The Hubris of the Drones
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/02/12-8
The Hubris of the Drones
by Bill Moyers and Michael Winship
Published on Tuesday, February 12, 2013 by Common Dreams
Last week, The New York Times published a chilling account of how indiscriminate killing in war remains bad policy even today. This time, its done not by young GIs in the field but by anonymous puppeteers guiding drones that hover and attack by remote control against targets thousands of miles away, often killing the innocent and driving their enraged and grieving families and friends straight into the arms of the very terrorists were trying to eradicate.
The Times told of a Muslim cleric in Yemen named Salem Ahmed bin Ali Jaber, standing in a village mosque denouncing al Qaeda. It was a brave thing to do a respected tribal figure, arguing against terrorism. But two days later, when he and a police officer cousin agreed to meet with three al Qaeda members to continue the argument, all five men friend and foe were incinerated by an American drone attack. The killings infuriated the village and prompted rumors of an upwelling of support in the town for al Qaeda, because, the Times reported, such a move is seen as the only way to retaliate against the United States.
~snip~
Rohde has firsthand knowledge of what a drone strike can do. He was kidnapped by the Taliban in 2008 and held for seven months. During his captivity, a drone struck nearby. It was so close that shrapnel and mud showered down into the courtyard, he told the BBC last year. Just the force and size of the explosion amazed me. It comes with no warning and tremendous force
Theres sense that your sovereignty is being violated
Its a serious military action. It is not this light precise pinprick that many Americans believe.
A special report from the Council on Foreign Relations last month, Reforming U.S. Drone Strike Policies, quotes a former senior military official saying, Drone strikes are just a signal of arrogance that will boomerang against America. The report notes that, The current trajectory of U.S. drone strike policies is unsustainable
without any meaningful checks imposed by domestic or international political pressure or sustained oversight from other branches of government, U.S. drone strikes create a moral hazard because of the negligible risks from such strikes and the unprecedented disconnect between American officials and personnel and the actual effects on the ground.