De-liberation exploits an alternative etymology for deliberation to emphasize the idea of freedom implicit in it, and especially the sense of both setting free one possibility and yet fixing or freezing it as an actuality in the immediate simple past, so "un-freeing" it as well. 
    
The meaning of "de-liberation" can be drawn from the observation that free will is a temporal sequence of "free" followed by "will."
First comes the consideration of 
alternative possibilities, which are generated unpredictably by acausal events (simply noise in neural network communications). This free creation of possible thoughts and actions allow one to feel "
I can do otherwise."  
The 
de-liberation and 
adequate determination (or 
self-determination) by the will, the 
unfreeing of possibilities into actuality, has made the decision that directs the tongue or body to speak or act.
After the 
de-liberation of the will, the true sentence "
I can do otherwise" can be changed to the past tense and remain true as a "hard fact" in the "fixed past," and written "
I could have done otherwise."
The usual etymological derivation of deliberate is from the Latin 
deliberare, to weigh well, to ponder, which is thought to come from prefix 
de- + 
librare, to weigh, from 
libra, scale, or pound.
Thus we have the strong connotation that deliberation is a balancing of two alternatives.
But there is another critical Latin word, 
liberare, to liberate, from the root 
liber, free. Another meaning of Latin 
liber is book.
The English word 
deliver also comes from middle Latin 
deliberare, at which time it was thought to mean 
set free, apparently a reference to the root verb 
liberare.
We can restore that sense with our own coinage 
de-liberate, from prefix 
de- + 
liberare, to free or un-free. 
Then we have the desirable connotation of un-freeing possibilities and determining one of them as actuality.