles fired from
CIA-operated drone aircraft flying along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. The Times
claims, citing official US government sources: “The drone program has been
effective, killing more than 400 Al Qaeda militants this year alone, according
to American officials, but fewer than 10 noncombatants.”
Actually, Pakistani government
officials estimated the number of civilians killed by drone attacks in 2009
alone at more than 700, with an even higher figure this year, as the Obama
administration has rained missiles and bombs on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border
region.(See “US drone
missiles slaughtered 700 Pakistani civilians in 2009” .)
A report in the Pakistani newspaper Dawn
concluded, “For each Al-Qaeda and Taliban terrorist killed by US drones, 140
innocent Pakistanis also had to die. Over 90 per cent of those killed in the
deadly missile strikes were civilians, claim authorities.”
The Times editors cannot be
unaware of these well-established figures, since their own journalists have
reported a civilian death toll from US missile strikes in Pakistan of some 500
by April 2009, and 100 to 500 more through April 2010. They lie shamelessly and
deliberately in order to conceal the significance of their endorsement of such
widespread killing.
The editorial claims that US drone
missile attacks are legal under international law as self-defense, but this is
flatly rejected by human rights groups and legal experts, except those who work
as paid apologists for the CIA and Pentagon. The United States is not at war
with Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen or Somalia, but US missiles have struck the
territory of all these countries and annihilated their citizens.
In a 29-page report to the United
Nations Human Rights Council in June, the UN Special Rapporteur on
extrajudicial executions, Philip Alston, rejected the doctrine of “preemptive
self-defense” employed by the Bush and Obama administrations, as well as the
state of Israel, and declared that a targeted killing outside actual warfare
“is almost never likely to be legal.”
In an accompanying statement, Alston
pointed out the consequences if such a doctrine were to become universal. He
declared: “If invoked by other states, in pursuit of those they deem to be
terrorists and to have attacked them, it would cause chaos.”
The Times concedes, “it is not
within the power of a commander in chief to simply declare anyone anywhere a
combatant and kill them, without the slightest advance independent oversight.”
The editorial argues that such arbitrary killings can be prevented through
procedural safeguards of a purely cosmetic character.
These would include the Obama
administration making public “its standards for putting people on terrorist or
assassination lists,” limiting targets to “only people who are actively
planning or participating in terror, or who are leaders of Al Qaeda or the Taliban”;
capturing instead of killing, where possible; and “oversight outside the
administration,” i.e., the aforementioned judicial review by a body like the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Yes, if only the Nazis had followed
“proper procedures.”
In the mealymouthed language that has
become typical of the Times as it provides “liberal” justifications for
the crimes of US imperialism, the editors insist that in the case of US
citizens, “the government needs to employ some due process before depriving
someone of life,” adding that, “If practical, the United States should get
permission from a foreign government before carrying out an attack on its
soil.”
The Times editorial admits
that in the much-publicized case of Anwar al-Awlaki, the US-born Muslim cleric
now living in Yemen, the Obama administration has acted in a manner
diametrically opposed to the procedure the newspaper claims to favor. Awlaki
has been targeted for assassination, based on criteria that are secret and
unreviewable. The Justice Department has gone to court to assert the “state
secrets” privilege to quash a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties
Union, on behalf of Awlaki’s father, seeking to compel the government to
justify or rescind its death sentence.
No evidence has been presented that
Awlaki, a longtime publicist for Islamic fundamentalism, has engaged in actual
terrorist actions. And as the Times itself admits, “If the United States
starts killing every Islamic radical who has called for jihad, there will be no
end to the violence.” But the editors are nonetheless willing to place their
confidence in the Obama administration, even to the point of giving it powers
of life and death over citizens of the US and other countries alike.
The Times editorial reeks of
cynicism. It advances arguments that convince no one, and are not intended to
convince, only to provide a screen of words for a policy of imperialist
barbarism and reaction. It is one more demonstration that, within the US
financial aristocracy, there is no constituency whatsoever for the defense of
democratic rights.
The open reactionaries like the Wall
Street Journal and Fox News display their bloodlust unashamedly. The
“liberals” like the Times prefer a dose of hypocritical moralizing and
legalistic quibbling. The consequences for humanity are the same.
Original URL