Today a federal court dismissed a lawsuit by the father of Anwar
al-Awlaki, the US citizen and al Qaeda operative whom the Obama
administration has declared a target for killing. Robert Chesney
provides
a useful outline of the ruling. Jack Goldsmith
notes that the ruling, while a win for the government, begins
to outline some constraints on the President's authority to order
the assassination of a citizen. The opinion suggests that if Awlaki
were to surrender to the US embassy in Yemen, it would be illegal
to simply shoot him. It offers that Awlaki might be able to seek
judicial relief while in hiding if he communicated with attorneys
remotely. And the ruling also, in the court's words, "does not hold
that the Executive possesses 'unreviewable authority to order the
assassination of any American whom he labels an enemy of the
state.'" The opinion sketches out a test that leans mainly on
determinations of the Director of National Intelligence. Goldsmith
concludes:
In short, in a case the government wins that technically rules
only on threshold issues, the court (a) states that domestic law
governs the president's targeting power outside the United States,
to some degree; (b) implies that someone deemed a terrorist by the
government who is hiding in another country can have standing to
seek judicial relief; and (c) limits its political question ruling
to terrorist targets approved by Congress and the DNI. I should
note that points (a) and (c) were points stressed in the
government's briefs as limiting principles. If they are small
victories for ACLU and CCR, they are victories invited by the
government. But whatever their origins, these points are now in a
judicial opinion. They are all new developments in the judicial
regulation of wartime that will influence executive branch lawyers,
and thus shape USG targeting decisions, going forward.
Sean| 12.8.10 @ 8:36AM
Maybe the Pentagon can invite Anwar al-Awlaki to lunch again.
MikeBee| 12.8.10 @ 12:32PM
I think a beer summit would be just perfect!