Editorial: Targeting Al-Awlaki

A government has to uphold the law, but its prime duty is protecting its citizens

US President Barack Obama has called the killing in Yemen of Anwar Al-Awlaki — one of the leaders of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula — a “major blow” to the organization. He is spot on. Al-Qaeda can replace leaders but in this case not one with the particular skills he had. Born in the US, the charismatic Al-Awlaki's particular skill was to appeal to alienated Muslims in the English-speaking world. He conveyed the Al-Qaeda message in a way they understood. Through his DVDs and the Internet, he had a major impact on radical English-speaking would-be jihadis across the world. It will be extremely difficult to find someone else who can so deftly recruit them to the ranks.

In as much as that has happened, there will be countless millions across the Muslim world who, while deeply antipathetical to the US over its slavish obedience to Israel, will pardon this particular action. Al-Awlaki preached Al-Qaeda's message of hatred and death — a message that has done more to damage the image of Islam and its message of peace than anything in living memory.

It is typical, though, of American society that there should now be anguish as to whether Al-Awlaki, as an American citizen, should have been targeted and killed. The American Civil Liberties Union says the killing violates the US and international law and condemns it because there had been no due judicial process.

A government's duty is to uphold the law, but its prime duty is to protect its citizens. It is rare that the two conflict but when they do, the law must take second place to protection. This was such a case. Al-Awlaki had declared war on the US through the Internet. On his website, he called on Muslims to kill American soldiers anywhere in the world; he said it was an Islamic duty. In e-mails he encouraged US Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan to kill US soldiers; Hasan gunned down 13 at Ft. Hood in November 2009. The list of those for whom he was a spiritual guide and who carried out attacks is long. Last year he called on American Muslims to attack the US. Al-Awlaki's target was not only Americans who, he said, had to be killed “without hesitation.” He targeted Arab governments as well.

In such rare cases, the demand for due judicial process by the likes of the ACLU is morally vacuous. Someone who plots to kill has to be stopped. Otherwise he will succeed. In such circumstances, those who insist that nothing be done until his criminal plans are proven in court are complicit in his crimes. They effectively enable him to proceed. They care more about legalities, not about saving lives. It was perfectly legitimate to target Al-Awlaki.

There is, however, another perhaps far more significant aspect to this killing. It does not seem to be the result of information gathered from the similar killing at the beginning of May of Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan. The information appears to have come from the Yemeni authorities. Is it a coincidence then that it happened just after President Ali Abdullah Saleh returned to his country? Was the information passed by him to send a desperate message to Obama that he needs him in power in Sanaa? There will be many who believe that is so.

Comments

MATT

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Thank you to Saudi Arabia for uncovering the recent failed plot, it fit perfect with the narrative for the Jewel of the Nile.

HAMMAD SETHI

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We have just seen how USA stood up to help the Israeli terrorist thugs in the United Nations against the poor pursecuted subjugated Palestinian Muslims. I would say that US support of current Afghan government is also against the interests of the entire Muslim world, and if Al-Qaeda and the Taliban do not deliberately attack any Muslim interests, and only attack US Christians, then Al-Qaeda and the Taliban are Mujahideen and heroes and Saviours of Muslim World. I think everybody will agree that this makes a lot of sense.

HAJ MOHAMED

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There is a saying "Tell me who your friends are and I'll tell you who you are."

We know Israel is USA's ally and Israel assassinates its enemies by targeted killings

So this action by USA is nothing but expected

DAVE LISTER

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It is because of such more introspection that the USA is great. Rarely is a decision reached without a debate of the consequences on what it means to be an American, whether a criminal or not. While I have no problem with the killing in this particular case, the debate in the USA is where exactly does the line not to be crossed get drawn. I think you will see this codified in some manner in the near future. Right now the war in Iraq is seen by a large percentage of the USA to have been wrong, again because the USA is willing to look at itself. A large part of the USA wants to change our Israel policies. Anyone ever claiming that the USA is always one unified opinion on anything simply doesn't understand the country at all except for one issue - physically attack the USA and you will find out we can be unified.

DICK

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The true measure of any nation is how it treats the least of its people, poor or criminal. In the case of the criminal a true democracy based upon the rule of law would give even the Devil himself a fair trial, not for the sake of the Devil, but for the nation and its laws. The rule of law must always prevail otherwise the society and its culture will slowly crumble to dust. If the American people accept some nameless bureaucrat can put a name on a list to be approved for killing instead of having the evidence tested in a court, then their society is certainly in decline.
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