Stopping Pakistan Drone Strikes Suddenly Plausible

by: Robert Naiman, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Stopping Pakistan Drone Strikes Suddenly Plausible
Predator drone attacks, by aircraft such as the one pictured here, have been an increasingly destabilizing force in Pakistan. (Photo: US Air Force)

    Until this week, it seemed like the conventional wisdom in Washington was that stopping US drone strikes in Pakistan was outside the bounds of respectable discussion.

    That just changed. Or it should have.

    Writing in The Los Angeles Times, Doyle McManus notes that counterinsurgency guru David Kilcullen has told Congress that US drone strikes in Pakistan are backfiring and should be stopped. Until now, Congress has been reluctant to challenge the drone strikes, as they are reluctant in general to challenge "military strategy," even when it appears to be causing terrible harm. But as McManus notes, Kilcullen has unimpeachable Pentagon credentials. He served as a top adviser in Iraq to General Petraeus on counterinsurgency, and is credited as having helped design the Iraq "surge." Now, anyone in Washington who wants to challenge the drone strikes has all the political cover they could reasonably expect.

    And what Kilcullen said leaves very little room for creative misinterpretation:

"Since 2006, we've killed 14 senior Al Qaeda leaders using drone strikes; in the same time period, we've killed 700 Pakistani civilians in the same area. The drone strikes are highly unpopular. They are deeply aggravating to the population. And they've given rise to a feeling of anger that coalesces the population around the extremists and leads to spikes of extremism.... The current path that we are on is leading us to loss of Pakistani government control over its own population."

    Presumably, causing the Pakistani government to lose "control of its own population" is not an objective of United States foreign policy.

    McManus says there's no sign that the Obama administration is taking Kilcullen's advice and the Obama administration is unlikely to abandon "one of the few strategies that has produced results." But a Washington Post report suggests otherwise:

Although the missile attacks are privately approved by the Pakistani government, despite its public denunciations, they are highly unpopular among the public. As Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari's domestic problems have grown, the Obama administration last month cut the frequency of the attacks. Some senior US officials think they have reached the point of diminishing returns and the administration is debating the rate at which they should continue.

    Since it is manifestly apparent that 1) the drone strikes are causing civilian casualties, 2) they are turning Pakistani public opinion against their government and against the US, 3) they are recruiting more support for insurgents and 4) even military experts think the strikes are doing more harm than good, even from the point of view of US officials, why shouldn't they stop? Why not at least a time-out?

    Why shouldn't members of Congress ask for some justification for the continuation of these strikes? The Pentagon is asking for more money. It's time for Congress to ask some questions.

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 Robert Naiman is policy director at Just Foreign Policy and president of Truthout's Board of Directors.


Comments

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Can you say "illegal"? The

Can you say "illegal"? The drones/missiles strikes are ILLEGAL, war crimes. Why is so much framed as "war efficiency"?


It's high time-long

It's high time-long overdue-for Congress to ORDER an end to these strikes. Stop treating presidents like elected royalty and make them do the right thing. What cowards in Congress. "Political cover"... can't these people think for themselves? See how fast they'll run if there is a future terrorist attack caused by this stupid policy.


For a classical reference,

For a classical reference, try Hercules versus the hydra. Every time Hercules cut off one of the Hydra's heads, he caused it damage - but two more grew in its place. So, too, with unmanned drone strikes - they show "results" (another al Qaeda head removed) - but result in a number of new al Qaeda heads popping up.


"Presumably, causing the

"Presumably, causing the Pakistani government to lose control of its own population is not an objective of US foreign policy"... Assume makes an ass of u and me.


How wrong can you all get.

How wrong can you all get. What do you want? Just to sit by and let the terrorists invade Pakistan and take control? Remember the sign on a monkey's cage: "THIS ANIMAL IS VICIOUS, WHEN ATTACKED, IT FIGHTS BACK". This also true of people and the use of drones.


Drones cost 53 million $

Drones cost 53 million $ each and the new military budget asks for 2 billion $ for 80 of them. So they are a great weapon--keep the taxpayer dollars flowing with a perfect justification--saving pilot's lives. Totally bogus, since US forces have virtual uncontested control of the airspace over their middle eastern battlefields.


The strikes are legal if the

The strikes are legal if the country being struck gives the OK which Pakistan must have since many of the drones fly from Pakistan territory. If we pull our punches in fear of future terrorist attacks we actually encourage them. I think this all began when Reagan pulled the marines out of Lebanon in 1983 after 241 troops were slaughtered there in a suicide terrorist attack. The simple message was that a single terrorist event could cause a superpower to fold. Thousands of US citizens have now died since 1983 because we cut and ran that one time. The Taliban is complaining about drones for a reason. They have been very effective in killing those who normally feel very safe, the leaders who send off the suicide bombers. One Taliban interviewed in the New York Times this week says that, contrary to the Kilcullen 14 senior personel killed by drones, he alone has lost 29 friends. Doesn't it seem fishy that drones are only able to pick out senior Al Qaeda leaders and innocent civilians? It is possible that many of that 700 were indeed all levels of active terrorist, their sympathizers and those who supported them. Innocents certainly died in our air strikes but innocents are dieing everyday at the hands of the Taliban and Al Qaeda and will continue to die for an untold number of years if they are not stopped. If we abandon the fight there we may face Pakistani nuclear weapons in our cities in the near future. Not one or a very bad dirty bomb, how about ten in ten major US cities delivered over our porous border with Mexico? All possible if Mr. Khan and a few friends and their families are all captured by a righteous religious Taliban and their Al Qaeda along with the weapons. Or do you think the Marines who pulled out of Lebanon after their barracks were bombed and Somalia after Blackhawk down will be able to go into a Pakistan of 175 million people, find the weapons, all of them, and get back out?


WAR CRIMES - drones/missiles

WAR CRIMES - drones/missiles by US in Pakistan villages according to US law, international law.


Air attacks, whether by

Air attacks, whether by drone or piloted aircraft are going to result in the same negative outcome in targeting. The advantage of the drone is it's ability to "hang around" long enough to ascertain the target and be there at the exact time needed. The alternative is ground troops and the impossible situation of fighting in the highest mountains in the world against a foe maintaining the high ground. I don't see a solution except to withdraw from any offensive action, and defend against constant attacks forever. Is there another way?


To 3:28: this is the perfect

To 3:28: this is the perfect Bush/Cheneyite "national security" mentality. The US military had no business in Lebanon or Somalia during these periods. The US government has funded the Pakistani military extensively in the past. Members of this military, supported by US money, helped to build the jihadist movement in the 1980's. It's possible that some of this money also helped to fund Pakistan's nuclear weapons. The point is that US meddling was and is disastrous. The "strategy" of US interference is making the situation worse. These nuclear weapons ARE potentially dangerous; that's why you need a more hands-off approach. It's imperative to respect other people. 3:28: how would YOU feel if your town were attacked like this? THINK.


As I keep saying, this is

As I keep saying, this is too lucrative to the military industrial complex and the war profiteers. Plus with people buying into the neocon mantra of "fight them over there instead of here", you get this continuing to escalate with no end in sight. So dream on about pulling out.


But if we stop killing

But if we stop killing civilians ==> enraging the survivors ==> making "terrorism" a more attractive prospect, since it's the only way they can fight back ==> increasing the numbers of "terrorists"... then how will the military-industrial complex justify its existence?


"Why shouldn't members of

"Why shouldn't members of Congress ask for some justification for the continuation of these strikes? The Pentagon is asking for more money. It's time for Congress to ask some questions." –(Robert Naiman) Please, let's dispense with the näiveté here. The U.S. Congress is so full to the brim with war criminals and state terrorists to make dead Nazi's stir in their graves. The Pentagon and their procurer's call the shots in America; all congress does is stage a 'dog and pony show' of deceit. There is no 'justification' for the use of terror drones, just as their is no justification for torture. That is why both will continue unabated. America does not do "justification." The chances of ending the depravity of the Predator drone is analogous to the chances of imprisoning Dick Cheney, or even John Yoo. However, the most grotesque obscenity would be what now passes for business as usual in the Obama lie fest: Blame it on the Republicans and George Bush; announce you will stop the savagery; then at the optimum moment of political expediency, resume the terror. Mollify the Liberals? That isn't necessary.


To 14:46 - even better: by

To 14:46 - even better: by supporting the Ethiopian army invading Somalia so as to remove the islamic courts just because they indeed are "islamic", the US helped create the legal void which allowed both the lawless dumping on waste in Somali national waters by western entities (e.g. italian mafias) and the festering of piracy, in part in reaction to the dumping...