Top military lawyer raised legal concerns about boat strikes
Source: NBC News
WASHINGTON The senior military lawyer for the combatant command overseeing lethal strikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats near Venezuela disagreed with the Trump administrations position that the operations are lawful and his views were sidelined, according to six sources with knowledge of the legal advice.
The lawyer, who serves as the senior judge advocate general, or JAG in military parlance, at U.S. Southern Command in Miami, raised his legal concerns in August before the strikes began in September, according to two senior U.S. officials, two senior congressional aides and two former senior U.S. officials.
His opinion was ultimately overruled by more senior government officials, including officials at the Justice Departments Office of Legal Counsel, the six sources said. Other JAGs and military lawyers at various levels of seniority weighed in on the boat strikes, as well. Its unclear what each of their opinions were, but some of the military lawyers, including civilians and those in uniform, also expressed concerns to senior officials in their commands and at the Defense Department about the legality of the strikes, the two senior congressional aides and one of the senior former U.S. officials said.
The JAG at Southern Command specifically expressed concern that strikes against people on boats in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean, whom administration officials call narco-terrorists, could amount to extrajudicial killings, the six sources said, and therefore legally expose service members involved in the operations.
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