It worries me too, although for me there is also a bottom-line feeling that Bin Laden deserved to die...Seraph wrote:I am disappointed to see the USA administration officially resorting to employing assassination squads. Although the Nuremberg trials of 1945/6 did not escape criticism, (Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court Harlan Fiske Stone, for instance, called the Nuremberg trials a fraud and a high-grade lynching party because the accused were arraigned on ex post facto laws,) at least a pretense of a fair trial took place before ten of the twelve principal Nazis on trial were executed. (The other two committed suicide).
In so far as "we" are now resorting to assassination, the "free world" is lowering itself to the same level as its enemy. Coming on the heels of exempting selected suspects from habeas corpus, a number of other legal protections from injustice, and the reintroduction of systematic use of torture, all of which we prided ourselves on as a mark of distinction from less civilised societies, I think the victories we may be said to have won in the war against terrorism are rather hollow.
However, precedents and slippery slopes are valid concerns.
It would have been better, even given the risks and problems, to forcibly extradite him and put him on trial; hopefully, either to be executed, or locked away for life...
Even then, the forcible extradition would have some legal ramifications, but I could live with that. As it is, I agree that it has all the hallmarks of an assassination, with the spin of "died while resisting arrest" being the hallmark of rather dodgy police procedures in other jurisdictions...