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Grassroots News & Progressive Views

Medea Benjamin: Why I Spoke Out at Obama’s Foreign Policy Speech

May 26, 2013 by Source

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On why Obama’s policies themselves, not those who speak out against them, are rude.

By Medea Benjamin / Common Dreams

Obama-Guantanamo-Close-630x350Having worked for years on the issues of drones and Guantanamo, I was delighted to get a pass (the source will remain anonymous) to attend President Obama’s speech at the National Defense University. I had read many press reports anticipating what the President might say. There was much talk about major policy shifts that would include transparency with the public, new guidelines for the use of drones, taking lethal drones out of the purview of the CIA, and in the case of Guantanamo, invoking the “waiver system” to begin the transfer of prisoners already cleared for release.

Sitting at the back of the auditorium, I hung on every word the President said. I kept waiting to hear an announcement about changes that would represent a significant shift in policy. Unfortunately, I heard nice words, not the resetting of failed policies.

Instead of announcing the transfer of drone strikes from the CIA to the exclusive domain of the military, Obama never even mentioned the CIA—much less acknowledge the killing spree that the CIA has been carrying out in Pakistan during his administration. While there were predictions that he would declare an end to signature strikes, strikes based merely on suspicious behavior that have been responsible for so many civilian casualties, no such announcement was made.

The bulk of the president’s speech was devoted to justifying drone strikes. I was shocked when the President claimed that his administration did everything it could to capture suspects instead of killing them. That is just not true. Obama’s reliance on drones is precisely because he did not want to be bothered with capturing suspects and bringing them to trial. Take the case of 16-year-old Pakistani Tariz Aziz, who could have been picked up while attending a conference at a major hotel in the capital, Islamabad, but was instead killed by a drone strike, with his 12-year-old cousin, two days later. Or the drone strike that 23-year-old Yemini Farea al-Muslimi talked about when he testified in Congress. He said the man targeted in his village of Wessab was a man who everyone knew, who met regularly with government officials and who could have easily been brought in for questioning.

When the President was coming to the end of this speech, he started talking about Guantanamo. As he has done in the past, he stated his desire to close the prison, but blamed Congress. That’s when I felt compelled to speak out. With the men in Guantanamo on hunger strike, being brutally forced fed and bereft of all hope, I couldn’t let the President continue to act as if he were some helpless official at the mercy of Congress.

“Excuse me, Mr. President,” I said, “but you’re the Commander-in-Chief. You could close Guantanamo tomorrow and release the 86 prisoners who have been cleared for release.” We went on to have quite an exchange.

While I have received a deluge of support, there are others, including journalists, who have called me “rude.” But terrorizing villages with Hellfire missiles that vaporize innocent people is rude. Violating the sovereignty of nations like Pakistan is rude. Keeping 86 prisoners in Guantanamo long after they have been cleared for release is rude. Shoving feeding tubes down prisoners’ throats instead of giving them justice is certainly rude.

predator_droneAt one point during his speech, President Obama said that the deaths of innocent people from the drone attacks will haunt him as long as he lives. But he is still unwilling to acknowledge those deaths, apologize to the families, or compensate them. In Afghanistan, the US military has a policy of compensating the families of victims who they killed or wounded by mistake. It is not always done, and many families refuse to take the money, but at least it represents some accounting for taking the lives of innocent people. Why can’t the President set up a similar policy when drone strikes are used in countries with which we are not at war?

There are many things the President could and should have said, but he didn’t. So it is up to us to speak out.

medea_benjamin_0Medea Benjamin (medea@globalexchange.org), cofounder of Global Exchange and CODEPINK: Women for Peace, is the author of Drone Warfare: Killing by Remote Control. Her previous books include Don’t Be Afraid Gringo: A Honduran Woman Speaks from the Heart., and (with Jodie Evans) Stop the Next War Now (Inner Ocean Action Guide).

This article was originally posted at Common Dreams.

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Comments

  1. bob dorn says

    May 26, 2013 at 9:14 am

    Before, even after, Medea Benjamin confronted the president on his warmaking, the press has studiously avoided gripping the larger issue of his power as Commander-in-Chief. Why doesn’t he simply issue orders to close that military prison? What happened to all those analyses that pointed to how Congressional paralysis could be overcome, at least partially, by his exercise of executive power?
    Barak Obama makes stirring speeches, encouraging us at difficult moments to hold on to our democratic principles, to support his administration and to help him sort out this mess we’re in.
    I’m beginning to wonder how I am supposed to support him.

  2. micaela shafer porte says

    May 26, 2013 at 11:51 am

    rumors from some corridors of security homelanders are that the coast guard is supposed to “not notice” some south of the border boat-people making for our san diego beaches so forces of order will have fodder for more “public safety and security” budget and development…
    you would think with all the technology at our command, we wouldn’t miss a thing….
    we don’t in pakistan…

  3. John P. Falchi says

    May 26, 2013 at 1:24 pm

    I want to acknowledge the courage that Medea Benjamin showed in speaking out against the Obama Administration’s policies on drones and on Guantanomo Bay. This, along with protests against these policies may raise their salience in the media, causing more people to pressure our government for change.

  4. obecean says

    May 26, 2013 at 1:27 pm

    America has betrayed its basic principles: it suspended Habeus Corpus at a time when it was needed most. No matter how many times Obama brushes over, stutters and stammers on the issue, the fact remain: The US has become a rogue State in the wake of 9/11.

    Brave actions like Ms. Benjamin’s only appear rude to the rotten.

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