David French: It doesn’t seem wise to let Trump decide what war is

posted in: All news | 0

President Donald Trump has done it again.

He is attacking a genuine and serious problem recklessly, heedless of the consequences and, in this case, of human life.

On Tuesday I watched Trump proudly display grainy footage of a military strike on what he said was a boat full of narco-terrorists on their way to the United States with a load of drugs.

Typically, when the Coast Guard or another branch of the military or law enforcement spots a boat suspected of carrying drugs, we seek to stop the boat, search it, seize any drugs, and arrest and question the crew. If these drug-smuggling suspects open fire, American forces can respond, but they cannot simply execute someone on the mere suspicion of drug trafficking.

We do not kill those suspected of being criminals from the air.

‘Jus ad bellum’ and ‘jus in bello’

The thing that separates war from murder is the law, and the law of war contains two key components. They go by two Latin terms: jus ad bellum and jus in bello.

Jus ad bellum refers to the limited legal right to go to war. In other words, when is it legal to fight?

Jus in bello refers to conduct within the war. If it’s lawful to fight, then how must I fight?

For the use of military force to be lawful, it must satisfy the requirements of both doctrines. There must be a legal basis for the use of force, and the force that is used must also be lawful. Russia’s war in Ukraine would be lawless, for example, even if President Vladimir Putin confined himself to conducting airstrikes against only military targets and even if his troops behaved scrupulously in the field.

Why? Because there was no justification for the initial invasion. International law prohibits wars of aggression and territorial conquest, so Russia’s war itself is a crime, regardless of how the military behaves.

Conversely, when debating Israel’s war in the Gaza Strip, jus ad bellum is satisfied: Hamas’ attacks Oct. 7, 2023, gave Israel the legal right to respond with military force, even to the point of removing Hamas from power. The controversies are, for the most part, over jus in bello, Israel’s conduct in the war. Hamas’ attack did not give Israel carte blanche to fight however it desires.

Firewalls

In the United States, we have two firewalls against unjust and unlawful wars. First, the Constitution grants Congress the exclusive power to declare war. The president does have authority as commander in chief to respond to immediate military threats, like an armed attack, before a declaration of war, but he is not supposed to initiate new hostilities in the absence of congressional action.

A crime — even a crime as vicious as trafficking hard drugs into the United States — is not an act of war. It can’t be compared to Pearl Harbor, to Sept. 11 or to any other attack on American citizens or troops, or allied citizens or troops. To even mention Tren de Aragua in the same breath as al-Qaida, much less Imperial Japan, illustrates the absurdity of the administration’s argument.

Second, the international law of armed conflict still applies to U.S. forces. The broad language of Article 18 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice — the criminal laws that govern the armed forces — extends the requirements of international law into U.S. military law, and that means that presidents don’t have the power to order violations of the laws of armed conflict.

So where did Trump find the legal authority to initiate deadly force against suspected members of a drug gang?

The closest thing we’ve heard to an actual legal argument is the repeated assertion that Trump could order a strike on Tren de Aragua because it’s a designated terrorist organization.

Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, said after the attack that American forces may strike anyone “trafficking in those waters who we know is a designated narco terrorist.”

“We knew exactly who was in that boat,” he added, and “we knew exactly what they were doing, and we knew exactly who they represented, and that was Tren de Aragua.”

Though I question his certainty (I’ve had enough experience with airstrikes to know that our intelligence is rarely that precise), even if he’s correct, then that knowledge granted American forces probable cause to stop and search the boat for evidence of a crime, not grounds to execute the crew (or any passengers) from above.

For his part, Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, said that the United States will “blow up” members of criminal groups, and Thursday designated two more groups, Ecuadorian gangs Los Lobos and Los Choneros, as terror organizations.

It is true that the administration has the authority to designate foreign entities as terrorist organizations. And it’s true that the administration has used its authority to classify a host of drug gangs as terrorist organizations, but the relevant statute that allows the administration to make that designation does not include an authorization for military force.

What the statute does do is bar Americans from providing “material support or resources” to the designated group and bar members of the group from entry into the United States. It can also require financial institutions to block transactions involving terrorist property and assets.

What we are left with is a military strike conducted against suspects without due process, in the absence of any need for immediate self-defense (the boat was not firing on American forces), without any congressional authorization and without any basis in international law.

Consequences to contemplate

The consequences of Trump’s action are terrible to contemplate. If you are in a state of war with a terror organization, then military forces have the right to shoot members of that organization wherever they are found. When I served in Iraq, if we had sufficient reason to believe a person or a group of people were terrorists, we didn’t have to arrest them. We could kill them.

As an Army lawyer, I helped my commander make life-or-death decisions, including whether to use deadly force on the basis of partial information and drone footage. I know firsthand that the process is imprecise, potentially fraught with mistakes and justifiable only in extreme circumstances.

In Iraq we were engaged in a congressionally authorized counterinsurgency campaign against the deadliest terrorists on earth. Those conditions don’t apply to Trump’s campaign in the Caribbean.

Under the Trump administration’s reasoning, the president’s power to use deadly force isn’t limited to speedboats in international waters. War, after all, is war, and it can be fought wherever the enemy is present. That means members of the National Guard patrolling American streets could be granted broad authority to use deadly force, circumventing due process through a hail of gunfire.

‘Can’t you just shoot them in the legs or something?’

Trump has long fantasized about the promiscuous use of military force. His former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said that Trump asked about using military force against protesters in 2020, during his first term. “Can’t you just shoot them, just shoot them in the legs or something?” Trump asked, according to Esper.

Trump also reportedly asked about shooting migrants in the legs, and he deployed thousands of soldiers to the southern border. And it’s not just the president. Republican governors have called the flood of migrants across the southern border an “invasion” and sought to unlock their own war powers to respond to illegal immigration.

The laws of war exist because decent societies place a high value on human life and because the world has repeatedly endured the horrendous consequences of total war. Due process exists because millennia of experience with arbitrary power teach us that rulers can’t be trusted to dispense unilateral justice.

Drug trafficking, like all serious crimes, imposes tremendous costs. Drug overdoses have imposed a staggering toll on American communities and families.

But to say that drug trafficking is a serious crime with serious consequences is not the same thing as saying that it’s an act of war. Conflating crime with war obviously risks inflicting violence and injustice on the innocent and the guilty alike, but there are other risks as well.

Military strikes raise the possibility of military escalation. Venezuelan fighter jets flew over an American destroyer after the strike on the suspected drug boat, and now the United States is deploying even more military assets to the Caribbean, including F-35 fighters, our most advanced combat aircraft.

Meantime, Russia and China

Injustice and escalation aren’t the only consequences of Trump’s foolishness and lawlessness. Perhaps the most dangerous consequence is diversion. Russia and China are moving closer together, and China held a military parade last week that showcased an extraordinary range of new, advanced weapons.

Trump is diverting the military from its primary mission: deterring a war with hostile forces that are infinitely more dangerous than any South American drug gang.

No one should have any illusions that either Congress or the Supreme Court will stop the president. The Republican Congress does whatever Trump demands, and the Supreme Court has been reluctant to interfere with the president’s authority to use force abroad, especially since the Vietnam War.

It’s up to the American people to hold Trump accountable for his lawless acts. Every person who pumped his fist at Trump’s news conference should pause and think very hard about letting him — or any president — expand the definition of war until due process dies, blotted out by the flame and smoke of a missile strike.

David French writes a column for the New York Times.

 

Musk’s SpaceX spends $17 billion to acquire spectrum licenses from EchoStar

posted in: All news | 0

By MICHELLE CHAPMAN, AP Business Writer

Elon Musk’s SpaceX has reached a deal worth about $17 billion with EchoStar for spectrum licenses that it will use to beef up its Starlink satellite network.

Related Articles


Mass layoffs at Bremer Bank’s Lake Elmo facility follow Old National merger


Robinhood joins new band of companies calling the S&P 500 their home


5 ways to get on the path to lifetime income


FAA extends ban on US commercial flights to Haiti’s capital because of risk from gangs


Stocks tick higher after Wall Street flirts with another record

The deal for EchoStar’s AWS-4 and H-block spectrum licenses includes up to $8.5 billion in cash and up to $8.5 billion in SpaceX stock. SpaceX will make approximately $2 billion in cash interest payments on EchoStar debt through November 2027.

SpaceX and EchoStar will enter into a long-term commercial agreement which will allow EchoStar’s Boost Mobile subscribers to access SpaceX’s next generation Starlink Direct to Cell service.

Shares of EchoStar surged 19% before the market opened Monday.

Last month AT&T said that it will spend $23 billion to acquire wireless spectrum licenses from EchoStar, a significant expansion of its low- and mid-band coverage networks.

EchoStar said that it anticipates that the AT&T deal and the SpaceX transaction will resolve recent inquiries from the Federal Communications Commission about the rollout of 5G technology in the U.S. The FCC had been calling for hearings on whether Echostar was properly using the spectrum that it is now selling, and its efforts to make 5G more available to communities.

EchoStar said Monday that it will use the proceeds from the sale partly to pay down debt. Current operations of Dish TV, Sling and Hughes will not be impacted, the company said.

Mass layoffs at Bremer Bank’s Lake Elmo facility follow Old National merger

posted in: All news | 0

Four months after finalizing a merger with Bremer Bank, Old National Bank is laying off 244 employees at the Bremer service center in Lake Elmo.

Related Articles


Robinhood joins new band of companies calling the S&P 500 their home


5 ways to get on the path to lifetime income


FAA extends ban on US commercial flights to Haiti’s capital because of risk from gangs


Stocks tick higher as Wall Street drifts near its record levels


Shortage of homebuyers forces many sellers to lower prices or walk away as sales slump drags on

Most of the terminations will be completed by mid-November and include accountants, cyber-security specialists, legal counsel, payroll administrators and benefits managers.

“This action is due to integration of the Bremer business following its acquisition with Old National Bank,” reads an Aug. 22 explanatory letter from an attorney for Old National Bank to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development.

DEED issued a notice Monday indicating all of the terminations at the 8555 Eagle Point Blvd. facility will take place by the end of 2026. The workers are not represented by a union and do not have bumping rights.

The letter gives no indication of any impacts in downtown St. Paul, where Bremer Bank has maintained a longstanding headquarters. A call to a spokesperson for Old National was not immediately returned Monday.

Lake Elmo Mayor Charles Cadenhead said city officials received a letter informing them of the layoffs.

“We are very sorry to hear about the business center closing, and we hope all the people who are out of a job are able to find a job quickly,” he said. “We hope another business takes the opportunity to use that space in Lake Elmo.”

The Old National Bancorp, which is publicly traded and maintains dual headquarters in Chicago and Evansville, Ind., announced in May it had completed a $1.4 billion merger and acquisition of St. Paul-based Bremer Financial Corp., one of the largest farm lenders in the nation.

Related Articles


Motorcyclist killed in I-94 crash was former East Ridge hockey player


Zebra mussels found in Washington County lake


Washington County: Deadline for community-based opioid projects funding is Oct. 10

The privately-held Bremer was the bank-holding company for Bremer Bank, which was founded in 1943 by German immigrant Otto Bremer, whose philanthropic trust owned the financial institution. With an 11% stake in the newly-merged institution, the Otto Bremer Trust remains a minority stakeholder in Old National Bank.

The merger has elevated Old National to be the third-largest bank in the Twin Cities — as measured by deposits — and among the top 25 banking companies headquartered in the nation. Bremer maintains some 70 branches in Minnesota, North Dakota and Wisconsin.

The merger followed multiple legal disputes between the Bremer trustees and the bank board over a potential hostile takeover through the sale of voting shares. The trustees’ efforts, the first step toward positioning the bank for sale, were paused during five years of legal fighting, which came to a close through a legal settlement reached about a year ago.

Jeanne Crain, chief executive officer of Bremer Bank, stepped down from the role May 16.

 

Democrats release suggestive letter to Epstein purportedly signed by Trump, which he denies

posted in: All news | 0

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats on the House Oversight Committee released on Monday a sexually suggestive letter to Jeffrey Epstein purportedly signed by President Donald Trump, which he has denied.

Trump has said he did not write the letter or create the drawing of a curvaceous woman that surrounds the letter. He filed a $10 billion lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal for a report on the alleged letter.

This is a developing story; check back for updates.