“Study finds ‘liberals’ more likely to favor targeted killings once they know it’s Obama’s policy,” reads the subtitle of a Tuesday article from Salon’s Joan Walsh. Needless to say, opponents of the president’s targeted killing program have been passing the story around Twitter, arguing that it confirms their prior suspicions: Liberals are willing to accept the unacceptable out of blind support for their president.
In reality, these findings might not be so revelatory or so damning. For one thing, Walsh notes that the political scientist who conducted the survey “didn’t refer specifically to American citizens, or the precise operational details of the broader ‘kill list,’ or the use of drones to do the killing.” And for another thing, it should surprise no one that most Americans are more likely to support particular policies if they trust the leaders who are seen to execute those policies.
In fact, many liberals who defend the president’s targeted killing program are remarkably forthcoming about the role their trust in Obama plays. The Cycle’s Krystal Ball has said as much on this very network—and she has pointed out, correctly, that there is nothing hypocritical about trusting one political actor more than another political actor. If one were to feel comfortable giving targeted killing powers to President Obama but not to President Romney, there would be nothing inherently inconsistent in her position.
As a result, those who find the targeted killing program abhorrent are going to have a hard time waving that position away. When they treat it as obviously ridiculous, deserving of no response but mockery, they do their own position a disservice. The truth is that it’s not obviously ridiculous to support targeted killings when you trust the man ordering them—it is a terrible mistake, yes, but for reasons that merit an explanation.
The most important and obvious objection to the argument from trust is that Obama will not be president forever. Yet the institutions being created to preside over targeted killings will last indefinitely: years, if not decades. The odds that a Republican president will one day preside over the disposition matrix are exceedingly high. That a Republican president will one day have the power, based on legal precedent to execute American citizens at will, based on hazy evidence of a potential threat—that’s virtually inevitable.









