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The Nuclear Card

Shocking Revelation: Drone Strikes Make People Mad

Posted on 01 October 2012 by Ilisha

Predator Drone Victim's Funeral

A recent study confirms Pakistanis resent foreign drones prowling their skies, vaporizing their compatriots. How is this news to anyone?

Would Iranian drones blasting Hellfire missiles at wedding parties in the American heartland endear us to Iran? Maybe we need a study to figure out why we need a study to conclude what’s perfectly obvious to anyone with an ounce of common sense?

New Stanford/NYU study documents the civilian terror from Obama’s drones

by , UK Guardian

A vitally important and thoroughly documented new report on the impact of Obama’s drone campaign has just been released by researchers at NYU School of Law and Stanford University Law School. Entitled “Living Under Drones: Death, Injury and Trauma to Civilians From US Drone Practices in Pakistan“, the report details the terrorizing effects of Obama’s drone assaults as well as the numerous, highly misleading public statements from administration officials about that campaign. The study’s purpose was to conduct an “independent investigations into whether, and to what extent, drone strikes in Pakistan conformed to international law and caused harm and/or injury to civilians”.

The report is “based on over 130 detailed interviews with victims and witnesses of drone activity, their family members, current and former Pakistani government officials, representatives from five major Pakistani political parties, subject matter experts, lawyers, medical professionals, development and humanitarian workers, members of civil society, academics, and journalists.” Witnesses “provided first-hand
accounts of drone strikes, and provided testimony about a range of issues, including the missile strikes themselves, the strike sites, the victims’ bodies, or a family member or members killed or injured in the strike”.

Here is the powerful first three paragraphs of the report, summarizing its main findings:

drone1

While noting that it is difficult to obtain precise information on the number of civilian deaths “because of US efforts to shield the drone program from democratic accountability”, the report nonetheless concludes: “while civilian casualties are rarely acknowledged by the US government, there is significant evidence that US drone strikes have injured and killed civilians.”

But beyond body counts, there’s the fact that “US drone strike policies cause considerable and under-accounted for harm to the daily lives of ordinary civilians, beyond death and physical injury”:

drone2

In other words, the people in the areas targeted by Obama’s drone campaign are being systematically terrorized. There’s just no other word for it. It is a campaign of terror – highly effective terror – regardless of what noble progressive sentiments one wishes to believe reside in the heart of the leader ordering it. And that’s precisely why the report, to its great credit, uses that term to describe the Obama policy: the drone campaign “terrorizes men, women, and children”.

Along the same lines, note that the report confirms what had already been previously documented: the Obama campaign’s despicable (and likely criminal) targeting of rescuers who arrive to provide aid to the victims of the original strike. Noting that even funerals of drone victims have been targeted under Obama, the report documents that the US has “made family members afraid to attend funerals”. The result of this tactic is as predictable as it is heinous:

Secondary strikes have discouraged average civilians from coming to one another’s rescue, and even inhibited the provision of emergency medical assistance from humanitarian workers.

In the hierarchy of war crimes, deliberately targeting rescuers and funerals – so that aid workers are petrified to treat the wounded and family members are intimidated out of mourning their loved ones – ranks rather high, to put that mildly. Indeed, the US itself has long maintained that such “secondary strikes” are a prime hallmark of some of the world’s most despised terrorist groups.

Perhaps worst of all, the report details at length that the prime excuse offered by Obama defenders for this continuous killing – it Keeps Us Safe™ by killing The Terrorists™ – is dubious “at best”; indeed, the opposite is more likely true:

drone3

All the way back in 2004, the Rumsfeld Pentagon commissioned a study to determine the causes of anti-US terrorism, and even it concluded:

Muslims do not ‘hate our freedom,’ but rather, they hate our policies.

Running around the world beating your chest, bellowing “we’re at war!”, and bombing multiple Muslim countries does not keep one safe. It manifestly does the opposite, since it ensures that even the most rational people will calculate that targeting Americans with violence in response is just and necessary to deter further aggression.

A one-day attack on US soil eleven years ago unleashed a never-ending campaign of violence around the world from the target and its allies. Is it really a challenge to understand that continuous bombings and civilian-killing assaults over many years, in many Muslim countries, will generate the same desire for aggression and vengeance against the US?

Time and again, those who have attempted to perpetrate attacks on US soil have cited the Muslim children and other innocent human beings extinguished by Obama’s drones. Recall the words of the attempted Times Square bomber, Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad, at his sentencing hearing when the federal judge presiding over his case, Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum, asked incredulously how he could possibly use violence that he knew would result in the deaths even of innocent children — as though she were literally unaware that her own government continuously does exactly that:

Well, the drone hits in Afghanistan and Iraq, they don’t see children, they don’t see anybody. They kill women, children, they kill everybody. It’s a war, and in war, they kill people. They’re killing all Muslims . . . .

I am part of the answer to the U.S. terrorizing the Muslim nations and the Muslim people. And, on behalf of that, I’m avenging the attack. Living in the United States, Americans only care about their own people, but they don’t care about the people elsewhere in the world when they die.

The minute he was apprehended by US authorities, Shahzad, as reported by the Washington Post, “told agents that he was motivated by opposition to U.S. policy in the Muslim world, officials said. ‘One of the first things he said was, ‘How would you feel if people attacked the United States? You are attacking a sovereign Pakistan.’”

Perhaps most importantly, the report documents the extreme levels of propaganda used by the western press to deceive their citizens into believing pure myths about the drone campaign. As I’ve argued before, the worst of these myths is the journalistic mimicry of the term “militants” to describe drone victims even when those outlets have no idea who was killed or whether that term is accurate (indeed, the term itself is almost as ill-defined as “terrorist”). This media practice became particularly inexcusable after the New York Times revealed in May that “Mr. Obama embraced a disputed method for counting civilian casualties that did little to box him in. It in effect counts all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants.”

Incredibly, even after that radical redefinition was revealed, and even after the Obama administration got caught red-handed spewing demonstrable falsehoods about the identity of drone victims, US media outlets continued to use the term “militant” to describe drone victims….

Read the rest here

  • Sir David ( Illuminati membership number 5:32)

    FYI
    I have revealed my name on here in the past and am proud to do so .
    Its ( drum roll in the background )………David Livingston and I live in Angers ,France . Its no big thing .
    And you are ?

    Sir David

  • Ilisha

    @leia

    I understand the need for diplomacy and gaging your audience.

    I also agree that ordinary people are blamed, and that it’s unfortunate. I’m with the ordinary people of the world everywhere and always, because they have so little control over policies, even in a democracy (often a plutocracy or an oligarchy in reality), and yet they are the ones who end up paying the price.

    In our case, there are a lot of Americans who don’t agree with US militarism and foreign policy. Our voices are often drowned out, but we’re here.

    No To Oligarchy
    http://www.thenation.com/article/37889/no-oligarchy

    The Plutonomy Memos
    http://politicalgates.blogspot.com/2011/12/citigroup-plutonomy-memos-two-bombshell.html?m=1

  • leia

    and yes what you say is not only true about iran, but is probably only the tip of a huge ugly iceberg. speaking as a young Muslim in the developing world, what frustrates me is how getting angry over it seems so hopelessly futile. as if nothing will really change. like Palestine.

  • leia

    @llisha just want to say i’m not a US resident, at the mo, and what i wrote was a greatly watered down version of what i really think and know. in the spirit of respect and so on.(my op on fat suited power hungry leaders,etc needs too much energy that i just cant muster right now, esp cuz i’m not an expert.) to the world, what the US government does, represents American people as well.the distinction between the ppl and its government, especially if that nation claims to be ruled by its ppl, is not easily made. not necessarily true, but its what ppl will inevitably think. sad really.

  • http://twitter.com/Raza_inc Razainc

    @Arab Atheist

    There are plenty if people on the political left like Dennis Kucinich and right like Ron Paul you can connect with academics like Scott Atran for example I think you have start with them because they intelligent and well educated on these issues and try give them a stronger voice as opposed to concerning our self with what the mainstream says also journalists like Glenn Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill , and Amy Gooldman are very helpful in providing an alternative voice

  • Garibaldi

    @FYI

    It is the preference of all the writers here. There are several good reasons for it, security is one, but most of all it focuses the debate not on personalities, etc. but on the substance. Also it annoys the hell out the haters. At some point, at our leisure we might reveal our identities but that time is not now.

    Thanks.

  • FYI

    “We’re anonymous bloggers, so I can’t share details, but both my education and career are related. If the American people could see what I’ve seen, they would be shocked–and furious. ”

    You need not be. Why are you anonymous here? You would have credibilty if you wrote under your real names. All of you. Why is Loon Watch anonymous? It’s not like it is promoting hate of any kind. Being anonymous is the domain of haters,

  • Ilisha

    @leia

    “…not that the US or any well meaning foreign power intends this…”

    Well meaning? This is deliberate neocolonialism, and what it amounts to is sophisticated theft by the vampire class on an international scale. It happens on the domestic front too, but in a different way.

    I hate to sound cynical, but I have some understanding of how this works. We’re anonymous bloggers, so I can’t share details, but both my education and career are related. If the American people could see what I’ve seen, they would be shocked–and furious.

    If you want just a glimpse into how this game works on the international front, read Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, or at least watch the film. It won’t explain it all, but it’s a good starting point.

    Note that today Iran’s currency reached a new low under international sanctions over non-existent nuclear weapons.

    It’s not a well meaning accident. It’s economic warfare, similar to the British-led sanctions before the overthrow of Iranian democracy in 1953. Deja vu.

  • leia

    @llisha well said. i strongly agree on your point on US aid, as well as the imf and the world bank. i don’t think aid should ever be given with strings/conditions attached, in the way the US does. it sets conditions that are near impossible for many third world countries to meet, gives a foreign power not just a say but a choke hold over the government. No more democracy, just a zombie government.
    not that the US or any well meaning foreign power intends this, this us just the inevitable final result (based on empirical evidence of the last century)

  • Ilisha

    @mindy1

    If you’re killing innocent people and increasing terrorism, doing nothing would be a better alternative. But if you want to solve the problem over the long run, that would require a complete overhaul of our policies:

    (1) The super powers created a complete mess in Afghanistan and left it there. The Soviets invaded and the US wanted to deliver a Vietnam-like defeat to them, via the Mujahadeen fighters. Then the US and other countries supported the Taliban to keep a lid on the mess, until the pot boiled over. We need to stop these short sighted, destructive strategies–yet, now we’re backing the MEK in Iran and Al-Qaeda linked fighters in Libya. Will we ever learn?

    (2) End “aid” to Pakistan, which doesn’t reach the people anyway. Aid in the present form amounts to bribes for corrupt politicians.

    (3) Stop IMF loan sharking and unjust World Bank policies that strap countries with debt to keep them under control. Forgive existing debts.

    (4) Since countries like Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan were doing far better in the 1960s to early 1980s and were regressed in part due to the policies of rich countries, they need to clean up and do some nation building. There have been two studies that show countries stabilize when people’s basic needs are met.

    Of course, everyone will howl if you say we should invest in nation building, but what kind of conditioning makes people think it’s okay to spend a trillion dollars slaughtering people instead of spending that same money on nation building? Think about that.

    The truth about modern war needs to be conveyed to the public. People falsely believe “surgical strikes” hit mostly militants, when in fact 90% of those killed are innocent civilians. How is that not terrorism?

    Even if some people have no moral problem with bombing people back to the stone age, it’s strategically foolish and a huge waste of resources, not to mention those killed and wounded on both sides in these senseless wars. Our entire self defeating, destructive thinking needs to change.

    We’ve devastated whole countries and left them in shambles, yet we haven’t decisively won a war in 60 years. Why do we think the military option works?

    The Hollow Empire
    http://original.antiwar.com/justin/2012/09/23/the-hollow-empire/

  • leia

    killing your enemy, whoever it is, when thay cant get a fair chance at defending themselves,when they are sleeping in their homes, when they are doing things that you as a human love to do as well, when they are not even marching to war against you on your soil,is this not horrifying? but its even more horrible for those who do such killing, who have let themselves becum inhuman.

  • leia

    This is just horrible. Most ppl outside of the US could have told you many reasons why drone attacks are monstrous acts against humanity, many years ago, many within the US as well. besides terrorising innocents there are other points: 1. what real threat would poor mountain tribes ever pose to a powerful nation(with tchnology that can track movement easily, guard borders, airways, protect seaways,etc) many miles and an ocean away? whats the point of all these continous attacks? when was anyone in pakistan proven to have attackd the US, in such a fashion it justified war? To those of us fortunate enuff to have access to news, net, etc, perhaps we know of the so called ‘war on terror’. Would those in rural pakistan, ppl who may not even be able to read or write know that? to them it likely seems that the US has declared an unfair and dishonorable war on them, without reason.(‘what did we ever do to you?’so many may think). many may feel that it is a moral necessity to fight to defend their families, men women children.
    2. the reason given for drone attacks , to protect US soldiers, and excessive loss of US life, is not only a despicable one, but also a highly unethical one. A long time ago in the time of swords and arrows, ppl actually had honor in war. how can you go to a war knowing that the ‘enemy’ you fight has never and will never do what you are doing to them?
    3. How can anyone sit behind a computer screen, killing off ppl randomly, and be allowed to get away with it?? there was an article a few years ago about how drone attacks make taking human life as nothing more than a computer game. a horrible thing to happen to any human being. worse even than being killed by drones. how can anyone allow a human to become a heartless killer?
    4.why aren’t there any protests, international human right organistaions condemnations? when if say iran did this to say israel the condemnation would be swift and deadly.
    5. WHy have the ppl of this region been sufficiently dehumanised, that certain ppl can take all this without getting outraged and horrified?

  • Arab Atheist

    @Razainc
    They cant do that. Muslim life has no worth whatsover in these people’s eyes. To most of them all Muslims are terrorists unless proven otherwise (having oil helps too) and it’s always good to kill “terrorists”, I mean who would disagree with that!

  • raghu

    unfortunately it is only way to target Taliban..without Pakistans in involvement. if left to Pakistan yhey fore warn terrorists.. perpetually to squeeze money from US

  • http://twitter.com/Raza_inc Razainc

    @mindy1 We need to first start to get the political left and right to acknowledge this then take a principled position opposing these policies but the problem is any time you do this the mainstream political left and right just go into denial claim that either the government is innocent and can’t possibly do anything morally wrong or just shout We’re at war

  • mindy1

    Sadly obvious, but what is the alternative? :(

  • http://aayjay.wordpress.com AJ

    Good article but I consider Faisal Shahzad’s case as a sting operation meaning he did it for money and not for the love of Islam or to avenge anyone’s death. His Connecticut home evaded foreclosure and his wife and kids got enough money to lead a comfortable life somewhere.

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