01/27/10
From ABC News
U.S. Mulls Legality of Killing American al
Qaeda "Turncoat"
Opportunities to "Take Out" Radical Cleric Anwar Awlaki In Yemen
"May Have Been Missed"
By MATTHEW COLE, RICHARD ESPOSITO and BRIAN ROSS
White House lawyers are mulling the legality of proposed attempts to kill an
American citizen, Anwar al Awlaki, who is believed to be part of the leadership
of the al Qaeda group in Yemen behind a series of terror strikes, according to
two people briefed by U.S. intelligence officials.
One of the people briefed said opportunities to "take out" Awlaki "may have been
missed" because of the legal questions surrounding a lethal attack which would
specifically target an American citizen.
A spokesperson said the White House declined to comment.
While Awlaki has not been charged with any crimes under U.S. law, intelligence
officials say recent intelligence reports and electronic intercepts show he
played an important role in recruiting the accused "underwear bomber" Umar
Farouk Abdulmutallab. Awlaki also carried on extensive e-mail communication with
the accused Fort Hood shooter, Major Nidal Hasan, prior to the attack that
killed 12 soldiers and one civilian.
According to the people who were briefed on the issue, American officials fear
the possibility of criminal prosecution without approval in advance from the
White House for a targeted strike against Awlaki.
An American citizen with suspected al Qaeda ties was killed in Nov. 2002 in
Yemen in a CIA predator strike that was aimed at non-American leaders of al
Qaeda. The death of the American citizen, Ahmed Hijazi of Lackawanna, NY, was
justified as "collateral damage" at the time because he "was just in the wrong
place at the wrong time," said a former U.S. official familiar with the case.
In the case of Awlaki, born in New Mexico and a college student in Colorado and
California, a strike aimed to kill him would stretch current Presidential
authority given to the CIA and the Pentagon to pursue terrorists anywhere in the
world.
Where Anwar al Awlaki Might Be Hiding
Awlaki's father told reporters in Yemen last week that his son had gone into
hiding in the mountains of Yemen and was being protected by al Qaeda, even
though, the father claimed, his son was not part of al Qaeda.
He told reporters he was pleading with the United States, "Please don't kill my
son."
The question of what limits apply to an American with suspected operational ties
to al Qaeda comes as the U.S. steps up efforts to track any American with ties
to Yemen.
Hundreds of FBI and other federal agents will fan out this week as part of a
secret operation to pursue leads about Americans with connections to Yemen that
were previously dismissed as not significant, according to law enforcement
officials.
Copyright © 2010 ABC News Internet Ventures
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"Opportunities may have been missed." "The white house declined to comment." Captain Bullshit rides again.
Don't we have anyone competent in this government? The guy is at least an accessory to premeditated murder.
You spent over $1,000,000 to send a bunch of congressmen and camp-followers to Copenhagen for a couple of days.
It should cost less than $5,000 to send a sniper and his gear to Yemen for a week or so.
