Let the [Drone] Thing be Pressed
The killing of Anwar al-Awlaki last week has sparked spirited discussions in the prestige press and on the Web. Awlaki was an American-born Muslim cleric who once headed a mosque in Falls Church, Virginia. But he traveled to Yemen, where he became a leader of Al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula. He urged fellow jihadists to take up arms and to engage in terror attacks on the United States, the country of his birth and citizenship.
For most of the nation’s history, such acts would be recognized, quite simply, as acts of treason. And in calling not just for war against America, but for terror acts outside all the recognized laws of warfare, Awlaki would have been branded Hostis humani generis – an enemy of all mankind. Such was the status of pirates and slave traders in the nineteenth century.
Editor’s Note: This column was coauthored by Bob Morrison
The killing of Anwar al-Awlaki last week has sparked spirited discussions in the prestige press and on the Web. Awlaki was an American-born Muslim cleric who once headed a mosque in Falls Church, Virginia. But he traveled to Yemen, where he became a leader of Al Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula. He urged fellow jihadists to take up arms and to engage in terror attacks on the United States, the country of his birth and citizenship.
For most of the nation’s history, such acts would be recognized, quite simply, as acts of treason. And in calling not just for war against America, but for terror acts outside all the recognized laws of warfare, Awlaki would have been branded Hostis humani generis – an enemy of all mankind. Such was the status of pirates and slave traders in the nineteenth century.
Some conservatives argue that Awlaki’s case should be compared to that of Herbert Hans Haupt, the naturalized German-American who joined a Nazi effort to sabotage power plants on the East Coast of the U.S. in 1942. The plotters were put ashore on Long Island by a German U-boat. The FBI quickly apprehended them and they were all tried, convicted, and sentenced to death in the space of just weeks. Haupt and most of the non-U.S. citizen saboteurs were executed in the Washington Navy Yard’s electric chair.
There may even be, however, a stronger argument from our history to back up what President Obama did in dispatching Awlaki. President Lincoln’s final dispatch to his commanding general was dated April 7, 1865. In it, he noted Gen. Sheridan’s telegram to Gen. Grant. “General Sheridan says ‘If the thing is pressed, I think Lee will surrender.’ Let the thing be pressed.”
Let the thing be pressed. What a terrible telegram to have to send. It meant more beardless young rebel boys and white-haired old men would be found dead in trenches. It would also mean a favorite Union drummer boy would lose his young life, and a favorite young cavalry captain, and many, many more.
“Let the thing be pressed,” meant more death and destruction to American citizens. But Lincoln believed the greater mercy was to press the thing – to end the war.
The discussions we are hearing about whether President Obama was wrong to “target” an American citizen, Anwar al-Awlaki, in Yemen take on a bizarre character. Anyone who disputes this most necessary use of lethal force should is not engaged in a serious debate.
When an American citizen turns terrorist and calls for murderous attacks on his fellow citizens, he surely places himself outside the protection of our Constitution and laws.
We now hear loud moans go up from those whom former federal prosecutor Andy McCarthy calls the “al Qaeda bar.” Herman Haupt, after all, got a trial by military tribunal.
The Confederate defenders of Richmond in 1865 got no such due process. Nor should they have.
Lincoln showed plenty of mercy toward the rebels – after they surrendered. But he was more than willing to let the thing be pressed against them while they were in rebellion and seeking to destroy the Union.
Today, we have already seen the murders and attempted murders carried out by Awlaki’s willing accomplices. The “underwear bomber” who tried to blow up his inbound flight over Detroit and Nidal Hasan, the accused shooter at Fort Hood, both cited Awlaki’s influence in their cases.
Nidal Hasan stands accused of killing fourteen innocent Americans at Fort Hood. Columnist Michelle Malkin provides this heart-rending account of Francheska Velez’s last minutes.
A pregnant soldier shot during a rampage at a Texas Army post last year cried out, “My baby! My baby!” as others crawled under desks, dodged bullets that pierced walls and rushed to help their bleeding comrades, a military court heard Monday.
A soldier had just told Spc. Jonathan Sims that she was expecting a baby and was preparing to go home, when the first volley of gunfire rang out Nov. 5 in a Fort Hood building where soldiers get medical tests before and after deploying.
“The female soldier that was sitting next to me was in the fetal position. She was screaming: ‘My baby! My baby!’” Sims said.
This piteous story raises serious questions as to why Nidal Hasan is not being charged with violation of the Unborn Victims of Violence Act. This law was intended to cover just such instances of crimes against the unborn. And why has his trial by court martial been unconscionably delayed?
While we continue to press for answers to these questions, however, we should agree that the president acted properly in killing Anwar Al-Awlaki by drone attack. Those who seek our destruction and who have shown no mercy to civilians, unarmed military members, and even babes in the womb, surely have no standing to claim protections from the very Constitution they seek to destroy.
We say: “Let the Drone thing be pressed.”