The Obama administration’s decision to share previously classified counter-terrorism documents comes after NBC’s Michael Isikoff’s exclusive reporting and mounting pressure from Washington lawmakers calling for more transparency.
Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M. is one of eleven senators who wrote a letter to President Obama, pushing him to reveal classified documents justifying the administration’s authority to carry out drone strikes on U.S. citizens.
“This is about fundamental values,” Udall told The Daily Rundown’s Chuck Todd, and continued:
“You’re talking about a president, any president, having the ability to exercise his national security power to protect the country, and in this case, an extraordinary power to kill an American citizen. And the other value is due process. We care a lot about due process. We care a lot about our liberty interests under the constitution. We know that if you take away an American life in this process, you can’t bring it back. And so this is a fundamental debate that needs to occur, it’s oversight that needs to occur.”
The secrecy surrounding drone strikes has been getting a lot more attention as confirmation hearings move forward for the President’s pick to be CIA director, current White House counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan. Brennan has vigorously defended the strikes’ legality.
Udall mentioned the killing of suspected al-Qaeda leader Anwar al-Awlaki, an American born in Udall’s state of New Mexico. Awlaki was killed by U.S. drone strikes in Yemen in September, 2011 but was never charged or indicted by the U.S. government.









