The United States’ use of unmanned drones in counter-terrorism strikes has produced a multifaceted debate, which does not fall cleanly along the usual left-right lines, especially when the targets are American citizens who’ve fled the country to become suspected terrorists. For some, all Americans, even those who’ve joined al Qaeda, are entitled to due process, and should not be summarily executed by the U.S. government.
For others, if there’s a war, and the nation is striking enemy combatants, whether an al Qaeda member is an American or not is immaterial. As Scott Lemieux noted the other day as an example, “[A]n American fighting for the Nazis on the battlefield would not have been entitled to due process.”
It’s obviously an issue worthy of debate, and I don’t think it’s an especially easy call. But even if we put aside for a moment this and related questions — whether drone strikes are effective in preventing terrorism, whether the weapons themselves should be used by intelligence agencies instead of the military — the far easier call is the one dealing with oversight, accountability, and checks and balances.
For the Obama administration, there’s no doubt that the use of drones in targeting suspected terrorists — whether they be American citizens or not — is entirely legal. Indeed, administration officials have said publicly that the matter has been thoroughly scrutinized and passes constitutional muster.
And while the accuracy of those conclusions is obviously important, that’s not quite what this week’s debate has been all about. Rather, what Rachel, Michael Isikoff, and others have focused on of late is why the administration hasn’t shared its legal findings with anyone outside the executive branch.
In other words, the administration strongly believes its drone policy is legally permissible, but it’s refused to tell anyone why.
As of last night, that position has changed, and the Obama administration will bring the legal rationale behind its drone policy into the light — but only a little.
With John Brennan, President Barack Obama’s nominee to lead the CIA, set to begin his confirmation hearings, the White House announced late yesterday that it will brief the House and Senate Intelligence Committees on the legal justifications for drone strikes against U.S. citizens who’ve become suspected terrorists.








