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Go Home America’s Scandalous Drone War Goes Unmentioned in the...

PLANK SEPTEMBER 26, 2012

America’s Scandalous Drone War Goes Unmentioned in the Campaign

A new study released this week by researchers at Stanford and NYU has found that American drone strikes in Pakistan are killing far more civilians than advertised, taking out few high value targets, and have become the primary recruiting tool for the terrorist groups the policy is aimed at combating. The report, “Living Under Drones: Death, Injury, and Trauma to Civilians From US Drone Practices in Pakistan,” is based on “more than 130 interviews with victims, witnesses, and experts, and review of thousands of pages of documentation and media reporting” conducted over nine months.

The research found that, over the last eight years, drone strikes have “killed 2,562-3,325 people in Pakistan, of whom 474-881 were civilians, including 176 children.” Meanwhile, only 2 percent of those killed were “high-level” targets. This means that the strikes have killed three times as many children as terrorist leaders. The report also shows that the impact of the drone war isn’t limited to those directly affected by strikes because the constant presence of drones overhead “terrorizes men, women, and children, giving rise to anxiety and psychological trauma among civilian communities.” People in these regions have become afraid to render assistance to innocent victims or to attend funerals, as both rescuers and mourners have been targeted for secondary strikes.  

The report’s findings are irrefutably stunning. Even more so is the fact that these revelations won’t play any role at all in the pending presidential campaign.

The study authors point to several legal, moral, and philosophical questions that arise from the drone policy, including whether it’s wise for a democratic government to undertake a systematic policy of killing over a period of years with virtually no transparency to its own people. Let’s leave those aside, however, and focus on the narrow and basic question of whether the campaign of targeted killing facilitated by the use of unmanned vehicles serves U.S. policy interests. American citizens are, after all, unlikely to demand that their leaders abandon a policy that’s keeping them safe from another 9/11 attack on the basis of some innocent lives ruined halfway across the world. It is, after all, easy to rationalize the toll on civilians who are family or associates of terrorists who mean us harm.

To be sure, some extremely high-value al Qaeda leaders have been killed under the policy. Qaed Sinan Harithi, believed to have been a planner of the USS Cole attack and killed in Yemen in November 2002, was likely the first. Saeed al-Masri, then-al Qaeda’s number 3, and Ahmed Mohammed Hamed Ali, East Africa embassy bombing mastermind, and others are also on the list. Further, as the report begrudgingly acknowledges, “Documents selectively released by the US after the raid on bin Laden’s Abbottabad compound indicate that bin Laden himself expressed concern about, and modified operations in response to, drone strikes.”

Still, the vast majority of those killed are mere “foot soldiers” or simply those who might be “militants” of some stripe. Indeed, that’s been an explicit policy choice by President Obama, under whose tenure the pace of attacks have dramatically escalated. The Bush administration carried out between 45 and 52 attacks, all aimed at major terrorist leaders. In less than half the time, his successor has carried out nearly 300, lowering the targeting threshold to include so-called “signature” strikes against “groups of men who bear certain signatures, or defining characteristics associated with terrorist activity, but whose identities aren’t known.”

While obviously dangerous—the 9/11 hijackers themselves were low level operatives, after all—they are much easier to replace than senior leaders. It’s debatable whether it’s worth the reported one million dollar per strike price tag for taking out these low level targets, much less whether it’s worth the resentment and collateral damage that’s the natural fallout.

The report authors note that “evidence suggests that US strikes have facilitated recruitment to violent non-state armed groups, and motivated further violent attacks.” They cite a May New York Times report asserting that “drones  have replaced Guantánamo as the recruiting tool of choice for militants” along with a June Pew survey which finds “74 percent of Pakistanis now consider the US an enemy.” (Although, in fairness, they omit the fact that the exact same survey shows very low support for al Qaeda, the Taliban, and other anti-American extremist groups and that, if anything, the trend in that regard is positive.) The report also cites a June 2012  Middle East Policy Council report which “identified a correlation between drone strikes and terrorist attacks in the years 2004-2009”and found it “probable that drone strikes provide motivation for retaliation, and that there is a substantive relationship between the increasing number of drone strikes and the increasing number of retaliation attacks.”

These findings reflect the increasing sense among expert analysts and practitioners that the policy is backfiring. New America Foundation national security studies program director Peter Bergen declared earlier this month that  “If the price of the drone campaign that increasingly kills only low-level Taliban is alienating 180 million Pakistanis--that is too high a price to pay.” Retired Admiral Dennis Blair, former Director of National Intelligence, declared in an August 2011 New York Times op-ed that “Drone strikes are no longer the most effective strategy for eliminating Al Qaeda’s ability to attack us,” and that the drone campaign “is eroding our influence and damaging our ability to work with Pakistan to achieve other important security objectives like eliminating Taliban sanctuaries, encouraging Indian-Pakistani dialogue, and making Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal more secure."

Despite the increasing intensity with which this issue is being debated in foreign policy wonk circles, the discussion has been all but absent in the ongoing presidential campaign. Terrorism is not among the twenty-six “issues” discussed on Mitt Romney’s website and the treatment of “Afghanistan & Pakistan” doesn’t mention the drone policy. To the extent that the issue is getting any traction on the domestic political front, it’s coming from the likes of Glenn Greenwald and others on the president’s left. One suspects that’s just fine with Obama, whose ability to tout the fact that “we got bin Laden” has put him in the unique position among Democrats of having the edge on national security issues. 

Indeed, Obama has shrewdly—some might say cynically—positioned himself to the right on foreign policy, thereby insulating himself from the “weak on defense” canard that has plagued his party going back to the days of George McGovern. He doubled down on Afghanistan, at the expense of more than a thousand dead American soldiers and marines, at a point when it was obvious the war was unwinnable on the timetable he set. He ignored the hectoring over damaged relations with Pakistan that would result from the bin Laden raid, betting that success would ensure his re-election. And his use of drone strikes makes George W. Bush look like a cautious man.

Romney seems to sense that he can’t use foreign policy to his advantage and has embarrassed himself on the few occasions he’s tried, notably his bizarre performance the morning after the murder of America’s ambassador to Libya. So, he’s taken James Carville’s axiom (“It’s the economy, stupid”) far more seriously than Bill Clinton ever did. The result is that the most important national security issues of the day aren’t being debated during the contest to determine who will be commander-in-chief the next four years.

 James Joyner is managing editor of the Atlantic Council.

 

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16 comments

Some might say "cynically" but they would probably be either (a) the conservatives who are really irritated that Obama has the edge on national security or (b) those on the Left who for whom Republicans and Democrats are all the same and who couldn't care less who gets elected because they don't really believe in elections. For anyone else? Shrewdly.

- ironyroad

September 26, 2012 at 4:38pm

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Drones won't be ignored in the US once the enemy starts using them against us. What is that buzzing sound I hear at night? George McGovern was a bomber pilot in WWII and knew what it was like to kill and have others attempt to kill you. Drones make killing safe and guilt-free. Perfect for the chicken hawks.

- rayward

September 26, 2012 at 4:50pm

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I don't know if the report is "irrefutably stunning". The Atlantic had a whole article on how it isn't quite that irrefutable (short version: the authors don't appear to have interviewed anyone in FATA, their sample appears to be an entire 130 people who likely have never been near a drone attack and hold senior positions in civil society, many of whom appear to have been previously contacted by a group whose stated mission is to end drone attacks). The casualty numbers are also a little suspect, given that they have to be based on media reports, who have to rely on what the Pakistani government (not the most neutral actor here) tells them. The Atlantic article also managed to find space to note that this new report curiously didn't compare the behavior of the general population in drone targeted areas with what happens with the Pakistani army rolls in to pick up the fight (hint: they flee, even if the move is only threatened). This is not to say in any way that drones are a 100% accurate precision weapon or that there are not grievous and tragic mistakes occurring. However the evidence appears to indicate that they cause far less collateral damage than sending the troops in. Which, at the end of the day, is the only option unless you count simply not pursuing the targets.

- Nari224

September 26, 2012 at 4:56pm

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Sorry, link here http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/09/targeted-killing-pro-and-con-what-to-make-of-obamas-afghan-drone-policy/262862/ Leave the link be. Leave the link be. Please.

- Nari224

September 26, 2012 at 4:56pm

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The fact that several hundred civilians, even children, are killed while fighting a war is not scandalous, it is a quantum leap forward in humaneness. Apparently the hundreds, nay thousands, of innocents killed by indiscriminate Al Qaeda and Taliban attacks don't prejudice the population, only our attacks do. The impact of our attacks can be questioned, and certainly should be dispassionately analyzed. It's possible that if we stopped the drone strikes they would like us. Uh huh.

- Vogelfam

September 26, 2012 at 6:41pm

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I agree with the crowd here. I disagree with much of the gist of the Mr. Joyner's article. It's not the most scientific method, but consider the hypothetical situation in which we stop conducting UAV operations in FATA/Pakistan (and Yemen, and Somalia). Honestly, do you think the violently anti-American crowd, there and among their like-minded brethren in other regions, will suddenly realize that they have no reason to hate us? Hmm. Or do you think maybe they'll find a new "primary recruiting tool," a fresh justification for their oppressive ideology, and a new campaign of misinformation that completely ignores the billions of dollars we give to aid the [hopefully legitimate sectors of the] government Pakistan? "It’s debatable whether it’s worth the reported one million dollar per strike price tag for taking out these low level targets, much less whether it’s worth the resentment and collateral damage that’s the natural fallout." No, it doesn't cost $1,000,000 per strike, unless you're prorating & calculating every single factor that goes into a mission, from weaponry R&D to the cost of the KBR laundry service that cleans the socks of the colonel who clears the airspace for UAV's flight path. Yes, it's still a marvelous bargain, both economically and in terms of the trade-off vis-a-vis actual boots-on-ground and all that that entails (American blood & sweat, expensive personnel movements & exfil, helicopter fuel, re-allocation of resources from bases & ALP train/advise/assist missions, etc.). And yes, "the resentment & collateral damage" are acceptable as long as the homeland remains safe and until foreign theocratic wingnuts are no longer unapologetic about their choice to make their lives an eternal conflict. The drone strikes represent one tool that facilitates the conditions in which the State Department & helpful NGOs can do their jobs there so that, eventually, the DoD & CIA no longer have any job there at all. The candidates don't discuss it because it seems like a no-win issue, but one of them ought to elevate the discussion by articulating what Scott Pelley would call "a big idea" about how to empower & educate the oppressed & ignorant citizens of the countries most victimized by Obama's policy of Death From Above (if I may re-appropriate that Airborne cheer for our new flying robot counterparts).

- Konstantin

September 27, 2012 at 4:10am

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Ditto the above (and thanks for the link that essentially blows this post's basic argument to Kingdom Come nari). If this so-far unanimous response shows up at tnr, imagine how much the rest of the public doesn't give a rat's ass about the arguments Joyner lamely makes. And, fwiw, in a war in which the enemy wears no uniform, doesn't sleep in barracks or march in large units, and surrounds itself with family and neighbors, 100% of the targets are "civilians", including the ones on crew-served weapons.

- Robert Powell

September 27, 2012 at 5:07am

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RP writes: "And, fwiw, in a war in which the enemy wears no uniform, doesn't sleep in barracks or march in large units, and surrounds itself with family and neighbors, 100% of the targets are "civilians", including the ones on crew-served weapons." Bullseye

- seattleeng

September 27, 2012 at 12:35pm

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There is an interesting push from the far left with regards to the drone policy and in particular the effects on Pakistan (which is really the current and relevant front in the "war on terror"). While it can be said that indiscriminate killing of civilians by drone attacks and mis-identification using satellite imagery and not so reliable 'eyes on the ground' intelligence, one would expect civilian casualties. I think for most Americans and even civilians in the countries in which drones operate, the preferred operation of drones versus patrols and random searches, sacking and razing of houses (like we did in Iraq and Afghanistan) puts a greater strain on people than the low-frequency buzz of drones flying overhead. Perhaps if Pakistan weren't the least stable nuclear-armed power state, one could make valid arguments for less drone attacks on suspected and known Al Queda operatives. But considering that Pakistan has shown its willingness to sell nuclear technology and materiel to whomever, it begs the question to those opposing the drone war....what are our other options? I haven't heard any from the far left like Conor Freidersdorf at the Atlantic who, out of purist piety will be voting for Gary Johnson because he promised to stop drone attacks. http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/09/why-i-refuse-to-vote-for-barack-obama/262861/ Of course neither of them speak to national security or foreign policy adjustments as they relate to Yemen, Pakistan, Afghanistan and the ME. None. So again. The question remains...what are our other options?

- singlspeed

September 27, 2012 at 1:13pm

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Thanks so much, Nari224, for the link to the Atlantic article. I was wondering how reliable the drone study was (from what I read, it felt like a lot of the information came from people with a possible agenda) but it's good to see a specific critique. Here's another interesting bit of information to put things in perspective: http://www.satp.org/satporgtp/countries/pakistan/database/casualties.htm In 2004-2012, over 14,000 Pakistani civilians and over 4,500 security personnel have been killed by terrorists. Even the highest estimates of civilian casualties from the drone attacks (832) are dwarfed by comparison.

- CYoung63

September 27, 2012 at 5:13pm

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Comparing the US response to terrorist activities to the Pakistani response is setting the bar pretty low. It's like defending BP in 2010 by saying 'Well at least refineries aren't blowing up every other month like in Nigeria'. I fear there will be consequences from this joystick war for years to come. I also think the most dubious 'success' to date of the drone campaign was the killing a year ago in Yemen of Anwar al-Awlaki, the US-born cleric. From what I gather, he was all hat and no cattle; a big mouth who had no authority in al Qaeda.

- Runciman

September 28, 2012 at 9:17am

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al-Awlaki was directly implicated in the Fort Hood massacre and in recruiting and training the "underwear bomber" who cost us billions in new screening technology and travel delays. He was a major figure in recruiting in general, in particular with regard to operations in the US. He needed killing, I'm glad he's dead, and appreciate Obama's willingness to pull the trigger.

- Robert Powell

September 28, 2012 at 2:15pm

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Joyner is over all correct. The Atlantic author writes "There aren't better choices than drones in NW Pakistan." How about disentangling from a primitive society that will be at the neolithic stage 1000 years from now? How about shutting off immigration from 3rd world cesspools? How about not killing innocents, which leads to revenge against America. John Q. Adams said America should not go abroad seeking monsters to destroy.

- raygun

September 28, 2012 at 5:32pm

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What has immigration got to do with targeting known Al-Qaeda operatives in the Af-Pak region?

- ironyroad

September 28, 2012 at 5:40pm

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Ironyroad: You have to be kidding. The 9-11 plane hijackers, mostly Saudi, were following BinLaden's instructions. And they were in America on student/immigrant visas. They & he were enraged that America based troops in Saudi Arabia during the "liberation" of Kuwait.As well as general support for Israel. It doesn't take much to make Muslims sullen, resentful & ready for jihad. (witness the youtube movie nobody has seen or cares about) The benefit of diversity visas that bring vipers into our country is...what?And if none of these vipers are allowed in, how can they hurt us, if we stop stirring up hornets nests in their backward lands? And if they are not card-carrying terrorists but "merely" want to establish sharia law here, how does that make America stronger? No connection w/immigration...really?

- raygun

September 28, 2012 at 5:55pm

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They would seem to be two distinct areas of policy, initially at least. But if you are saying that the 9-11 hijackers were able to game the student visa system to enter the US, that's perfectly true. They did (and partly because processing had been outsourced to clueless private enterprise). However, operational border control is not the same thing as immigration policy in general, and there's a big difference between making sure that people don't sneak in on spurious visas and not allowing anyone to study in the US. I presume you're not suggesting the latter, as third-level education is a growing area of the American economy.

- ironyroad

September 28, 2012 at 6:06pm

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