Adam Serwer

Adam Serwer

Reporter

Adam Serwer is a reporter at Mother Jones. Formerly a staff writer at the American Prospect, his writing has appeared in the Washington Post, the Root, the Village Voice, and the New York Daily News

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Court Says Obama Can't Talk About Drones and Still Call Them Secret

| Fri Mar. 15, 2013 10:17 AM PDT
Obama discussing drones in his 2013 Googe+ Fireside Hangout.

If you want to keep something a secret, you probably shouldn't brag about it. 

That may seem obvious. But the Obama administration's habit of singing the virtues of its supposedly secret targeted killing program is the reason a panel of three federal judges on the DC Circuit ruled against the government on Friday, finding that the CIA cannot continue to claim it has not acknowledged its involvement in the use of drones in targeted killings. Quoting newly minted CIA Director John Brennan, former CIA Director Leon Panetta, and President Barack Obama himself, Judge Merrick Garland wrote that "it is neither logical nor plausible" for the CIA to say it would reveal anything not already public to admit that the Agency "at least has an intelligence interest" in such strikes. "The defendant is, after all, the Central Intelligence Agency," the judges added. Friday's ruling reverses a previous one from 2011 in which a lower court ruled in favor of the government.

Since 2010, the ACLU has been seeking information from the CIA on when, where, and against whom drone strikes can be authorized, and how and whether the US ensures compliance with international law restricting extrajudicial killings. The CIA had argued that "no authorized CIA or Executive Branch official has disclosed whether or not the CIA possesses records regarding drone strikes or whether or not the CIA is involved in drone strikes or has an interest in drone strikes." According to the CIA's argument, just because high ranking officials can't stop talking about how targeted killing is effective, only kills bad guys, and always complies with the law doesn't mean it's not a secret.

This doesn't mean the CIA will be releasing the documents. The Agency will have to explain and list which documents it has, and either release them or find another reason to argue why they can't be released—and there are national security exemptions to the Freedom of Information Act the Agency could use to avoid having to hand them over. "It's only a small step forward but an important one," says Jameel Jaffer, the ACLU attorney who argued the case. "It will also make it more difficult for government officials to deflect questions about the program."

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The Washington Post's Jennifer Rubin Is Still Wrong About the New Black Panther Party

| Fri Mar. 15, 2013 10:05 AM PDT

Long before Washington Post conservative blogger Jennifer Rubin fabricated the existence of a real-time video feed of the attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, deliberately misled her readers in her coverage of Mitt Romney during the 2012 election, and compared Jewish Democrats supporting Chuck Hagel to Jewish leaders who failed to prevent the Holocaust, she wrote that the Obama White House had conspired to shield the New Black Panther Party, a buffoonish black separatist group, from being brought up on voter intimidation charges during the 2008 election.

Titled "Friends in High Places," Rubin's June 2010 expose in the Weekly Standard alleged that the "Obama Justice Department went to bat for the New Black Panther party—and then covered it up." Rubin's reporting on the New Black Panther voter intimidation case has now been eviscerated by not one but two internal investigations of the Justice Department's civil rights division, though Rubin has gone out of her way to avoid recognizing this. 

Rubin's claim rested on the fact that, shortly after Obama took office, interim leaders of the civil rights division dropped some of the charges in a voter intimidation case against the New Black Panther Party. The idea that the first black president of the United States and his black attorney general were going out of their way to protect an anti-white black fringe group fulfilled two right-wing fantasies—Obama as closet radical and his administration as an elaborate scheme of racial revenge against whites. The head of the civil rights division under Bush had broken civil service laws by seeking to purge liberals from the division and then lying to Congress about it, and, to conservatives like Rubin, the New Black Panther case was proof that the Obama Justice Department was no less politicized.

The problem, however, is that right-wing narrative is bogus. In 2011, the Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) found "no evidence that the decision to dismiss the case against three of the four defendants was predicated on political considerations." The interim heads of the civil rights division had dropped some of the charges against the NBPP not because they'd been pushed to by the AG or the White House, but rather because they had discovered the conservative-leaning attorneys who filed the case had left out key—and possibly exculpatory—information. The OPR report also found, contrary to Rubin's reporting and to right-wing allegations, that political higher-ups at the Justice Department had sought to prevent the New Black Panther Party case from being dismissed outright.

A second report on the topic, from the Justice Department Inspector General's office, was released Tuesday. Like the OPR report before it, the IG report found that the decision to narrow the case was "based on a good faith assessment of the law and facts of the case." Perhaps more importantly, the IG report found no evidence that the division "improperly favored or disfavored any particular group of voters."

Rubin has not acknowledged that her writing on the New Black Panther Party has been discredited by the two reports. Instead, she has taken Tuesday's IG report as a vindication, declaring that "things were much worse than most imagined":

The IG declined to find a racial or political motive for dismissing the New Black Panther case, but found actions surrounding that action "risked undermining confidence in the non-ideological enforcement of the voting rights laws." In other words, it sure looked partisan.

The appearance of partisanship, in Rubin's telling, is "much worse" than the Obama administration being racist. Rubin hasn't moved the goalposts, she's flung them into another dimension. Yet Rubin's elaborate pratfall is not yet complete: When the original OPR report, which came to the same  conclusion as the IG report regarding the New Black Panther case, was released in March 2011, Rubin called it "unprofessional" and "biased." Holding two wildly divergent opinions on the same set of facts is something of a Rubin speciality.

The Drone Strikes We Really Should Worry About

| Mon Mar. 11, 2013 8:30 AM PDT

Senator Rand Paul's (R-Ky.) 13-hour filibuster over whether or not the White House believes it has the authority to assassinate terrorism suspects within the United States raised the weary spirits of critics of the Obama administration's targeted killing program. But, advocates say that the focus on something that may never come to pass—drone strikes at home—should not distract from the problems with targeted killing as it is actually used.

"We ought to be more focused on the current program as it is today rather than what I see as a very hypothetical and not very likely use of force within the United States," says Raha Wala, an attorney with Human Rights First. "We have hundreds of drone strikes, thousands of people dead in a half a dozen or so countries around the world, with very little explanation from the administration as to the legal, ethical and operational basis for the program."

While the administration says it does not have the authority to use drones within the United States to kill a suspected terrorist who is not "engaged in combat," between 3000 and 5000 people have been killed by drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. Many have been civilians. Many of the strikes themselves have not been targeted at specific individuals, but in so-called "signature strikes" against anonymous targets who are singled out and believed to be militants based on a "pattern of behavior." While the administration has publicly defended the use of targeted killing against suspected terrorists, it has said little publicly about signature strikes. Civil liberties and human rights advocates hope that Paul's filibuster—which did at times touch on drone strikes abroad—will help draw attention to the targeted killing program as it actually exists.

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