Christine Sixta Rinehart
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Targeted killing
The constitutionality of killing US citizens
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Between November 2002 and January 2015, the United States’ drone (Remotely Piloted Aircraft, RPA) war killed approximately twelve United States (US) citizens with armed Predator or Reaper RPA. Targeted killing or the assassination of foreign citizens is not new for the US. However, the targeted killing of US citizens by their own government abroad, let alone killing with RPA, is a relatively new concept. Four US citizens were killed during the George W. Bush Administration. Eight are known to have died in US RPA strikes during President Barack Obama’s Administration. A ninth US citizen claims he was targeted but survived five strikes. This chapter engages with the US official and public records to explore the killing and targeting of US citizens by RPA strikes. In part it explores the tension between the legal justification found in the Official Record and the due process provided to US citizens in the US Constitution. The chapter begins with discussions of the intelligence cycle and its critics and the process of RPA strikes as they relate to the intelligence cycle. Next, the data on US citizens killed and/or targeted, or who claim to have been targeted, by RPA strikes is presented. Key aspects of the evolution of targeted killing from Bush to the administration of President Joe Biden are then highlighted, before the concepts of due process, imminence and feasibility are discussed in the final section.

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The Official Record

Oversight, national security and democracy

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