Midgen wrote:
The United States government has no business murdering people without some sort of due process. Just because they aren't U.S. citizens and don't have the protection of the Constitution, doesn't mean we can kill anyone we feel has wronged us.
Don't get me wrong, I want to see these terrorists strung up by their scrotums just as much as everyone else, but I don't like the idea of lobbing missiles into foreign countries, killing anyone in the general vicinity on the off chance we might have a chance to murder someone we have a grudge against.
Capture them, try them, convict them, and THEN punish them...
First of all, when we (or for that matter, any other country) choose to attack another country in furtherance of whatever national goal we happen to be pursuing, we are not "murdering" anyone, any more than Japan murdered anyone by attacking Pearl Harbor. We also do not need to give them due process of any kind or description. Matters of due process, trial, arrest, and so forth, are matters of domestic justice; not for dealing with foreign enemies unless it happens to be beneficial to us to pursue that course of action.
Second, capturing, trying, and convicting them is not always practical, rhetorical questions saying "well, but if we could blow him up,why couldn't we capture him?" notwithstanding; the 2 are entirely different types of operations. There is no reason we should be pursuing legal niceties in dealing with foreign terrorists or foreign nations.
As for "lobbing missiles on the off chance" we are not doing any such thing, and no one is advocating that. We have probably made some ill-advised attacks in the past, but that is not the same thing as simply slinging ordinance all over the place hoping to luck out.
The problem in this case stems exclusively, and entirely, from the fact that this guy was an American citizen. For that reason, unless he were directly either A) fighting against Americans B) directly commanding those actively doing so or C) was killed in the process of attacking another legitimate target, then he should not have been assassinated in this or any other fashion.
We had an obligation we failed to meet to capture and try this ******* (or at least, attempt to). We have no such obligation towards any other foreigner except insofar as its A) beneficial to us and B) we have any pertinent treaty obligations.