Obama administration releases redacted
version of drone policy
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[August 08, 2016]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama
administration released a redacted version of President Barack Obama's
once-secret policy on drone strikes abroad following a freedom of
information lawsuit filed last year, the American Civil Liberties Union
said on Saturday.
The release of the 18-page Presidential Policy Guidance document, as
well as other Department of Defense papers, follows an order by a U.S.
District Court judge in February requiring the Justice Department to
disclose the document, also known as "the Playbook."
It sets out the law and rules the government must follow when carrying
out targeted killings and the capture of terrorist suspects abroad.
Obama pledged in 2013 to provide greater transparency about
counter-terrorism operations, including drone strikes overseas, amid
calls by some U.S. lawmakers and rights groups for more openness.
ACLU's deputy legal director, Jameel Jaffer, welcomed the release of the
documents, saying they provide new details about policy standards and
insights into the process for targeting individuals with lethal force or
for capture.
"Its release now will inform an ongoing debate about the lawfulness and
wisdom of the government's counter-terrorism policies," Jaffer said in a
statement.
The ACLU's lawsuit sought information, among other things, on the law
and policies used to justify lethal force and how the government picks
targets.
According to the documents, published by the ACLU, strikes against
high-value terrorist targets can be taken "when there is near certainty"
that the person is present, and that no civilians will be injured or
killed, and is necessary to "achieve U.S. policy objectives".
The administration has defended its use of drones as essential in
fighting al Qaeda and other militants in countries such as Pakistan,
Afghanistan and Yemen. Some drone strikes have killed civilians who were
not targets, igniting local anger.
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President Barack Obama holds a news conference at the Pentagon in
Arlington, Virginia, U.S. August 4, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"The president has emphasized that the U.S. Government should be as
transparent as possible with the American people about our
counter-terrorism operations, the manner in which they are
conducted, and their results," National Security Council spokesman
Ned Price said of Saturday's release of documents.
"Our counter-terrorism actions are effective and legal, and their
legitimacy is best demonstrated by making public more information
about these actions as well as setting clear standards for other
nations to follow," he added.
Naureen Shah, Amnesty International's U.S. director for security and
human rights, also welcomed the documents but said more was needed
to ensure the policy was followed.
"The Obama administration's disclosures are welcome but they only
tell part of the story and obscure disturbing practices. We still
know extremely little about the standards that would govern
signature strikes and so-called rescuer strikes, which have involved
potentially unlawful killings," Shah added.
(Reporting by Lesley Wroughton; Editing by Leslie Adler and Paul
Simao)
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