Ottawa Citizen

Legal experts set sights on drone warfare

ANALYSIS: U.S. use of deadly technology might be violating internatio­nal law

- WILLIAM MARSDEN

WASHINGTON • Civilian death estimates are referred to as “bug splat.”

The weekly White House meetings to evaluate candidates for the “kill list” are tagged “Terror Tuesdays.”

Among the many lives that hang in the balance at these meetings are those of the wives and children of alleged terrorists, the people who come to the aid of blast victims after an attack and people who show up at their funerals. The logic is that if they know the terrorist, they must be collaborat­ors so why not “double tap” — hit them with a second strike.

This is the covert world of killer-drone warfare, what some people refer to as Washington’s worst-kept secret.

This is a sort of armchair killing where drones are remotely piloted from bases in the United States. Using drones makes going into battle safer and cheaper for the attacker but not for the attacked. It’s Lethal Toy Story.

Ben Emmerson, the United Nations’ special rapporteur on human rights, said the rise in the use of drone technology “represents a real challenge to the framework of establishe­d internatio­nal law” and has called on the internatio­nal community to create standards for drone warfare and “reach a consensus on the legality of its use,” particular­ly in counterter­rorism and counter-insurgency.

What worries many is that drones lower the threshold for making war and may violate internatio­nal and humanitari­an law as civilians in countries not at war with the U.S. pay with their lives.

With the State Department claiming the number of alQaida members is growing, the question is whether drone killings work.

Micah Zenko, a security policy fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, said reports from both military and academic experts conclude that military force rarely leads to the eliminatio­n of terrorist organizati­ons. Most have been eliminated either because they were infiltrate­d by police or as a result of a peaceful settlement.

Both for political reasons and because of the questionab­le legality of it, the U.S. drone program is cloaked in a frayed veil of secrecy. While American courts have refused to order the government to release informatio­n about a program that officially doesn’t exist, the Obama administra­tion leaks when it benefits Obama’s image. It’s hard to keep Hellfire air-tosurface missile attacks secret.

Pre- election concerns that Obama was appearing weak resulted in a series of New York Times stories in which unnamed administra­tion sources depicted him as tough enough to make the weekly drone-kill decisions. Obama became the moral man saddled with a troubling but necessary drone war to keep America safe. One official quoted Obama as saying that the decision to kill Anwar al-Aulaqi, an al-Qaida recruiter and an American citizen, in Yemen in September 2011 “was an easy one.”

This article was followed by a speech last June by Obama’s “high priest” of killer drones, John Brennan, who at the time was his lead terrorism adviser and is now his nominee to head the CIA. He said that “in order to prevent terrorist attacks on the United States and to save American lives, the United States government conducts targeted strikes against specific alQaida terrorists, sometimes using remotely piloted aircraft, often referred to publicly as drones.”

The killer-drone program began under former president George H.W. Bush in 2002. Fifty strikes occurred under his administra­tion. Obama has accelerate­d the program seven-fold with 350 strikes, according to Zenko and other experts.

Estimates vary as to how many “terrorists” and how many “civilians” have been killed. Of the 32 al- Qaida leaders on Obama’s kill list, 22 have been killed, 21 by drones, Zenko said. The total number of people killed is much higher — more than 3,000 according to some accounts. How many of these were civilians depends on how “civilian” is defined. The administra­tion says civilian deaths are minimal. Non-government organizati­ons say the figure is more than 2,000.

The U.S. is operating killer drones in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia and is seeking a base in North Africa. It has refused since 2004 UN requests for informatio­n about the drone attacks, which under internatio­nal law the U.S. is obliged to provide.

 ?? S. MIRZA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A Pakistani demonstrat­or holds a burning U.S. flag during a protest in Multan against killer-drone attacks in Pakistan’s tribal areas last month.
S. MIRZA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES A Pakistani demonstrat­or holds a burning U.S. flag during a protest in Multan against killer-drone attacks in Pakistan’s tribal areas last month.

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