Unassigned

PBS: Military Personnel Seeking Legal Counsel About the Missions Trump Has Assigned Them

Here's something we haven't seen anywhere except for the no-longer-government-funded PBS. According to them, military personnel have been seeking legal advice on whether the missions assigned to them by the Commander-in-Chief are legal.

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PBS News reports:

The U.S. strikes against alleged drug trafficking boats and deployments to American cities have sparked a firestorm of debate over their legality, and some service members are turning to nonprofit organizations for help.

In grainy footage from above the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean, 20 times since September, the Pentagon has shown the same thing, a flash of light and a boat allegedly carrying drugs into the United States incinerated by a U.S. military strike, in all, dozens of people killed on board the vessels.

But that is the extent of what the Trump administration has disclosed publicly, no confirmation of any drugs on board or the identities of the people killed. President Trump has justified the lethal strikes and the fog of war that's clouded them.

It seems as though PBS got a press release from "The Orders Project," an outfit run by a former Army lawyer. We're sure it's nonpartisan.

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We'd bet even fewer.

That's straight from The Orders Project.

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