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John Feffer

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America the Serial Killer

Posted: 05/15/2012 3:35 pm

Everybody loves Dexter. He’s handsome. He’s helpful. He works at the Miami Metro Police Department, and he’s very good at his job as a blood-splatter analyst. Oh, did I mention that he moonlights as a serial killer? Don’t worry: he only kills bad guys. That’s part of the code that Dexter’s adoptive father, himself a police officer, passed down to his son. As a child who had watched his mother die a horrendous death, Dexter couldn’t overcome the murderous impulses that surged within him. His father, channeling those impulses in the only constructive way he could think of, created a better monster of his son’s nature: a serial killer of serial killers.

The other essential rule of Dexter’s code: don’t get caught. He is very precise in the way he dispatches his victims, and he will do almost anything to evade detection. Dexter works for the law, but his second job is most definitely above the law.

During its six seasons on Showtime, the popular TV show Dexter has asked a vexing moral question: can a person do good by doing bad? Let’s throw in one more twist. Sometimes Dexter makes mistakes and kills people who don’t fit his definition of Really Bad. He must then wrestle with his (rudimentary) conscience and, more importantly, try to resolve the paradoxes of his father’s code. One last painful element of the Dexter story: his efforts to wipe out bad guys occasionally endanger and even lead to the death of his own nearest and dearest. Dexter has a serious problem, in other words, with blowback.

By this point, you’ve probably figured out my theory. Dexter is all about U.S. foreign policy and the moral calculus of a superpower. Our government has likewise been on a killing streak for a long time, and there’s no end in sight. But we are also, as a country, conflicted about this propensity toward murder. We try to tell ourselves that we only kill bad guys like Osama bin Laden and his ilk. We maintain that we intervene in the affairs of other countries for only the best and purest of reasons. But we also suspect that we have deviated from our code — many times and with devastating consequences.

The first season of Dexter aired in 2006, and it’s tempting to draw the parallels between the serial killer and our serial wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan. But let’s go post-partisan here and instead look at what the Obama team is doing today. “More recently, there has been hope for a more humane set of policies from the Obama administration,” writes Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF) senior analyst Adil Shamoo in an excerpt from his new book Equal Worth. “However, such hope has not materialized in the form of a new policy toward the [Middle East]. The Obama administration is bent on proving its ‘national security credentials’ by following the old policy of vengeance and not of justice.” This tension between vengeance and justice, a major preoccupation of Dexter, was on display last week when a U.S. drone strike killed Fahd al-Quso, a top al-Qaeda operative in Yemen. 

Quso helped plan al Qaeda’s attack on the USS Cole in Yemen in 2000, and he would certainly fit Dexter’s definition of Really Bad. He pledged to attack any and all Americans, soldiers and civilians alike. Maybe, you say, we should have apprehended him. Actually, Quso had been apprehended — several times. The FBI interrogated him prior to September 11. He escaped from prison in 2003 only to be recaptured in 2004 and then released by the Yemeni government in 2007. Maybe Washington should have tried extraordinary rendition. But the Obama administration has largely backed out of the business of extraordinary rendition in favor of extrajudicial killing.

Dexter would have no compunction about taking out Quso. Extrajudicial killing is what he’s all about. America’s favorite serial killer is judge, jury, and executioner all wrapped up in one.

But how do we feel about the U.S. president occupying that role? To make a final judgment, we must consider the legal issues, the foreign policy implications, and finally the practical matter of blowback.

The Obama administration only admitted publicly back in January to the existence of its CIA-directed drone attacks in Pakistan. Talk about open secrets. The New American Foundation estimates that the Obama administration has expanded the drone program sixfold over what the Bush team had initiated in Pakistan. And that doesn’t include the expansion of drone warfare to Yemen and Somalia or the drone strikes that the Air Force conducts over Afghanistan.

Two weeks ago, in an effort to increase transparency in one of the most opaque overseas operations the United States conducts, White House counter-terrorism advisor John Brennan was more expansive about the program. "One could argue that never before has there been a weapon that allows us to distinguish more effectively between al-Qaeda terrorists and civilians," Brennan said. "It's this surgical precision, the ability, with laser-like focus to eliminate the cancerous tumor called an al Qaeda terrorist while limiting damage to the tissue around it that makes this counter-terrorism tool so essential."

Next time I need surgery, I’m certainly not going to employ Brennan. Tasked with removing a tumor in my toe, he’d lop off my entire leg, remove an arm from an attending nurse, and accidently cut away a couple limbs from patients waiting in pre-op. That’s how “surgical” the drone strikes have been. The New America Foundation estimates that they have a 17 percent error rating (in other words, we’ve killed 300-450 non-militants). This corresponds to the calculations of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which has compiled a list of 317 civilians killed by drones in Pakistan.

There are two major categories of drone strikes. The first, dubbed the personality strike, goes after a known bad guy. The second, the signature strike, targets unidentified individuals and groups according to their pattern of behavior. Neither type qualifies as “surgical.” In the first case, U.S. drones killed Zabet Amanullah on the presumption that he was a top Taliban commander when in fact he was a human rights advocate. Even Dexter would have felt bad about that. In the second case, the United States is expanding its definition of enemy combatants to include groups in Yemen and Somalia, and this makes even the State Department uncomfortable.

We should all be uncomfortable. It’s bad enough when the president directs the extrajudicial killings by handpicking a set of discrete targets. But signature strikes give the CIA even more latitude in drawing up kill lists and racking up “collateral damage.” As William Saletan explains in Slate, “in the Pakistani frontier regions, the CIA has license to take out fighters who appear to be involved, or intent on getting involved, in the Afghan insurgency. The drone campaign has spread from counterterrorism to counterinsurgency.”

So, the United States doesn’t do so well with the first rule of Dexter’s code — only kill bad guys. It works a great deal harder to abide by the second rule: don’t get caught. It has done its utmost to conceal the drone program and create plausible deniability. “To absolve itself in the most sensitive strikes, the CIA has become skilled at using lawyers to cover its tracks. "They use paper when it is going to help them," says the former official. "Or they get on the secure phone. Or they get in an elevator casually with a lawyer and ask for his advice, like, 'There's nothing preventing me from destroying those tapes, is there?'" writes Michael Hastings in an  in-depth article on drones in Rolling Stone.

Wait, you might say, what Dexter does is clearly illegal. Murder is illegal. But aren’t drone strikes legal? It’s a war, they’re combatants, we’re combatants, we take them out. Why bring in any lawyers?

Back in the 1970s, the United States banned the practice of assassination until Congress passed a law in the wake of 9/11 that empowered the president "to use all necessary and appropriate force" in going after those responsible for the terrorist attacks. But the targeted killing of American citizens, the “collateral damage” inflicted on innocent bystanders who happen to be in the vicinity of targeted drone strikes, and the dispatch of unknown targets based on unreleased evidence of their behavior all raise difficult legal questions. That’s a polite way of saying that these are lawsuits waiting to happen.

Moreover, what if other countries made the same claims in assassinating individuals in the United States? Washington might rethink the legality of its actions when China or Russia authorizes a drone attack on a Uygur or Chechen “terrorist” hanging out in Chicago. They too could use the self-defense argument.

So, strictly speaking, targeted killings are legal because the Congress passed a law declaring them legal. But they still fly in the face of international law and establish a dangerous precedent that will one day be used against the United States.

Meanwhile, the blowback continues. In a drone strike last year, the United States killed an American citizen, Anwar al Awlaki, a leading al Qaeda militant. A subsequent strike took out two of his close relatives. “The October drone strike that killed Awlaki’s 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman, a U.S. citizen, and his teenage cousin shocked and enraged Yemenis of all political stripes,” writes Jeremy Scahill in The Nation. “'I firmly believe that the [military] operations implemented by the U.S. performed a great service for al-Qaeda, because those operations gave al-Qaeda unprecedented local sympathy,’ says Jamal, the Yemeni journalist. The strikes ‘have recruited thousands.’ Yemeni tribesmen, he says, share one common goal with al-Qaeda, ‘which is revenge against the Americans, because those who were killed are the sons of the tribesmen, and the tribesmen never, ever give up on revenge.’”

Dexter is an individual driven by his nature to kill. He can’t help himself. The United States is not an individual, but rather a collection of institutions subject to the democratic control of more than 300 million individuals. Like Dexter, the United States was baptized in blood —the slaughter of Native Americans, the enslavement of Africans — and has been steeped in blood ever since. But it need not be part of our nature any more than the Holocaust defines Germany today or King Leopold’s monstrous crimes compel modern-day Belgium to behave in like manner. If the U.S. government argues, as Dexter does, that the system is broken and the Really Bad act with impunity, Washington can do something Dexter can’t — use its unprecedented power and influence to strengthen international law rather than undermine it.

If Dexter turns himself in, the show is over. The United States, in its last flush of unipolar glory, fears the same ending should it suddenly adhere to international law. With its expanded drone program, the Obama administration has kept America’s serial killer persona on the air for too long. More and more Americans are just saying no, as Medea Benjamin chronicles in her new book on drones. It’s time for the United States to stop breaking bad and behave like a proper, law-abiding member of the international community.

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01:22 PM on 05/30/2012
America's citizenry and peace keepers (defense) have been the real victims of hateful Islamists' barbaric attacks and propaganda, which obviously gets buried by the extremely naive self-righteous liberal base.
03:40 PM on 05/16/2012
God help us if the nations that America bullied all get together and retaliate paying us for the all and new! Maybe that's the plan since the UN has allowed foreign troops in for training while we sleep. But train for what and whom?
shakesome
Freedom. Not corporatism, not socialism.
07:49 PM on 05/16/2012
What about all the nations the USA has helped? Those we've freed? Those we've kept safe? Not to mention the humanitarian aid.
09:57 AM on 05/16/2012
The US has always been a violent nation. And Obama's 'change' isn't improving this situation.
shakesome
Freedom. Not corporatism, not socialism.
07:50 PM on 05/16/2012
I know! I'm glad we're not violent like Red China, who murdered 50 million of THEIR OWN people. Or the USSR, who murdered 27 million (or more) of THEIR OWN people.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
09:37 AM on 05/16/2012
THe us is far more like yosamite Sam than Dexter. We use a blunderbuss, not a needle. And we dont just kill psychos we take out the whole block.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sheldon archer
Facebook name is Yuyun Archer
08:39 AM on 05/16/2012
Yes the USA is the real terrorist of the world and the sheeple continue to believe that they are the good guys.
08:11 AM on 05/16/2012
This is why we fear other nations having nuclear bombs. They just might become like us. We won't be able to bully them. We violate sovereign airspace of other nations, bomb other nations against whom we have not decalred war, accept collateral damage (death of their innocent citizens), violate international laws, whisk away our citizens who commit crimes in foreign countries before they can be arrested, torture, have secret prisons, secret pisoners. And, we still feel morally right in lecturing others about human rights and international law. I think the world has now seen the the Emperor does not have any clothes on.
09:58 AM on 05/16/2012
If the US fears other countries having nuclear bombs...why does the US keep selling reactors and such? Profits before people, or should I say 'profits before principles'?
12:01 PM on 05/16/2012
It is our fault that we have been sold a silly definition of what Capitalism is. Capitalism is a morality free word that allows one to screw another without feeling guilt in his conscience. Let me give you an example. Assume water is very limited in the world. Moral values dictate that we share and price the water out of an act of humanity. Capitalism states that one should immediately raise the price of the water to what the market can bear. Then, so as not to feel the guilt of our actions, we say something like "Sorry, business is business". This is how the hangman justifies the selection of his career. O, someone has to do it and if I didn't someone else would. We have made Capitalism a balm to soothe our conscience. Hence, we can kill by demonizing others so we can sleep at night with blood on our hands. So we sell our weapons, our phosphoros bombs, our crowd control bombs, our nuclear technoloy, our cluster bombs in the name of Business and Capitalism. We can still walk around with our spine erect and trumpet how princpiled we are and how barbaric everyone else is. Not realizing that we have the largest weaponry systems in the world, the largest manufacturers of weapons in the world, the largest spy network in the world, the largest nuclear arsenal in the world, started the most wars in the world, and involved in the most wars in the world.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
07:53 AM on 05/16/2012
Supply and demand, everyone wants a Lexus, a polyester suit(picture), or one of those fancy-schmancy electric cars whose batteries are probably at least partly constructed out of rare earths and minerals such as those found in Afghaniscam, and don't want any mining activity or anything like that in THIS country, anymore(NIMBY), but still couldn't honestly care less what happens to anyone else in this country, or in this world, for that matter(IGMFY). Mentality, outlook, attitude, expectation, demand. If demand gets strong enough, war ensues. And, that's what happened, roughly. Now, will we give up our plastic(cellphones, computers, prepackaged foods, clothing, younameit), and live in tents in the dark as our primitive forebears once did. HARDLY. This is the 21st century, and modernity has crept 'round the world while we slept, and China now vyes for the same resources we're in contention for. It's a modern age, international multi-hundred-billion-dollar economic and political battles, which eventually, one fine day, we'll probably lose and never regain as China moves into the house of cash.
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Enroh Mot
Veritas Lux Mea
09:03 AM on 05/16/2012
China might die from pollution first.
07:39 AM on 05/16/2012
Excellent article. Thank you John.

@mericans need to wake up to the terror being unleashed around the world in their name.
Randybostonterrier
Calling Republicans down on their BS
07:02 AM on 05/16/2012
Yes I agree with the author of this article. When you get older you get the full picture of what your country is about and it is very ugly. Don't understand the need to kill people who disagree or who are different from you. I'm all for self-defense but why the need to invade and kill people so much. Once you hit my age (47) and have lived through Reagan and beyond, the endless decades of invading and killing people gets old to you. Let us spend more money at home for people who need it, our infrastructure, the elderly and children and lets become less violent as a nation.
HansB
The only good certainty is a dead certainty
03:25 AM on 05/16/2012
I have a dark feeling that creating anger and hostility against the United States is not a bug but a feature of the drone war.

With the rare privilege of being protected by two vast oceans, how can one defend a 1 $ trillion "defense" budget in the absence of a sufficient number of enemies?

As for international law, the consensus of both parties in Washington - the one thing they agree upon - is that the right of the strongest applies. Bush's contempt for international law was shocking way back when (before 9/11, by the way), but it's bipartisan now. The idea that China might use drones to strike a terrorist in Chicago is not going to change anyone's mind, it's theoretical, everyone knows it won't happen. Nor will the US fly drones over China, or even India or France. Whether you can walk the streets without fearing death from the skies depends on one thing alone: how strong your country is.

This is going to be a very violent century - by design.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pixeloid
Reality has a liberal bias.
02:50 AM on 05/16/2012
Americans love destruction, war, suffering, and death, and have found all of them to be extremely profitable. Drones simply make it more cost-effective, and let people avoid responsibility or risk for their crimes.
shakesome
Freedom. Not corporatism, not socialism.
07:52 PM on 05/16/2012
Speak for yourself, Trotsky.
01:18 AM on 05/16/2012
I'm not a big Obama fan, in fact I plan to vote against him, but these strikes are one area where I think he has gotten it right. We are fight an asymetric war against as enemy that doesn't stop at not playing by our rules, but by not playing by any rules at all. They hide in civilian populations that not only tollerate them, but in some cases openly suport them them. They then turn around and say that since they aren't part of a recognised army they can't be treated by the same rules.
To the last point i say fine, we'll hit you when and where you choose to hide and take out whoever you endanger by keeping them near you. We can't beat an enemy like this with pandering and soft handed tactics. We beat an enemy like this by scaring them so badly that they spend so much time looking over their shoulder that they can't plan any attacks, let alonse carry them out.
You can cry and scream all you want that our foreign policy has brought the radicals on us, but don't forget, they started with the killing of civilians and they declared war on us first because they didn't want "Western Influence" to corrupt their stone age ideas of how a society should function.
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porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
02:11 AM on 05/16/2012
The most proximate cause for the attacks against us were a direct result of really bad foreign policy decisions of GHWB.....protecting the Saudi's...and we started it....we are the radicals you speak of and we haven't finished harming people and making enemies yet. Did you sit in your living room in January, 1991 on the night of the shock and awe mass murders and cheer and think that there would be no blow back?
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somewhatodd
micro-bio undetectable to the naked eye
07:37 AM on 05/16/2012
you're misunderstanding bin laden's cult. their conduct is not merely a reaction to us policies abroad. but it is true that america's fringes, be they led by ayn rand or noam chomsky, need to blame uncle sam himself for all his troubles, and so they do.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
klosch80
Looking for a new party!
12:34 PM on 05/16/2012
This started WAY before 9/11. We've been involved in mid east politics since the 50's with the overthrow of an democratically elected gov't in Iran.

The more we bomb and kill......the more terrorists we create.
11:58 PM on 05/15/2012
"That’s how “surgical” the drone strikes have been. The New America Foundation estimates that they have a 17 percent error rating (in other words, we’ve killed 300-450 non-militants). This corresponds to the calculations of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which has compiled a list of 317 civilians killed by drones in Pakistan."

Perhaps we should go back to the level surgical precision during our air strikes in World War II, the Vietnam War, or the Korean War? We leveled whole cities to destroy targets. 317 civilian deaths, most of whom where living with the target, is a astonishingly small rate of civilian deaths.
08:14 AM on 05/16/2012
Or perhaps simply stop killing innocents altogether. Why is our first option always to kill?
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The Canadian
Stop Harper
10:45 PM on 05/15/2012
All this comes back to the question asked after 9/11 - did America do anything to provoke the hatred directed towards it?

Look at a country like Iran. They're a bitter enemy of the USA, but why is that? A small history lesson is in order.

In 1951, the Iranians overthrew the Shah, and Dr. Mohammad Mosaddegh was elected as Prime Minister. Unfortunately for the Iranians, they decided to nationalize the oil and gas industry. This lead to Operation Ajax in 1953, where the USA overthrew an elected, civilian government and put the Shah back in power, who then ruled an American-friendly but brutal regime.

Understandably, lots of Iranians resented American interference with their elected government to put a puppet on the throne, and this lead to the Iranian Revolution in 1979. The Iranians committed a major transgression of diplomatic rights when they let their hatred of America loose, and they seized the American Embassy and took hostages. And to this day, relations are very bitter between the countries.

America has grossly interfered with many other countries who until the Americans came didn't really have a serious beef with them. So while the horrendous crime of 9/11 remains a low-point for the human race, it is incredibly arrogant and irresponsible for some Americans to say that they are always 100% in the right.

If you keep pushing the world, it will push back. And America, no matter how strong it gets, cannot stand against the entire world.
08:15 AM on 05/16/2012
Remeber also, we have the largest secret service CIA. We have CIA agents embedded in all our embassies in the world. Why? To interfere in other countries of the world.
10:21 PM on 05/15/2012
Seems to me we are the only country on the planet addicted to war.