“I don’t talk about national security questions in that way.” That’s what President Barack Obama a reporter for an Ohio Fox affiliate on Monday, regarding allegations that the administration had ordered the deaths of American citizens in Yemen.
“First of all, you’re basing this on reports in the news that have never been confirmed by me,” the president said, echoing the Justice Department’s claim that the administration had never “officially acknowledged” any role in the death of Anwar Al-Aulaqi, a dual citizen of Yemen and the United States.
Obama’s brief interview with FOX19’s Ben Swann took place a day before the official start of the Democratic National Convention, but it set the tone for what was to come. Two days into the convention, civil liberties concerns have been conspicuously absent from the agenda.
That absence is perhaps most conspicuous in the 2012 Democratic platform, released on Tuesday, the first day of the convention. According to Adam Serwer of Mother Jones, the Democrats either softened or entirely excised much of the civil liberties language left over from their 2008 platform. For example, whereas the 2008 platform forcefully condemned indefinite detention and warrantless wiretapping, the 2012 version does not mention either issue at all.









