Ahmad Abdullah Ravian
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WASHINGTON (Agencies) -
The US will keep targeting Al-Qaeda anywhere in the world, including in countries unable or unwilling to do it themselves, the top US counterterror official said Friday.
White House counterterror chief John Brennan laid out what could be called the Osama bin Laden raid doctrine, in remarks at Harvard Law School. He said under international law, the US can protect itself with pre-emptive action against suspects the US believes present an imminent threat, wherever they are. That amounts to a legal defence of the unilateral Navy SEAL raid into Pakistan that killed Al-Qaeda mastermind bin Laden in May, angering Pakistan. It also explains the thinking behind other covert counterterrorist action, like the CIAs armed drone campaign that only this week killed a top Al-Qaeda operative in Pakistans tribal areas. The Obama administration has quadrupled drone strikes against Al-Qaeda targets since taking office. The Obama administration has more recently expanded drone strikes and the occasional special-operations raid into areas like Somalia, where the government may be willing to fight Al-Qaeda, but lacks the resources. Navy SEALs targeted Al-Qaeda operative Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan in Somalia in 2009, by helicopter. The SEALs then landed to pick up his body and bury it at sea, just as bin Laden was later interred.
We reserve the right to take unilateral action if or when other governments are unwilling or unable to take the necessary actions themselves, Brennan said.
Yet Brennan followed that by saying that does not mean the US can use military force whenever we want, wherever we want. International legal principles, including respect for a states sovereignty and the laws of war, impose important constraints on our ability to act unilaterally.
Brennan did not explain how that constraint applied, when the US Navy SEALs entered Pakistani territory to go after Bin Laden, without Pakistani government knowledge or permission. He said the US prefers to work with countries where the targets hide, as it does in Yemen.
The US will keep targeting Al-Qaeda anywhere in the world, including in countries unable or unwilling to do it themselves, the top US counterterror official said Friday.
White House counterterror chief John Brennan laid out what could be called the Osama bin Laden raid doctrine, in remarks at Harvard Law School. He said under international law, the US can protect itself with pre-emptive action against suspects the US believes present an imminent threat, wherever they are. That amounts to a legal defence of the unilateral Navy SEAL raid into Pakistan that killed Al-Qaeda mastermind bin Laden in May, angering Pakistan. It also explains the thinking behind other covert counterterrorist action, like the CIAs armed drone campaign that only this week killed a top Al-Qaeda operative in Pakistans tribal areas. The Obama administration has quadrupled drone strikes against Al-Qaeda targets since taking office. The Obama administration has more recently expanded drone strikes and the occasional special-operations raid into areas like Somalia, where the government may be willing to fight Al-Qaeda, but lacks the resources. Navy SEALs targeted Al-Qaeda operative Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan in Somalia in 2009, by helicopter. The SEALs then landed to pick up his body and bury it at sea, just as bin Laden was later interred.
We reserve the right to take unilateral action if or when other governments are unwilling or unable to take the necessary actions themselves, Brennan said.
Yet Brennan followed that by saying that does not mean the US can use military force whenever we want, wherever we want. International legal principles, including respect for a states sovereignty and the laws of war, impose important constraints on our ability to act unilaterally.
Brennan did not explain how that constraint applied, when the US Navy SEALs entered Pakistani territory to go after Bin Laden, without Pakistani government knowledge or permission. He said the US prefers to work with countries where the targets hide, as it does in Yemen.