The Lede blog in the New York Times today has a post by Robert Mackey, ‘Drone Strikes Are Legal, U.S. Official Says’. Highly recommend reading.
I’ve embedded a video from the post in which Harold Hongju Koh, the US State Department’s top lawyer, defends the ‘legitimacy’ of drone attacks and targeted assassinations.
As Mackey points out, Koh was a strident critic of the Bush Administration’s policies when he was the dean of Yale Law School; he even described America as part of ‘the axis of disobedience’ alongside North Korea and Iraq.
Hard to imagine now.


Lest anyone watch that video and be soothed by the lawyer’s weasel words and soporific intonation, let’s not forget that we are talking here about sky-borne robots blasting remote rural areas.
Did I not make that clear? My apologies. I’m so overcome with rage whenever I think about UAVs and military lawyers on hand to justify war crimes that I clearly become inarticulate.
You were perfectly clear, Jacinda; I was just trying to cut through the lawyer’s perfect opacity!
On this point, there’s an interesting CIA document up on Wikileaks that discusses how the Afghan war might be sold in Europe. As Glenn Greenwald notes, ‘The Report celebrates the fact that the governments of those two nations continue to fight the war in defiance of overwhelming public opinion which opposes it — so much for all the recent veneration of “consent of the governed” — and it notes that this is possible due to lack of interest among their citizenry: “Public Apathy Enables Leaders to Ignore Voters,” proclaims the title of one section.’
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/03/27/wikileaks
The CIA also identifies Obama’s popularity with Europeans as a major asset to be exploited in promoting these wars.
I’m glad you brought that up, eekamouse. I read this document over the weekend and learned that the CIA’s first recommendation was for Obama to visit Afghanistan. And lo! behold! the next day he was in Afghanistan on a surprise visit.
And I just read this at the BBC:
Now I can’t find that part, but was struck by this insight: