America's Drone Terrorism / Growing Global Opposition

blackascoal

The Force is With Me
America’s Drone Terrorism
October 19, 2012

In the United States, the dominant narrative about the use of drones in Pakistan is of a surgically precise and effective tool that makes the U.S. safer by enabling “targeted killing” of terrorists, with minimal downsides or collateral impacts.

This narrative is false.

Those are the understated opening words of a disturbing, though unsurprising, nine-month study of the Obama administration’s official, yet unacknowledged, remote-controlled bombing campaign in the North Waziristan region of Pakistan, near Afghanistan. The report, “Living Under Drones,” is a joint effort by the New York University School of Law’s Global Justice Clinic and Stanford Law School’s International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic.

The NYU/Stanford report goes beyond reporting estimates of the civilian casualties inflicted by the deadly and illegal U.S. campaign. It also documents the hell the Pakistanis endure under President Barack Obama’s policy, which includes a “kill list” from which he personally selects targets. That hell shouldn’t be hard to imagine. Picture yourself living in an area routinely visited from the air by pilotless aircraft carrying Hellfire missiles. This policy is hardly calculated to win friends for the United States.

Defenders of the U.S. campaign say that militants in Pakistan threaten American troops in Afghanistan as well as Pakistani civilians. Of course, there is an easy way to protect American troops: bring them home. The 11-year-long Afghan war holds no benefits whatever for the security of the American people. On the contrary, it endangers Americans by creating hostility and promoting recruitment for anti-American groups.

The official U.S. line is that America’s invasion of Afghanistan was intended to eradicate al-Qaeda and the Taliban, who harbored them. Yet the practical effect of the invasion and related policies, including the invasion of Iraq and the bombing in Yemen and Somalia, has been to facilitate the spread of al-Qaeda and like-minded groups.

U.S. policy is a textbook case of precisely how to magnify the very threat that supposedly motivated the policy. The Obama administration now warns of threats from Libya — where the U.S. consulate was attacked and the ambassador killed — and Syria. Thanks to U.S. policy, al-Qaeda in Afghanistan spawned al-Qaeda in Iraq, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, and al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.

If that’s success, what would failure look like?

Regarding Pakistani civilians, the report states,

While civilian casualties are rarely acknowledged by the U.S. government, there is significant evidence that U.S. drone strikes have injured and killed civilians.… It is difficult to obtain data on strike casualties because of U.S. efforts to shield the drone program from democratic accountability, compounded by the obstacles to independent investigation of strikes in North Waziristan. The best currently available public aggregate data on drone strikes are provided by The Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ), an independent journalist organization. TBIJ reports that from June 2004 through mid-September 2012, available data indicate that drone strikes killed 2,562–3,325 people in Pakistan, of whom 474–881 were civilians, including 176 children. TBIJ reports that these strikes also injured an additional 1,228–1,362 individuals.

The Obama administration denies that it has killed civilians, but bear in mind that it considers any male of military age a “militant.” This is not to be taken seriously.

The report goes on,

U.S. drone strike policies cause considerable and under-accounted-for harm to the daily lives of ordinary civilians, beyond death and physical injury. Drones hover twenty-four hours a day over communities in northwest Pakistan, striking homes, vehicles, and public spaces without warning. Their presence terrorizes men, women, and children, giving rise to anxiety and psychological trauma among civilian communities. Those living under drones have to face the constant worry that a deadly strike may be fired at any moment, and the knowledge that they are powerless to protect themselves.

It’s even worse than it sounds:

The U.S. practice of striking one area multiple times, and evidence that it has killed rescuers, makes both community members and humanitarian workers afraid or unwilling to assist injured victims. Some community members shy away from gathering in groups.

How can Americans tolerate this murder and trauma committed in their name? But don’t expect a discussion of this in Monday night’s foreign-policy debate. Mitt Romney endorses America’s drone terrorism.
http://www.fff.org/comment/com1210q.asp
 
Growing oppostion to US drones program

The United States has a long history of violating international law when its leaders believe foreign policy objectives justify doing so. The belief in the right of the United States to overthrow democratically elected governments (Guatemala), to train and arm insurgencies (Nicaragua), and to launch aggressive wars (Iraq) free of the inconvenience of the law grows out of the nationalistic fervor of “American Exceptionalism.”

Currently, President Obama is directly overseeing a drones program that potentially violates a number of international legal norms. In October 2009, Philip Alston, then UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions, stated that the drones program would be illegal if the U.S. was failing to take “all of the relevant precautions to make sure that civilians are not killed, in accordance with the relevant international rules.” Alston continued, “The problem is that we have no real information on this program.”

In May we learned that the President personally maintains a “Kill List” and holds weekly meetings during which, as judge, jury and executioner, he determines who lives and who dies. It was also revealed that the President counts all military-age males killed in drone strikes as militants. However, as a show of his compassion and fairness, the President does leave open the possibility for those killed to be proved innocent posthumously.

Such brazen counting and book cooking would make the sneakiest Wall Street accountants blush. It is also what allowed Counterterrorism Adviser John Brennan to maintain for over a year that there had not been a single civilian casualty from drone strikes. In May, Brennan corrected his patently absurd and dishonest claim, stating that innocent loss of life “is exceedingly rare, but it has happened.”

There is also the president’s personal authorization of the use of “signature strikes” in Pakistan and Yemen. Signature strikes target unidentified and unconfirmed individuals based in behavioral characteristics that are perceived to be those of militants or terrorists. Of course, it doesn’t actually matter whether an individual killed by a signature strike is a militant because he will be counted as one regardless.

President Obama’s method of distinguishing militants from civilians inherently violates the principle of distinction precisely because it fails to distinguish civilians from militants. It also potentially violates the principle of proportionality. There are limits to even unintentional civilian deaths in war. The number of civilians killed in a military action cannot be “excessive in relation to the concrete and direct overall military advantage anticipated.”

The president’s system of counting civilian deaths is only one potentially criminal component of his drones program. In February, The Bureau of Investigative Journalism and the Sunday Times published the results of a joint investigation into the practice of targeting rescuers who converge on the scene of an initial drone strike. They concluded that between 2009 and 2011, more than a dozen such attacks occurred, resulting in the deaths of at least fifty civilians.

After a brief lull, similar attacks were carried out numerous times this year. The most recent “double tap” occurred last month in Pakistan. Intentionally targeting rescuers and the wounded are clear violations of international humanitarian law. Of course, the president attempts to evade accountability by presuming all those killed in both the initial strike and the follow-up to be militants.

Not everyone agrees. There is a growing international movement against the impunity with which President Obama runs his drones program. UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism Ben Emmerson has called for an independent investigation into each and every death that results from drone strikes. Such investigations are worthwhile in response to all future drone attacks, but are too little too late for those already victimized by President Obama’s potential war crimes.

We need more than an end to the “conspiracy of silence” concerning the president’s drone attacks; we need an investigation into the legality of the Obama Administration’s favored means of making war. U.S. foreign policy cannot be immunized from the very same laws used as the impetus for applying sanctions and making war against others. International law’s legitimacy is grounded in its consistent application. Selectively applying and enforcing international law undermines the law, as well as the moral high ground claimed by those who use it as a tool against “rogue” elements while immunizing themselves.
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/262877-growing-oppostions-to-us-drones-program

Bachman is a professor of human rights at American University, with a focus in state responsibility for violations of international human rights and humanitarian law.
 
BAC... you simply don't understand the terminology.

"surgically precise and effective tool" means 'we think we might have gotten who we wanted to get (and please don't mention the 'collateral damage')'
 
I've tried to make this an issue here, but nobody seems to want to talk about it. Killing people by remote control... I remember when the Ds thought it created terrorists, but they are all blood-thirsty when it is a D President and no American gets splattered with the blood...
 
I've tried to make this an issue here, but nobody seems to want to talk about it. Killing people by remote control... I remember when the Ds thought it created terrorists, but they are all blood-thirsty when it is a D President and no American gets splattered with the blood...
Not arguing with that. It's why Obama is getting away with mass murder. Democrats are only humanitarian when it's a republican in office.

Doesn't change that Obama's drones have created the most anti-american sentiment anywhere. He's given the fundamentalists what they couldn't get on their own, legitimacy.
 
I've tried to make this an issue here, but nobody seems to want to talk about it. Killing people by remote control... I remember when the Ds thought it created terrorists, but they are all blood-thirsty when it is a D President and no American gets splattered with the blood...

I applaud your efforts to make this an issue.

If Bush were still in office, it would be an issue .. with massive protests to boot.
 
Not arguing with that. It's why Obama is getting away with mass murder. Democrats are only humanitarian when it's a republican in office.

Doesn't change that Obama's drones have created the most anti-american sentiment anywhere. He's given the fundamentalists what they couldn't get on their own, legitimacy.

Well said.
 
BAC... you simply don't understand the terminology.

"surgically precise and effective tool" means 'we think we might have gotten who we wanted to get (and please don't mention the 'collateral damage')'

I know. I'm so stupid I think that "surgically precise" means that we didn't blow up innocent women, children, and babies in the process.

What do I know?
 
Yes she is .. and growing like a weed. :0)

Seems like just yesterday she was an egg.

Today, she walks.

It goes too quickly. Our youngest grand is two and I don't want her to grow up, but because she is the third girl, she is learning and growing up at a faster rate than the other two.
 
I'm sure that it's necessary to kill innocents along with terrorists after the mess that Bush got us in to. (/channeling liberals)


Oooooh good channel.

If Romney wins(if, not calling it) I predict Massive outbreak in "WHY IS THE US SO IMPERIALISTIC?" protests and "WHY ARE WE SO EVIL?" questions. Liberals are hypocrites, conservatives are just pricks. I'll take the honest evil over the dishonest one.
 
Oooooh good channel.

If Romney wins(if, not calling it) I predict Massive outbreak in "WHY IS THE US SO IMPERIALISTIC?" protests and "WHY ARE WE SO EVIL?" questions. Liberals are hypocrites, conservatives are just pricks. I'll take the honest evil over the dishonest one.
I need you to point out which is the 'honest evil', because as it stands, I see both sides lying for years.
 
I need you to point out which is the 'honest evil', because as it stands, I see both sides lying for years.
Conservative evil comes down to, "Muslims all deserve bombing, God is the only god, homo's go to hell, Abortions are murder, diplomacy is for pussies and everybody who disagrees with america should be shot."
 
Conservative evil comes down to, "Muslims all deserve bombing, God is the only god, homo's go to hell, Abortions are murder, diplomacy is for pussies and everybody who disagrees with america should be shot."

whereas liberal evil is honest evil? like a muslim shooting up a military base is just a violent crime, but an american shooting up a movie theater is terrorism? or telling people that you won't go after MED MJ dispensaries, but doing so in plain sight isn't dishonest, it's just collaborative damage in the war on drugs?
 
whereas liberal evil is honest evil? like a muslim shooting up a military base is just a violent crime, but an american shooting up a movie theater is terrorism? or telling people that you won't go after MED MJ dispensaries, but doing so in plain sight isn't dishonest, it's just collaborative damage in the war on drugs?
You misunderstand, liberal evil is the hypocrisy, saying imperialism is evil while bombing sovereign nations. Condemning nations that kill civilians while we claim those civilians we kill were obvious terrorists. Republican rich people is corporatism liberal rich people are just well off. The list goes on
 
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