A report this weekend in The New York Times raised more questions about President Obama’s secretive drone program.
According the report, the administration began preparing for a possible Romney presidency earlier this year by collecting rules outlining the parameters under which drones might be used. With the president re-elected, the rules, according to the Times, are being drafted at a “more leisurely pace.”
On Now with Alex Wagner Monday, guest host Ari Melber spoke with Jameel Jaffer of the ACLU, which is suing the administration to get more details about the highly-classified program. “They’re right to be worried about how a future administration would use these powers,” said Jaffer. “They’ve carved out these very broad powers, essentially the authority to kill anyone who is deemed by the executive branch, deemed by the president to be a threat to national security, can be killed without due process, can be killed without charges.”
Since President Obama took office four years ago, the number of drone strikes have dramatically increased. In Pakistan alone, the New America Foundation estimates, at least 1,900 people have died. During strikes in Yemen, drones have targeted and killed American citizens suspected of being terrorists.








