U.N. report finds torture by Afghan authorities - potential complicity of the US?


report
Treatment of Conflict­Related Detainees in Afghan Custody


The International Herald Tribune October 12, 2011 Wednesday  BY ALISSA J. RUBIN

U.N. report finds torture by Afghan authorities

A study released by the United Nations provides a devastating picture of abuses of detained militants by arms of the Afghanistan government.

Detainees are hung by their hands and beaten with cables, and in some cases their genitals are twisted until the prisoners lose consciousness at sites run by the Afghan intelligence service and the Afghan National Police, according to a report by the United Nations.

The report, based on interviews over the past year with more than 300 suspects linked to the insurgency, is the most comprehensive look at the Afghan detention system and an issue that has long concerned Western officials and human rights groups. It paints a devastating picture of abuse, citing evidence of ''systematic torture'' during interrogations by Afghan intelligence and police officials even as U.S. and other Western backers provide training and pay for nearly the entire budget of the Afghan ministries running the detention centers.

The report, released Monday, does not assess whether U.S. officials knew of the abuses. But such widespread use of torture in a detention system supported by U.S. mentors and money raises serious questions about the potential complicity of U.S. officials and whether they benefited from information obtained from suspects who had been tortured.

''I know of no one who knew about these alleged abuses as they were happening,'' said a U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of the issues involved. ''Thus, it's impossible to know if there was any information passed on that came in some form from these alleged incidents.''

At a minimum, there appears to have been little effort to scrutinize the practices of the Afghan security forces at the detention centers, as pressure has built to move as much responsibility as possible to the Afghans and to reduce U.S. involvement in the country.

As the United States looks to wind down a decade of war in Afghanistan, the report threatens to complicate efforts to transfer more detention responsibilities to the Afghans. It could also set in motion provisions of U.S. law that would require the United States to cut off money to any Afghan unit involved in abuses.

The Afghan government denied the worst of the allegations in the report, while allowing that there were ''deficiencies'' in a war-torn country that routinely faced suicide bombings and other forms of terrorism.

Early word of the findings provoked immediate action. After seeing a draft of the report in September, Gen. John R. Allen, the NATO commander in Afghanistan, halted transfers of those suspected of being insurgents to 16 of the facilities identified as sites where torture or abuse routinely took place. He has since initiated a plan to investigate the sites, provide training in modern interrogation techniques and monitor the Afghan government's practices. The U.S. Embassy is now heavily involved in devising a long-term monitoring program for Afghan detention sites, U.S. officials said.

In a statement, NATO officials said they were working with the United Nations and the Afghan government to ''improve detention operations'' and ''establish safeguards.''

Nearly half of the detainees interviewed by U.N. researchers who were in detention sites run by the Afghan intelligence service, known as the National Directorate of Security, told of torture. The national police treatment of detainees was somewhat less severe and widespread, the report found. Its research covered 47 facilities in 22 provinces. Most of those interviewed were suspected of involvement in the insurgency.

Of the 324 security-related detainees interviewed, 89 had been handed over to the Afghan intelligence service or the police by international military forces, and in 19 cases, the men were tortured once they were in Afghan custody. The U.N. Convention Against Torture prohibits the transfer of a detained person to the custody of another state where there are substantial grounds for believing that the detainee is at risk of torture.

''Use of interrogation methods, including suspension, beatings, electric shock, stress positions and threatened sexual assault is unacceptable by any standard of international human rights law,'' the report said.

One detainee described being taken in for interrogation in Kandahar and having the interrogator ask whether he knew the name of the official's office. The detainee said that after he answered, the interrogator said, ''You should confess what you have done in the past as Taliban - even stones confess here.''

The man was beaten over several days for hours at a time with electrical wire and then signed a confession, the report said.

The report pointed out that even though the abusive practices were pervasive, the Afghan government did not condone torture and had explicitly said the abuses found by the United Nations were not government policy. Several longtime aid workers said that as disturbing as the allegations were, there had been improvements in detainee treatment, particularly since the Soviet occupation, when many people were detained and never heard from again.

''Reform is both possible and desired,'' said Staffan de Mistura, the U.N. special representative for Afghanistan, noting that the government had cooperated with the report's researchers and had begun to take remedial action.

''We take this report very seriously,'' said Shaida M. Abdali, the Afghan deputy national security adviser.

''Our government, especially the president, has taken a very strong stand on the protection of everyone's human rights, their humanity, everywhere and especially in prisons and in detention,'' he said.

The government said that it had set up a group to look into the problem and that it had dismissed several employees at a unit known as Department 124, where the United Nations said the torture appeared to have been the most entrenched. The intelligence service is now admonishing newly assigned interrogators to observe human rights, the government said in its response.

Still, a senior diplomat in Afghanistan said, the report had the potential ''to undermine the strategic partnership'' with both the European Union and the United States, referring to the agreement for future relations that the Americans and Afghans had hoped to complete by December.  It could also jeopardize U.S. financing. Under a law written by Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont, neither the State Department nor the Defense Department can provide assistance or training to any unit of the security forces of a foreign country if there is credible evidence of gross human rights abuses. However, financing can go forward to other units not involved and even to the offending units if serious remedial actions are taken.

''This would clearly constitute credible evidence,'' said Tom Malinowski, the director of the Washington bureau of Human Rights Watch, who has tracked the Leahy law.

Recently, the United States pulled financing for some units of the Pakistani military that were involved in extrajudicial killings in the tribal areas.  Money for the Afghan intelligence agency may not be not covered by the law, but it was unlikely that the Obama administration would use a legal technicality to continue financing the agency if torture allegations persisted, Mr. Malinowski said.

Ultimately the prosecution of the torturers is required, said Georgette Gagnon, the director of human rights for the United Nations in Afghanistan, in order to ''prevent and end such acts in the future.''

A number of instances have raised similar questions in other places, including Uzbekistan, Pakistan and El Salvador, according to a RAND Corp. report in 2006. Aid to Colombia in fighting its drug cartels and insurgents has also raised some of these issues and has periodically been halted to some military units as a result of gross violations of human rights, Mr. Malinowski said.

China taps Rason (Rajin and Sonbong) in N. Korea opening up to foreign investment


The International Herald Tribune October 12, 2011 Wednesday BY EDWARD WONG

A whiff of capitalism in N. Korea; China taps remote spots in a country opening up to foreign investment

A main thrust of the government's strategy is to jump-start several "free trade and economic zones" (Rason) on the country's borders that have languished economically.

A seaside casino resort developed by a Hong Kong company picks Chinese officials and businesspeople up from the nearby border in a red Humvee.

A Chinese construction company is expanding a covered bazaar where North Korean entrepreneurs sell Chinese-made goods to their compatriots at market prices, a sign of nascent capitalism. Trucks bring coal from mines in northeastern China to a pier leased by the Chinese where the coal is then shipped to Shanghai, while a Russian company is leasing another pier.

Those are the just some of the seeds of foreign enterprise in this remote northern port town that North Korean officials are seeking to nurture into full-bloom economic growth. Grappling with an economy that has stagnated from decades of Communist central planning, North Korean leaders are slowly opening the doors of their isolated nation to foreign investment.

A main thrust of their strategy is to jump-start several ''free trade and economic zones'' on the country's borders that have languished. Here, about 50 kilometers, or 30 miles, from China, the twin towns of Rajin and Sonbong, called Rason, are at the vanguard of the new push. Since designating Rason a special zone in 1991, North Korean officials have occasionally tried to attract investment to it, but the results have been lackluster.

Some foreign analysts and businesspeople are skeptical about the current efforts, saying that the country's investment climate remains too unstable. But others argue that North Korea could be establishing here the kind of laboratory that the Chinese Communist Party set up in the fishing village of Shenzhen in 1980 to help move China toward a quasi-market economy.

Foreign journalists got a rare glimpse of Rason when they accompanied Chinese businesspeople on a recent investment tour. The area is an unlikely place for a boomtown. It takes three hours to drive to on a rutted dirt road from the Chinese border. In the surrounding countryside, green with cornfields and pine trees, men ride horses and drive oxcarts while women dry cuttlefish on rooftops. The area, home to 200,000 people, suffers from power blackouts. In the town center, people ride bicycles on dirt tracks. There are few cars, stores or restaurants.

But Rason has a port that remains ice-free the entire year, a rarity in Northeast Asia, and officials here see shipping as one of the pillars of economic growth, along with seafood processing and tourism. They say they also want foreign-run assembly plants and high-tech factories. The monthly minimum wage for such enterprises would be the equivalent of $80 per worker, lower than in China, officials say.

Another incentive is tax breaks. And Hwang Chol-nam, the vice mayor in charge of economic development, said that this was the only place in North Korea where enterprises could be fully foreign owned.

''The Rason government will do its best to provide favorable conditions for investment,'' Mr. Hwang said. ''Please tell the world.''

North Korean leaders have begun executing a 10-year development plan that aims for rapid economic growth through 2020. The central question is whether the ideologies of the country's leader, Kim Jong-il, and senior officials in the ruling Korean Workers' Party will allow the changes necessary to spur that growth. Some analysts say Mr. Kim's visit to Rason in December 2009 was a signal that this town, at least, should embrace experimentation.

More than any other country, North Korea runs on a command economy with limited input from market forces. Misguided policies led to mass starvation that killed millions in the 1990s, and a currency revaluation in 2009 wiped out savings. The nation's per capita gross domestic product is one of the world's lowest.

The country has also been hit by sanctions from the United Nations aimed at forcing Mr. Kim to abandon his nuclear weapons program. And South Korea, which was an important aid and trading partner throughout much of the last decade, has taken a hard line on North Korea since 2008, because of domestic politics there and violence by the North Korean military.

So Pyongyang is casting about for new sources of investment. The powerful National Defense Commission recently created both the State Development Bank and the Taepung International Investment Group, which is charged with, among other things, bringing in foreign investment. Park Chol-su, an ethnic Korean with Chinese citizenship, has top positions in both organizations.

Mr. Park has an office in Beijing and led the recent tour to Rason as well as a visit to the nature park of Mount Kumgang aboard a dilapidated cruise ship. ''It's the market that directs national development,'' Mr. Park said. ''We operate according to market economic principles.''

Mr. Park said North Korea welcomed investment from all countries, including the United States, but was looking closely at China, its longtime ally, because ''China has successfully opened and reformed. At this point, China has ample experience, so it's easier for Chinese enterprises to participate in the North Korean market.''

Some analysts ask how much the development push will help the people of Rason and how much of it will fill the coffers of Pyongyang. Bradley Babson, a former World Bank consultant who studies North Korea, said the leaders were putting ''a high priority and a high profile'' on the economic zones near China in order to ''re-establish central control over the significant potential for trade with China.''

Mr. Kim, the North Korean leader, has visited China four times since 2010. In June, Pyongyang approved a 50-year lease by China on two islands in the economic zone of Sinuiju, across the Yalu River from the Chinese city of Dandong. Mr. Hwang said North Korean officials had met with Chinese policy makers to get advice on writing a new investment law for the economic zones. Chinese businesspeople and other foreigners attended a trade fair in Rason in August.

A Chinese company that has been critical to Rason's development is Yanbian Tianyu International Trade, which got involved in the town 13 years ago. It began by erecting the covered bazaar, and went on to build the casino resort run by the Emperor Group, a hospital and adjoining bread factory, and a telecommunications building. It is now working on a cement factory and also has two iron mines in the country.

''The policy environment has been improving continuously,'' said Zheng Zhexi, 58, the company's vice president. ''It's moving toward a market economy.''

One example he pointed to is official tolerance of the sprawling bazaar. There, ordinary people rent stalls from the government to sell goods that they buy from Chinese traders. Prices fluctuate according to the market, and people haggle. The bazaar has proven so successful that Tianyu has been contracted to expand it to 30,000 square meters, or 320,000 square feet - six times its current size.

Such markets have sprung up all over North Korea because people cannot survive solely on subsidized rations from government food centers. Foreign journalists were allowed a 15-minute tour of the Rason market on the condition that they not bring in cameras or pull out notebooks.

The market, open just a few hours each day, was bustling, selling skinned rabbits and sofas, as well as Sony-brand headphones and Dell-brand computer mice. A soldier with a Kalashnikov slung over his back walked among the aisles, looking to buy. Women running stalls wore red vests, a sign they were officially registered.

In one corner was an office with the English words ''Foreign Exchange'' above the door. In Rason, currency is exchanged at the market rate - 1 Chinese renminbi to 350 North Korean won - rather than at the official rate, which values 1 renminbi at 15 won.

For Rason to really attract foreign investment, it has to solve the ''urgent problem'' of infrastructure, Mr. Hwang said. A Chinese company is building a paved road from the Chinese border that is expected to be completed by November. The town also plans to buy electricity from China and build a coal-fired power plant. Mr. Hwang said officials had signed a contract with a Thai company, the Roxley Group, to establish regular cellphone and Internet service in Rason, and had gotten agreements from the North Korean border guards not to confiscate foreigners' cellphones.

The Peterson Institute for International Economics, based in Washington, recently published conclusions from a 2007 survey of 250 Chinese companies doing business in North Korea. The authors found that while nearly 90 percent were profitable, the companies ''generally have a negative assessment of the business environment'' for reasons like poor infrastructure and lack of rule of law. Most Chinese companies sought to limit their activities to trade and export.

''In the future, of course I want to come here to invest,'' said Wang Zhijun, a Chinese businessman. ''For now, the conditions are not yet mature.''

drone attack, another example of the US assaulting transnational legal process created by its own government since WWII


Herald Hongju Koh

transnational legal process after 9/11

(1)  unsigning the Rome Statute, seeking exemption of the US troops from ICC jurisdiction
(2)  the US’s attitude toward GCs and it’s decision to create Gitmo without complying the GCs as well as designating certain US citizens in US as enemy combatant
(3)  death penalty which has been growing irritant in relationship b/w the US and EU

All of which show assault by the US government on the system of transnational legal process the US has created since WWII to serve its own national interest.  

After WWII the US constructed world public order devoted to liberal internationalism. Its effectiveness was immuted by the intent of polarity of the Cold War. After Berlin Wall fell, from 1981 to 2001, there was an era of global optimism. The US tried to revive the idea of using global cooperation to solve global problem like war crime, global warming, trade, development, AIDS, transnational crime and drug. So the approach adopted by the US was more of diplomacy, more of human rights, and more of democracy, and more of legal process. Then, came in 9/11, a classic example of global problem to solved by global cooperation. The Bush administration responded not within the existing post WWII framework. But they tried to create new architectural counter-response – Bush doctrine.     

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International Herald Tribune  October 10, 2011 Monday BY SCOTT SHANE

A world soon armed with drones; U.S. created a new model for warfare that is certain to be pursued by others

The use of armed drones has been a largely U.S. phenomenon. The spread of such weapons to other countries and potentially to terrorist groups has severe implications. The problem is that the US is creating an international normasserting the right to strike preemptively against those the US suspect of planning attack.
DO – this would be another example of the US assaulting transnational legal process created by its own government since the WWII

FULL TEXT

At the Zhuhai air show in southeastern China last November, Chinese companies startled some Americans by unveiling 25 different models of remotely controlled aircraft and showing video animation of a missile-armed drone taking out an armored vehicle and attacking a U.S. aircraft carrier.

The presentation appeared to be more marketing hype than military threat; the event is China's biggest aviation market, drawing Chinese and foreign military buyers. But it was stark evidence that the United States' near monopoly on armed drones was coming to an end, with far-reaching consequences for international law and the future of warfare, to say nothing of American security.

Eventually, the United States will face a military adversary or terrorist group armed with drones, military analysts say. But what the experts foresee is not an attack on America, which faces no enemies with significant combat drone capabilities, but the political and legal challenges posed when another country follows the U.S. example. The George W. Bush administration, and even more aggressively the administration of President Barack Obama, embraced an extraordinary principle: that the United States can send this robotic weapon over borders to kill perceived enemies, even American citizens, who are viewed as a threat.

''Is this the world we want to live in?'' Micah Zenko, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, has asked. ''Because we're creating it.''

What was a science-fiction scenario not much more than a decade ago has become the news of today. In Iraq and Afghanistan, military drones have become a routine part of the arsenal. In Pakistan, according to American officials, strikes from Predators and Reapers operated by the C.I.A. have killed more than 2,000 militants; the number of civilian casualties is hotly debated. In Yemen last month, an American citizen was, for the first time, the intended target of a drone strike: Anwar al-Awlaki, the Qaeda propagandist and plotter, was killed along with a second American, Samir Khan.

If China, for instance, sends killer drones into Kazakhstan to hunt minority Uighur Muslims it accuses of plotting terrorism, what will the United States say? What if India uses remotely controlled craft to hit terrorism suspects in Kashmir, or Russia sends drones after militants in the Caucasus? American officials who protest are likely to find their own example thrown back at them.

''The problem is that we're creating an international norm'' - asserting the right to strike preemptively against those we suspect of planning attacks, argued Dennis M. Gormley, a senior research fellow at the University of Pittsburgh and author of ''Missile Contagion,'' who has called for tougher export controls on U.S. drone technology. ''The copycatting is what I worry about most.''

The qualities that have made lethal drones so attractive to the Obama administration for counterterrorism appeal to many countries and, conceivably, to terrorist groups: a capacity for leisurely surveillance and precise strikes, modest cost, and most important, no danger to the operator, who may sit in safety, thousands of miles from the target.

To date, only the United States, Israel (against Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza) and Britain (in Afghanistan) are known to have used drones for strikes. But American defense analysts count more than 50 countries that have built or bought unmanned aerial vehicles, or U.A.V.'s, and the number is rising every month. Most are designed for surveillance, but as the United States has found, adding missiles or bombs is hardly a technical challenge.

''The virtue of most U.A.V.'s is that they have long wings and you can strap anything to them,'' Mr. Gormley said.

So far, the United States has a huge lead in the number and sophistication of unmanned aerial vehicles - about 7,000, by one official's estimate. The U.S. Air Force prefers to call them not unmanned aerial vehicles but remotely piloted aircraft, or R.P.A.'s, in acknowledgment of the human role; the air force is now training more pilots to operate drones than fighters and bombers.

Philip Finnegan, director of corporate analysis for the Teal Group, a company that tracks defense and aerospace markets, says global spending on research and procurement of drones during the next decade is expected to total more than $94 billion, including $9 billion on remotely piloted combat aircraft.

Israel and China are aggressively developing and marketing drones, and Russia, Iran, India, Pakistan and several other countries are not far behind. The Defense Security Service, which protects the Pentagon and its contractors from espionage, warned in a report last year that American drone technology had become a prime target for foreign spies.

Last December, a surveillance drone crashed in a neighborhood in El Paso, Texas; it had been launched, it turned out, by the Mexican police across the border. Even Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group, has deployed drones, an Iranian design capable of carrying munitions and diving into a target, said P.W. Singer of the Brookings Institution in Washington, whose 2009 book ''Wired for War'' is a primer on robotic combat.

Late last month, a 26-year-old man from a Boston suburb was arrested and charged with plotting to load a remotely controlled aircraft with plastic explosives and crash it into the Pentagon or U.S. Capitol. His supposed co-conspirators were actually undercover F.B.I. agents, and it was unclear that his plan could have done much damage.

But it was an unnerving harbinger, said John Villasenor, professor of electrical engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles. He noted that the U.S. Army had just announced a $5 million contract for a backpack-size drone called a Switchblade that could carry an explosive payload into a target; such a weapon will not long be beyond the capabilities of a terrorist network.

''If they are skimming over rooftops and trees, they will be almost impossible to shoot down,'' Mr. Villasenor maintained.

It is easy to imagine terrorist drones rigged not just to carry bombs but to spew anthrax or scatter radioactive waste. Speculation that Al Qaeda might use exotic weapons has so far turned out to be just that. But the technological curve for drones means the threat can no longer be discounted.

''I think of where the airplane was at the start of World War I,'' Mr. Singer said. ''At first it was unarmed and limited to a handful of countries. Then it was armed and everywhere. That is the path we're on.''

Germany reopens investigations into Nazi death camp guards – JCE II


Germany reopens investigations into Nazi death camp guards – JCE II
Poland reopens investigations into Nazi-era crimes

Germany reopens investigations into Nazi death camp guards
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 5 October 2011

Prosecutors in Germany have reopened hundreds of investigations of former Nazi death camp guards and others who might now be charged under a precedent set by the conviction of John Demjanjuk, a guard at Sobibor camp in Poland in 1943.

the head of the German prosecutors' office dedicated to investigating Nazi war crimes , Kurt Schrimm

The Simon Wiesenthal Centre's chief Nazi-hunter, Efraim Zuroff, said he would launch a campaign in the next two months – a successor to his Operation Last Chance – to track down the remaining war criminals.

He added that the Demjanjuk conviction had opened the door to prosecutions that were never thought possible.

Demjanjuk, now 91, was deported from the US to Germany in 2009 to stand trial. He was convicted in May of 28,060 counts of accessory to murder for serving as a guard at the Sobibor death camp.
It was the first time prosecutors were able to convict someone in a Nazi-era case without direct evidence that the suspect participated in a specific killing.
He has appealed against his conviction.

In bringing Demjanjuk to trial, Munich prosecutors argued that if they could prove he was a guard at a camp like Sobibor, which had been established for the sole purpose of extermination, it would be enough to convict him of being an accessory to murder.

After 18 months of testimony a Munich court agreed and found Demjanjuk guilty, sentencing him to five years in prison. Demjanjuk, a retired car worker who denies having served as a guard, is currently free and living in southern Germany as he waits for his appeal to be heard.

Schrimm said his office was poring over its files to see if others fit into the same category as Demjanjuk.  He could not give an exact figure, but said there were probably "less than 1,000" possible suspects living in Germany and elsewhere who could face prosecution.

It has not yet been tested in court whether the Demjanjuk precedent could be extended to guards of Nazi camps where thousands died but whose sole purpose was not necessarily murder.

Murder and related offences are the only charges that are not subject to a statute of limitations in Germany.  Even the narrowest scenario – investigating the guards of the four death camps: Belzec, Chelmno, Sobibor and Treblinka – plus those involved in the Einsatzgruppen could lead to scores of prosecutions, Zuroff said.

Immediately after the war senior Nazis such as Hermann Göring were convicted at war-crimes trials run by the allied powers, while investigations of lower-ranking officials fell to German courts.  But there was little political will to aggressively pursue the prosecutions, and many of the trials ended with short sentences or the acquittal of suspects in greater positions of responsibility than Demjanjuk allegedly had.

However, Schrimm said it makes sense to try to bring new cases to trial once the Demjanjuk case is through the appeals process, rather than expend the resources needed to charge a suspect only to have the case thrown out if Demjanjuk wins.

Zuroff said he hoped the appeal would be fast-tracked so new charges could be filed. "This is a test for the German judicial system to see if they can expedite this in an appropriate manner to enable these cases to go forward," he added.

Germany reopens hundreds of Nazi investigations
October 5th, 2011

"This signals that there is a new generation of prosecutors who want to take a fresh and serious look, and it means that the larger German bureaucratic machine is paying attention to the importance of finding these criminals."

Germany Reopens Nazi War Criminal Investigations
October 9, 2011

the defense attorney for Demjanjuk, he has often made the argument that his client is effectively a stand-in and a kind of scapegoat. That he essentially stood by and did nothing and participated, but that a great many Germans at that time did the same thing. And I guess I'm wondering what you feel about that assessment



Poland reopens investigations into Nazi-era crimes
Thu Oct 27, 2011

WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland has reopened investigations into crimes committed at the Nazi death camp of Auschwitz during World War Two, in an effort to track down any surviving camp employees before they die.

Up to 1.5 million people, mostly Jews, perished at Nazi German hands at Auschwitz, near the city of Krakow in southern Poland, during the war that ended in 1945.

In the postwar communist era, Warsaw launched probes into crimes committed at Auschwitz, but closed them in the 1980s because questioning witnesses and perpetrators based abroad was too hard at a time when Poland was part of the Soviet bloc.

"We do not exclude the possibility of finding alive former employees of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp," Piotr Piatek of Poland's Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) told the PAP state news agency Thursday.

Jewish groups welcomed Thursday's announcement by the IPN.

Poland reopens investigation into Auschwitz crimes
By VANESSA GERA, Associated Press   Oct.27, 2011

Nazi Germany opened Auschwitz in 1940, months after it invaded and occupied Poland. Over the next five years of war, German and Austrian Nazis murdered up to 1.5 million people there at the expanded Auschwitz-Birkenau camp complex, most of them Jews from across Europe, but also Poles, Roma, gays and others

A leading international Nazi hunter, Efraim Zuroff, praised Poland's reopening of the investigation

Poland reopens investigations into Auschwitz crimes
By Matthew Day, Warsaw , 27 Oct 2011

Many of the old cases were started in the 1970s and 1980s but failed to progress owing to difficulties caused by the Iron Curtain,

Most of the staff who served at the camp were captured and punished but a 1956 amnesty stopped trials and led to the release of some of those imprisoned for crimes committed at Auschwitz 

North Koreans in Libya banned from returning home


North Koreans in Libya banned from returning home
Posted By Suzanne Merkelson   Thursday, October 27, 2011

Can North Koreans living and working abroad possibly have it worse than those citizens who stay home? From waitresses who work in government-run restaurants across Asia to seamstresses essentially enslaved in the Czech Republic to the well-documented North Korean football team publically shamed after its World Cup loss, it's obvious that the regime's brutality doesn't stop at the border. Now, the estimated 200 North Korean citizens living in Libya have been banned from returning to North Korea, due to fears that news of the Arab Spring will leak to the country's 23 million subjugated inhabitants.

As the Telegraph reports, Kim Jong Il's regime had a close relationship with Muammar al-Qaddafi -- the North Koreans sent doctors, nurses, and construction workers to Libya, earning hard currency needed to buy missiles and equipment for North Korean's nascent nuclear weapons program. The North Koreans in Libya join other nationals who had been working in Tunisia and Egypt not allowed to return home.

According to the Telegraph, North Korean media hasn't reported on Qaddafi's death and only about one percent of North Koreans are even aware of the uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa -- mainly government officials and a few citizens who travel to China for business.

As an editorial in the Korean Herald says:

Pyongyang's silence about the fall of the dictators in Tunisia and Egypt and the bloody death of Gaddafi reveals Kim Jong-il's awareness of the vulnerability of his regime in the process of a third-generation dynastic succession of power. Despite their boasting of the perfect loyalty of the 23 million people to the party and the leader, the ruling elite are afraid of what effect the information on the fates of the overseas dictatorships will have on the oppressed people of the country.

Kim Jong-un has soft-landed as successor

In North Korea, a new personality cult is seeded
The International Herald Tribune , October 1, 2011 Saturday , CHOE SANG-HUN

It is a telling sign of who is the rising star in North Korea: state-run television showing octogenarian party secretaries bowing to a man their grandchildren's age before accepting the smiling young man's handshake or kowtowing to his instructions.

A year after Kim Jong-un made his public debut as North Korea's leader-in-waiting, scenes like that - the old party elite groveling like servile vassals - have become a staple of North Korea's propagandist media, a key tool for its leader, Kim Jong-il, to elevate his son as his successor.

''The obvious message of all this to North Koreans is that Kim Jong-un is now dictating to the top elite,'' said Cheong Seong-chang, a North Korea specialist at the Sejong Institute in South Korea. ''It reflects the regime's confidence about his status as successor and about another hereditary succession.''

When Kim Jong-un, thought to be in his late 20s, emerged from obscurity a year ago this past week as a four-star general and vice chairman of the Workers' Party's Central Military Commission, the first thing the outside world noticed was the obesity he appeared to have inherited from his father and his grandfather, the late North Korean founder Kim Il-sung. (Some South Korean news media outlets speculate that he may have undergone plastic surgery to more closely resemble his grandfather, a godlike figure among North Koreans.)

A year on, it appears increasingly clear that the regime is helping Kim Jong-un inherit a personality cult of his own. On state TV, he is packaged to look like his grandfather: Mao suit, swept-back hair and the gravitas North Koreans associate with the ''Great Leader,'' who died in 1994. Less clear is whether the ruthless cunning that has intimidated generals and party elders is his or his father's. Key to the political dynamics surrounding the succession in Pyongyang, analysts say, is whether Kim Jong-il can live long enough to provide his son with whatever assistance he may need to settle into power.

At national events, officials now habitually propose a toast to the health not only of Kim Jong-il but also of ''the young general,'' says Peter Hughes, who left Pyongyang in September after three years as British ambassador.

Last November, An Jong-hyok, the physician for the North Korean national soccer team, chastised a South Korean reporter for referring to Kim Jong-un without the honorific ''Dear Young General.''

''How would you feel if I talked impolitely to your father? That's exactly how I feel now,'' South Korea's Daily Sports quoted Mr. Ahn as saying. ''We regard Gen. Kim Jong-il and Comrade Kim Jong-un like our father.''

Factories commemorate a visit by Kim Jong-un with a special plaque, an honor that had until now been reserved for his father and grandfather. His name now immediately follows his father's in rosters of officials who attended state functions. On the Sept. 9 anniversary of the founding of the North Korean regime, the father and son together inspected a military parade. On Sept. 23, the son joined his father in a photograph with Choummaly Sayasone, the visiting president of Laos.

''It appears that Kim Jong-un has soft-landed as successor,'' Mr. Cheong said.

It is a stark contrast to a year ago, when the transition - taking place in the panicked atmosphere of Kim Jong-il's failing health - seemed that it could pose challenges to the regime's internal cohesion.

Kim Jong-il had fought for his inheritance as much as it was bestowed upon him by his father. He terrorized the older elite and won their grudging respect in a process of consolidating absolute power that lasted decades. By comparison, Kim Jong-un resembled more of an inexperienced, even clueless, dauphin thrust onto a fast track whipped together after his father suffered a stroke in 2008.

The question then was whether the old elite, whose ambitions and interpersonal rivalries were tamped by Kim Jong-il's merciless power, would support the son in the event of the father's death.

Perhaps to the son's advantage, Kim Jong-il recovered enough to make five trips to China and Russia in the past two years. Meanwhile, there has been a steady stream of political purges, according to North Korean announcements and South Korean intelligence, with top party officials executed, dismissed or demoted - and a few killed in traffic accidents under circumstances the South Korean news media found suspicious.

Park Hyong-joong, an analyst at the government-run Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul, said that Kim Jong-un was believed to have masterminded the execution of Ryu Kyong, the No. 2 man in the North's spy agency, the State Security Department, in January and the dismissal in March of Ju Sang-song, the police chief. ''With Ryu, many others were purged at the State Security Department,'' Mr. Park said. ''We can say that as he gained control of the department, Kim Jong-un needed to give jobs to people loyal to him.''

As he has strengthened his position at home, his alienated half-brother, Kim Jong-nam, is living in affluent exile in China. Kim Jong-nam's 16-year-old son, Kim Jong-il's grandson, has been accepted to study at an international college in Bosnia, The Associated Press reported Friday.

Since the collapse of the Soviet bloc, the North Korean regime has been under a prolonged death watch. But it has proved resilient, surviving decades of international sanctions and a famine that by some estimates killed one-tenth of its population. It has flouted the U.N. Security Council to conduct the world's two most recent nuclear tests and has cannily manipulated the Americans, the Chinese and the South Koreans into providing it with aid.

While South Korea moved on to build an export-driven global economy, North Korea has dug in, building what analysts call a ''garrison state'' where malnutrition stunts children's growth, an unaccounted number languish in prison camps and party slogans scream of a coming invasion of the ''American imperialists.'' The regime's apparently effortless transfer of dynastic power into a third generation once again testifies to its endurance.

The new leadership in Pyongyang remains determined to pursue nuclear weapons. Last November, it revealed an industrial-scale uranium enrichment plant. It has also been accused of sinking a South Korean warship in a torpedo attack that killed 46 in 2010, and it shelled a South Korean island last November.

It is also increasing trade ties with China - with a resulting influx of foreign goods, such as South Korean DVDs and electronics - and has begun, again, reaching out for talks with Washington and Seoul.

In Pyongyang, a city filled with anti-American slogans, outside visitors often find children wearing Mickey Mouse backpacks and T-shirts.

John Delury, a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul, who visited North Korea in September, said: ''From what can be gleaned on visits to the country itself, Pyongyang at least shows visible signs of vitality: the increase in volume and variety of cars and trucks on the streets, construction projects swarming with workers, the bustling scene at the central market, and the incessant portaging of goods across the city - burgeoning market activity carried out overwhelmingly by enterprising women.''

But while visitors to Pyongyang have reported that women can be spotted occasionally in more stylish clothes, Mr. Hughes told reporters in Seoul this past week that ''fundamentally there have been no changes in terms of ideology or policy'' in North Korea.

''There is no civil society, there's no center of dissent, there's no intellectual grouping, there's no way of actually communicating outside of the mobile phone,'' he said, adding that people who have such phones, estimated at 600,000, ''are very careful of what they say, because they believe everything is being listened to.''

Adm. Robert F. Willard, commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, said that, in the past, succession has been accompanied by provocations as the new leadership has tried to establish its bona fides with the military, and that Kim Jong-un may not be an exception.

''The prospect of continued provocations is another dynamic that we must pay very close attention to,'' Admiral Willard said during a news briefing in Washington over the past week

the pitfalls of outsourcing immigration enforcement


Dark profits in industry of migrant detention;
As private security firms craft a global business, abuses in camps soar
NINA BERNSTEIN , September 30, 2011 Friday. The International Herald Tribune

The men showed up in a small town in Australia's outback early last year, offering top dollar for all available lodgings. Within days, their company, Serco, was flying in recruits from as far away as London and busing them from trailers to work 12-hour shifts as guards in a remote camp where immigrants seeking asylum are indefinitely detained.

It was just a small part of a pattern on three continents where a handful of multinational security companies have been turning crackdowns on immigration into a growing global industry.

Especially in Britain, the United States and Australia, governments of different stripes have increasingly looked to such companies to expand detention and show voters they are enforcing tougher immigration laws.

Some of the companies are huge - one is among the largest private employers in the world - and they say they are meeting demand faster and less expensively than the public sector could. But the ballooning of privatized detention has been accompanied by  scathing inspection reports, lawsuits and the documentation of widespread abuse and neglect, sometimes lethal.

Human rights groups say detention has neither worked as a deterrent nor speeded deportation, as governments contend, and some worry about the creation of a ''detention-industrial complex'' with a momentum of its own.

''They're very good at the glossy brochure,'' said Kaye Bernard, general secretary of the union of detention workers on the Australian territory of Christmas Island, where riots erupted this year between asylum seekers and guards. ''On the ground, it's almost laughable, the chaos and the inability to function.''

Private prisons in the United States have long stirred controversy. But while there have been conflicting studies about their costs and benefits, no systematic comparisons exist for immigration detention, say scholars like Matthew J. Gibney, a political science professor at the University of Oxford who tracks immigration systems.

Still, Mr. Gibney and others say the pitfalls of outsourcing immigration enforcement have become evident in the past 15 years. ''When something goes wrong - a death, an escape - the government can blame it on a kind of market failure instead of an accountability failure,'' he said.

In the United States - with almost 400,000 annual detentions in 2010, up from 280,000 in 2005 - private companies now control nearly half of all detention beds, compared with only 8 percent in state and federal prisons, according to government figures. In Britain, 7 of 11 detention centers and most short-term holding places for immigrants are run by for-profit contractors.

No country has more completely outsourced immigration enforcement, with more troubled results, than Australia. Under unusually severe mandatory detention laws, the system has been run by a succession of three publicly traded companies since 1998. All three are now major players in the international business of locking up and transporting unwanted foreigners.

The first, the Florida-based prison company GEO Group, lost its Australia contract in 2003 amid a commission's findings that detained children were subjected to cruel treatment. An Australian government audit reported that the contract had not delivered ''value-for-money.'' In the United States, GEO controls 7,000 of 32,000 detention beds.

The second company, G4S, an Anglo-Danish security conglomerate with more than 600,000 employees in 125 countries, was faulted for lethal neglect and abusive use of solitary confinement in Australia. By the middle of the past decade, after refugee children had sewed their lips together during hunger strikes in camps like Woomera and Curtin, and government commissions discovered that Australian citizens and legal residents were being wrongly detained and deported, protests pushed the Liberal Party government to dismantle some aspects of the system.

But after promising to return the work to the public sector, a Labor government awarded a five-year, $370 million contract to Serco in 2009. The value of the contract has since soared beyond $756 million as detention sites quadrupled, to 24, and the number of detainees ballooned to 6,700 from 1,000.

Dangerous problems

Over the past year, riots, fires and suicidal protests left millions of dollars in damage at Serco-run centers from Christmas Island to Villawood, outside Sydney, and self-harm by detainees rose twelvefold, government documents show. In August, a government inspection report cited dangerous overcrowding, inadequate and ill-trained staff, no crisis planning and no requirement that Serco add employees when population exceeded capacity.

At the detention center Serco runs in Villawood, immigrants spoke of long, open-ended detentions making them crazy. Alwy Fadhel, 33, an Indonesian Christian who said he needed asylum from Islamic persecution, had long black hair coming out in clumps after being held for more than three years, in and out of solitary confinement.

''We talk to ourselves,'' Mr. Fadhel said. ''We talk to the mirror; we talk to the wall.''

Naomi Leong, a shy 9-year-old, was born in the detention camp. For more than three years, at a cost of about $380,000, she and her mother were held behind its barbed wire. Psychiatrists said Naomi was growing up mute, banging her head against the walls while her mother, Virginia Leong, a Malaysian citizen accused of trying to use a false passport, sank into depression.

Naomi and her mother became a cause célèbre in protests against the mandatory detention system, leading to their release in 2005 on rare humanitarian visas. They are now citizens.

''I come here to give little bit of hope to the people,'' Ms. Leong said during a recent visit to Villawood, where posters display the governing principles of Serco, beginning with, ''We foster an entrepreneurial culture.''

Free-market solutions

Companies often say that losing a contract is the ultimate accountability.

''We are acutely aware of our responsibilities and are committed to the humane, fair and decent treatment of all those in our care,'' a Serco spokesman said in an e-mail. ''We will continue to work with our customers around the world and seek to improve the services we provide for them.''

But lost detention contracts are rare and easily replaced in this fast-growing business. Serco's $10 billion portfolio includes many other businesses, from air traffic control and visa processing in the United States, to nuclear weapons maintenance, video surveillance and welfare-to-work programs in Britain, where it also operates several prisons and two ''immigration removal centers.''

''If one area or territory slows down, we can move where the growth is,'' Christopher Hyman, Serco's chief executive, told investors last year, after reporting a 35 percent increase in profits. This spring, Serco reported a 13 percent profit rise.

Its rival G4S delivers cash to banks on most continents, runs airport security in 80 countries and has 1,500 employees in immigration enforcement in Britain, the Netherlands and the United States, where its services include escorting illegal border-crossers back to Mexico for the Department of Homeland Security.

Nick Buckles, chief executive of G4S, would not discuss the company. But last year he told analysts how its ''justice'' business in the Netherlands blossomed in one week after the 2002 assassination of a politician with an anti-immigrant and law-and-order agenda.

''There's nothing like a political crisis to stimulate a bit of change,'' Mr. Buckles said.

In Britain last autumn, the company came under criminal investigation in the asphyxiation of an Angolan man who died as three G4S escorts held him down on a British Airways flight. Soon afterward, the British immigration authorities announced that the company had lost its bid to renew a $48 million deportation escort contract because it was underbid by a competitor.

Even so, G4S has more than $1.1 billion in government contracts in Britain, a spokesman said, only about $126 million from the immigration authority. It quickly replaced the lost revenue with contracts to build, lease and run more police jails and prisons.

In 2007, Western Australia's Human Rights Commission found that G4S drivers had ignored the cries of detainees locked in a scorching van, leaving them so dehydrated that one drank his own urine. The company was ordered to pay $500,000 for inhumane treatment, but three of the five victims already had been deported. Immigration officials, relying on company misinformation, had dismissed their complaints without investigation, the commission found.

There was a public outcry when an Aborigine man died in another G4S van in similar circumstances the next year. A coroner ruled in 2009 that G4S, the drivers and the government shared the blame. The company was later awarded a $70 million, five-year prisoner transport contract in another state, Victoria, without competition.

G4S pleaded guilty to negligence in the van death this year and was fined $285,000. Mr. Buckles, its chief executive, alluded to the case at a meeting with analysts in March, reassuring them.

''There is only two or three major players, typically sometimes only two people bidding,'' Mr. Buckles said. ''In time, we will become a winner in that market because there's a lot of outsourcing opportunities and not many competitors.''

legality of the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki

DO
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 507, 597 (2004) (Thomas, J., dissenting) (suggesting that the plurality would not demand additional process in a situation where US citizens are targeted and killed in Yemen missile strike)

A Just Act of War
By JACK L. GOLDSMITH,  September 30, 2011

Santa Fe, N.M.
ON Friday, an American drone flying over northern Yemen killed Anwar al-Awlaki, a leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula — a Qaeda affiliate. Mr. Awlaki helped support an attempted attack on a Detroit-bound flight in 2009 and had been linked to other attempted attacks in the United States.

Drone strikes against terrorists outside of so-called hot battlefields like Afghanistan have become commonplace during the Obama presidency, and have reportedly decimated the leadership of Al Qaeda and its affiliates. What made this strike unusual, however, was that Mr. Awlaki was an American citizen, having been born in New Mexico.

This fateful new step in our ever-expanding war against terrorists — intentionally killing an American citizen — is fraught with the danger of executive overreach or mistakes. But the Obama administration has done an admirable job to date of balancing these potential dangers against security imperatives.

The United States did not claim the power to kill Mr. Awlaki because of his political views or because he was a mere member of a Qaeda affiliate against which Congress had authorized the use of force. It claimed the power to kill him, rather, because he was an operational leader of a Qaeda affiliate that had been involved in terrorist plots on American soil and because he was hiding in a country that lacked the capacity to arrest him and bring him to justice.

Nor does the killing of Mr. Awlaki mean, as Glenn Greenwald charged in Salon, that “due-process-free assassination of U.S. citizens is now reality.” An attack on an enemy soldier during war is not an assassination. During World War II, the United States targeted and killed Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto, the architect of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Moreover, the United States knew there were many American citizens in the German Army during World War II, but it did not alter its bombing practices as a result.

And while no court approved the killing of Mr. Awlaki, it is not accurate to say that he was targeted without due process. What due process requires depends on context. In a lawsuit brought last year that sought to prevent the government from targeting Mr. Awlaki, a federal judge ruled that in wartime the Constitution left it to the president and Congress, not the courts, to decide military targeting issues.

Even with this ruling, there is an understandable concern about the president’s making a decision to kill an American citizen. This is why the Obama administration has gone to unusual lengths, consistent with the need to protect intelligence, to explain the basis for and limits on its actions. Mr. Obama’s senior counterterrorism adviser, John O. Brennan, made clear in a recent speech that, outside traditional battlefields, the United States targets only individuals who threaten American security. Moreover, there is an extraordinary process inside the government to ensure that this standard is met.

Before someone like Mr. Awlaki is targeted, multiple intelligence sources support the conclusion that he is a dangerous threat, top lawyers from many agencies scrutinize the action, policy makers at the highest levels of government approve the action after assessing its legal and political risks, and the Congressional intelligence committees are informed about the intelligence community’s role in the operations.

It is true that these internal targeting procedures gave Mr. Awlaki less due process than he would have received from a court. And these procedures are no guarantee against mistakes (though judicial process provides no such guarantee either).

That said, these procedures are wholly unprecedented in war, and they exceed anything the law requires. The caution inherent in this internal process is appropriate to guard against mistaken or imprudent actions when targeting individuals who have the power to wreak havoc on America while hiding among civilians in faraway places.

Such a cautious approach is especially appropriate when an American citizen is targeted. The president has a duty to keep the country safe. So far, it appears, the Obama administration is exercising this duty lawfully and with caution. Such caution, however, does not guarantee legitimacy at home or abroad. There are relatively few complaints in American society about the drone program, but drones are becoming increasingly controversial outside the United States on the ground that they violate international law.

The Obama administration has tried to explain the basis for its actions under international law just as it has under domestic law. But its international law arguments are more controversial. The administration claims that strikes in places like Yemen are consistent with the United Nations charter because the other country consents to them or is unable or unwilling to check the terrorist threat, thereby bringing America’s right to self-defense into play. Moreover, the White House argues that such strikes comply with international law-of-war duties to distinguish civilians from attack and use only proportionate force.

These international-law arguments are unconvincing to those who deny the possibility of a war in many nations against nonstate actors, and who are deeply worried about the asymmetrical power that drones possess — precluding, as they do, the need to put American soldiers at risk. Drone critics are increasingly mobilizing forces — at the United Nations, through human rights advocacy and litigation, and in other arenas — to attack the American drone program and make it more costly to use. 

This campaign will only gain steam after today’s strike in Yemen. The Obama administration cannot afford to ignore these efforts, but it also cannot give in to them.

It can perhaps release a bit more information about the basis for its targeted strikes. It is doubtful, however, that more transparency or more elaborate legal arguments will change many minds, since the goal of drone critics is to end their use altogether (outside of Afghanistan).

While the administration must continue to manage its critics, it cannot afford to forgo using drones, which are an accurate, successful and cost-effective counterterrorism tool whose value will only grow as the United States withdraws its troops from Afghanistan and Iraq.

Jack L. Goldsmith, a former assistant attorney general in the George W. Bush administration, teaches at Harvard Law School, serves on the Hoover Institution Task Force on National Security and Law and is the author of “The Terror Presidency.”


An Illegal and Counterproductive Assassination
By YASIR QADHI , October 1, 2011

Yasir Qadhi, an American Muslim cleric, is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Religious Studies at Yale. He blogs at muslimmatters.org.
Memphis
ANWAR AL-AWLAKI, the Yemeni-American cleric who was killed Friday in a C.I.A. drone attack in Yemen, appears to be the first United States citizen that our government has publicly targeted for assassination.

The accusations against him were very serious, but as a citizen, he deserved a fair trial and the chance to face his accusers in a court of law. Whether he deserved any punishment for his speech was a decision that a jury should have made, not the executive branch of our government. The killing of this American citizen is not only unconstitutional, but hypocritical and counterproductive.

The assassination is unconstitutional because the Fifth Amendment specifies that no person may “be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” A group of policy makers unilaterally deciding that a particular citizen needs to be targeted is not, by any stretch of the imagination, due process.

The assassination is hypocritical because America routinely criticizes (and justifiably so) such extrajudicial assassinations when they occur at the hands of another government. We most certainly don’t approve the regimes of Syria or Iran eliminating those whom they deem to be traitors. In fact, Al Qaeda’s own justifications for murder stem from the notion that its members are qualified to be the judge, jury and executioner of those whom they view as enemies. America’s moral authority is undermined if we criticize in others what we do ourselves. It only reinforces the stereotype that the United States has very little concern for its own principles. Even Nazi war criminals got their day in court, at Nuremburg.

It is ironic to note that those who have actually attempted terrorist attacks on American soil and been caught were read their Miranda rights and went to trial, even though some were not United States citizens. Yet Mr. Awlaki, who has never been accused of himself directly attempting an attack, was not given this chance.

Lastly, the assassination is counterproductive because it feeds into the martyr mythology that makes Al Qaeda’s narrative so different from that of most other terrorist groups.

If our policy makers studied history, they would realize that Sayyid Qutb, a founder of radical Islam, while popular in his life, only achieved his legendary status after the Nasser regime in Egypt had him executed, in 1966. Instantly, his books became (and remain) best sellers. Killing people doesn’t make their ideas go away.

Mr. Awlaki was born in New Mexico in 1971 while his father was pursuing graduate studies. Though his parents returned to Yemen when he was seven, he later returned to the United States to pursue degrees in engineering and education. Eventually, he became an imam, or leader, of a mosque in California and later in Virginia. During these years, it is alleged that he met multiple times with at least three of the 9/11 hijackers. But for many American Muslims, he was only known for one thing: the telling of stories from the Koran. He lectured about the lives of the prophets of God, drawing from traditional Islamic sources (and sometimes even Biblical ones).

His captivating lecture style and copious quotations from classical sources made him extremely popular, especially among American Muslim youth. During these pre-9/11 years, these lectures, still available online, became some of the hottest-selling items at some Islamic conferences across America. At this stage, he was not publicly associated with any radical views. However, after 9/11, he adopted a more adversarial and anti-American tone, eventually moving back to Yemen. He was jailed for two years (and rumored to have been tortured).

It was only after his release that he publicly began supporting Al Qaeda and issuing messages calling for attacks upon the United States. It was alleged that he came into contact with or inspired a number of people to attempt terrorist activities: Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, the Army psychiatrist accused in the 2009 killings in Fort Hood, Tex.; Umar Farouk Abdulmuttalib, accused of trying to set off a bomb hidden in his underwear on a 2009 flight to Detroit; and Faisal Shahzad, who tried to blow up a car in Times Square last year.

Mr. Awlaki’s ideas were dangerous. His message that one cannot be a good Muslim and an American at the same time was insulting to nearly all American Muslims. His views about the permissibility of killing Americans indiscriminately were completely at odds with those of mainstream Muslim clerics around the world. He needed to be refuted. And that is why many people, myself included, were extremely vocal in doing just that.

Mr. Awlaki needed to be challenged, not assassinated. By killing him, America has once again blurred the lines between its own tactics and the tactics of its enemies. In silencing Mr. Awlaki’s voice, not only did America fail to live up to its ideals, but it gave Mr. Awlaki’s dangerous message a life and power of its own. And these two facts make the job of refuting that message now even more difficult.



A Targeted killing.
International Herald Tribune
October 13, 2011 Thursday

President Obama said Mr. Awlaki, a radical Muslim cleric, had taken ''the lead role in planning and directing the efforts to murder innocent Americans.'' Officials have said Mr. Awlaki's role went beyond inspiration into operational planning of attacks, though they have not supplied proof. If the White House would release the evidence it has to back up these claims, it would have a better chance of justifying the cleric's death.

The memo, prepared by two Justice Department lawyers, said Mr. Awlaki could be killed because he was taking part in the war between the United States and Al Qaeda and posed a significant threat to Americans, but it stopped short of analyzing the quality of the evidence. It said joining an enemy force deprived him of a citizen's due process rights, citing several Supreme Court rulings that put the protection of innocent lives above the risk of possible death of a suspect.


Secret U.S. Memo Made Legal Case to Kill a Citizen
By CHARLIE SAVAGE , October 8, 2011

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration’s secret legal memorandum that opened the door to the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born radical Muslim cleric hiding in Yemen, found that it would be lawful only if it were not feasible to take him alive, according to people who have read the document.

The memo, written last year, followed months of extensive interagency deliberations and offers a glimpse into the legal debate that led to one of the most significant decisions made by President Obama — to move ahead with the killing of an American citizen without a trial.

The secret document provided the justification for acting despite an executive order banning assassinations, a federal law against murder, protections in the Bill of Rights and various strictures of the international laws of war, according to people familiar with the analysis. The memo, however, was narrowly drawn to the specifics of Mr. Awlaki’s case and did not establish a broad new legal doctrine to permit the targeted killing of any Americans believed to pose a terrorist threat.

The Obama administration has refused to acknowledge or discuss its role in the drone strike that killed Mr. Awlaki last month and that technically remains a covert operation. The government has also resisted growing calls that it provide a detailed public explanation of why officials deemed it lawful to kill an American citizen, setting a precedent that scholars, rights activists and others say has raised concerns about the rule of law and civil liberties.

But the document that laid out the administration’s justification — a roughly 50-page memorandum by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, completed around June 2010 — was described on the condition of anonymity by people who have read it.

The legal analysis, in essence, concluded that Mr. Awlaki could be legally killed, if it was not feasible to capture him, because intelligence agencies said he was taking part in the war between the United States and Al Qaeda and posed a significant threat to Americans, as well as because Yemeni authorities were unable or unwilling to stop him.

The memorandum, which was written more than a year before Mr. Awlaki was killed, does not independently analyze the quality of the evidence against him.

The administration did not respond to requests for comment on this article.

The deliberations to craft the memo included meetings in the White House Situation Room involving top lawyers for the Pentagon, State Department, National Security Council and intelligence agencies.
It was principally drafted by David Barron and Martin Lederman, who were both lawyers in the Office of Legal Counsel at the time, and was signed by Mr. Barron. The office may have given oral approval for an attack on Mr. Awlaki before completing its detailed memorandum. Several news reports before June 2010 quoted anonymous counterterrorism officials as saying that Mr. Awlaki had been placed on a kill-or-capture list around the time of the attempted bombing of a Detroit-bound airliner on Dec. 25, 2009. Mr. Awlaki was accused of helping to recruit the attacker for that operation.

Mr. Awlaki, who was born in New Mexico, was also accused of playing a role in a failed plot to bomb two cargo planes last year, part of a pattern of activities that counterterrorism officials have said showed that he had evolved from merely being a propagandist — in sermons justifying violence by Muslims against the United States — to playing an operational role in Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula’s continuing efforts to carry out terrorist attacks.

Other assertions about Mr. Awlaki included that he was a leader of the group, which had become a “cobelligerent” with Al Qaeda, and he was pushing it to focus on trying to attack the United States again. The lawyers were also told that capturing him alive among hostile armed allies might not be feasible if and when he were located.

Based on those premises, the Justice Department concluded that Mr. Awlaki was covered by the authorization to use military force against Al Qaeda that Congress enacted shortly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 — meaning that he was a lawful target in the armed conflict unless some other legal prohibition trumped that authority.

It then considered possible obstacles and rejected each in turn.

Among them was an executive order that bans assassinations. That order, the lawyers found, blocked unlawful killings of political leaders outside of war, but not the killing of a lawful target in an armed conflict.

federal statute that prohibits Americans from murdering other Americans abroad, the lawyers wrote, did not apply either, because it is not “murder” to kill a wartime enemy in compliance with the laws of war.

But that raised another pressing question: would it comply with the laws of war if the drone operator who fired the missile was a Central Intelligence Agency official, who, unlike a soldier, wore no uniform? The memorandum concluded that such a case would not be a war crime, although the operator might be in theoretical jeopardy of being prosecuted in a Yemeni court for violating Yemen’s domestic laws against murder, a highly unlikely possibility.

DO – CIA is technically speaking civilian. DPHing is not a violation of law of armed conflict (LOAC). Instead, CIA is not entitled to POW status (not protected under LOAC)

Then there was the Bill of Rights: the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee that a “person” cannot be seized by the government unreasonably, and the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee that the government may not deprive a person of life “without due process of law.”

The memo concluded that what was reasonable, and the process that was due, was different for Mr. Awlaki than for an ordinary criminal. It cited court cases allowing American citizens who had joined an enemy’s forces to be detained or prosecuted in a military court just like noncitizen enemies.

It also cited several other Supreme Court precedents, like a 2007 case involving a high-speed chase and a 1985 case involving the shooting of a fleeing suspect, finding that it was constitutional for the police to take actions that put a suspect in serious risk of death in order to curtail an imminent risk to innocent people.

The document’s authors argued that “imminent” risks could include those by an enemy leader who is in the business of attacking the United States whenever possible, even if he is not in the midst of launching an attack at the precise moment he is located.

There remained, however, the question of whether — when the target is known to be a citizen — it was permissible to kill him if capturing him instead were a feasible way of suppressing the threat.
Killed in the strike alongside Mr. Awlaki was another American citizen, Samir Khan, who had produced a magazine for Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula promoting terrorism. He was apparently not on the targeting list, making his death collateral damage. His family has issued a statement citing the Fifth Amendment and asking whether it was necessary for the government to have “assassinated two of its citizens.”

“Was this style of execution the only solution?” the Khan family asked in its statement. “Why couldn’t there have been a capture and trial?”

Last month, President Obama’s top counterterrorism adviser, John O. Brennan, delivered a speech in which he strongly denied the accusation that the administration had sometimes chosen to kill militants when capturing them was possible, saying the policy preference is to interrogate them for intelligence.

The memorandum is said to declare that in the case of a citizen, it is legally required to capture the militant if feasible — raising a question: was capturing Mr. Awlaki in fact feasible?

It is possible that officials decided last month that it was not feasible to attempt to capture him because of factors like the risk it could pose to American commandos and the diplomatic problems that could arise from putting ground forces on Yemeni soil. Still, the raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan demonstrates that officials have deemed such operations feasible at times.
Last year, Yemeni commandos surrounded a village in which Mr. Awlaki was believed to be hiding, but he managed to slip away.

The administration had already expressed in public some of the arguments about issues of international law addressed by the memo, in a speech delivered in March 2010 by Harold Hongju Koh, the top State Department lawyer. (ASIL speech by Harold Hongju Koh)

The memorandum examined whether it was relevant that Mr. Awlaki was in Yemen, far from Afghanistan. It concluded that Mr. Awlaki’s geographical distance from the so-called hot battlefield did not preclude him from the armed conflict; given his presumed circumstances, the United States still had a right to use force to defend itself against him.

As to whether it would violate Yemen’s sovereignty to fire a missile at someone on Yemeni soil, Yemen’s president secretly granted the United States that permission, as secret diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks have revealed.

The memorandum did assert that other limitations on the use of force under the laws of war — like avoiding the use of disproportionate force that would increase the possibility of civilian deaths — would constrain any operation against Mr. Awlaki.

Do- other LOAC

That apparently constrained the attack when it finally came. Details about Mr. Awlaki’s location surfaced about a month ago, American officials have said, but his hunters delayed the strike until he left a village and was on a road away from populated areas.


The Administration’s Strange Reasoning on al-Awlaki
By John Yoo  , October 09, 2011

Sunday’s report on the Obama administration’s secret legal justification for the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki shows just how dangerously confused they have become about the rules of war.  All of this comes, of course, with the caveat that we are only going on secondhand descriptions of the Office of Legal Counsel opinion (and we should at least note, in passing, that this administration’s members attacked the Bush folks for not making similar national-security documents public, and have already refused to make public their legal opinions that laughably found the Libya conflict not to be a “war”).

Let’s give partial credit where it is due.  Apparently the Obama administration argues that al-Awlaki was a legitimate target because he is a member of an enemy engaged in hostile conduct against the United States.  At least Obama has figured out that the war on terrorism is in fact a war, and that it is not limited just to Afghanistan.  We should be thankful that Obama officials have quietly put aside the arguments they made during the Bush years that any terrorist outside the Afghani battlefield was a criminal suspect who deserved his day in federal court.  By my lights, I would rather the Obama folks be hypocrites in favor of protecting the national security than principled fools (which they are free to be in the faculty lounges both before and after their time in government).

But the administration’s former worldview of terrorism still infects their decisions, to the country’s detriment.  According to the reports, the Obama administration believes that force could only be used against al-Awlaki because arrest was impractical and al-Awlaki posed an imminent threat of harm to the United States.  This is plainly wrong.  It may make for good policy, especially toward American citizens who make the mistake of joining the enemy, but there is no legal reason why a nation at war must try to apprehend an enemy instead of shooting at him first.  Every member of the enemy armed forces and leadership is a legitimate target in wartime, regardless of whether they can be caught or whether they pose an imminent threat.  In fact, the Obama administration continues to confuse war with crime — the idea that you must try to arrest first and can only use force against an imminent attack is the standard that applies to the police, not the military.

Think of the operation to kill Admiral Yamamoto in World War II.  He was well behind the lines, flying from one military base to another.  He didn’t pose an “imminent” threat of attack on the United States at that moment.  The United States did not need to ask whether it could have forced Yamamoto’s plane down first and captured him.  It was allowed to kill him, just as it could kill any other member of the Japanese military, regardless of his threat.

It may be that the Obama administration thinks that U.S. citizens who join the enemy are entitled to special rules — like those that apply to the police, instead of those that apply to the military.  But this would be wrong too.  As I explained in the Wall Street Journal last week, ever since the Civil War, our national leaders and the Supreme Court have agreed that a citizen who joins the enemy must suffer the consequences of his belligerency, with the same status as that of an alien enemy.  Think of the incentives that the strange Obama hybrid rule creates. Our al-Qaeda enemy will want to recruit American agents, who will benefit from criminal-justice rules that give them advantages in carrying out operations against us (like the right to remain silent, to Miranda and lawyers, to a speedy jury trial, etc.).  Our troops and agents in the field may well hesitate in the field, as they will not be able to tell in the heat of the moment whether an enemy is American or not.  Obama still remains trapped by his liberal pieties, and those biases will reduce the reach of American arms and bless the enemy with undeserved advantages.

— John Yoo is a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley and author of Crisis and Command: A History of Executive Power from George Washington to George W. Bush.