Today at the Opinio Juris blog, Koh finally made the U.S. government's case. He quoted heavily from his 2010 drone speech. He also appended some analysis on the legal requirements for completing a battlefield surrender, which should be of interest to all infantrymen.
In my column I surmised that the purpose of the administration's reticence to thoroughly defend the legality of the bin Laden raid was to avoid declaring a checklist of requirements defining armed conflict status that might end up restricting the legal flexibility of the government against future irregular adversaries. Koh did not appear to add any disclaimers in this regard, so it remains to be seen whether some "lawfare" adversary of the United States will use Koh's blog post against the government in the future.
Comments
The critics have had an entire decade where they clearly knew the US was after Osama "dead or alive" and they had no complaints while he was alive. Their complaints are self serving and convenient to say the very least about their pseudo-outrage. It must be asked, what part of dead didn't they understand then?