I am not pro-drone. But I am pro killing those who are working to kill us.
I am anti-collateral damage, everyone is, but I know civilians are tragically killed in human warfare and robotic warfare.
I know war crimes may have been committed via our drone program but I am pro killing Al Qaeda leaders via drones even if they are American citizens. That is not a war crime. The authorization for use of military force gives the president that power and frankly you cannot join al Qaeda in a time of war and traitorously plot against us in a foreign country and expect Constitutional protection.
If you are in al Qaeda working to kill Americans you should be killed. Anwar al Awlaki, an operational figure involved with multiple attacks, a man convicted in absentia by a Yemeni court of belonging to al Qaeda, a man hiding in a tribal area from which American soldiers may not have escaped, that man should have been killed.
Abdulrahamn al Awlaki, his 16 year old son, was not in al Qaeda. He was killed while looking for his father who’d died two weeks earlier.
Some say he was targeted, which would be tragic and a war crime, but some say he was not targeted but standing too near an al Qaeda official who was targeted. We will never know.
All major wars lead to these moments of moral outrage and confusion. An endless post-geographical war against a fluid enemy is especially fraught.
We have a president who is probably extraordinarily afraid of a successful attack on America and afraid of another Black Hawk Down and battling an enemy hiding in ungovernable areas.
So he uses the technology available to disrupt al Qaeda in ways that minimize the risk to American soldiers.









