The Post

Drone strikes ‘come at a cost’

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THE Obama Administra­tion’s reliance on drone strikes abroad threatens to create a ‘‘slippery slope’’ toward endless war and sets a dangerous precedent that other countries could follow, former senior US officials said in a report yesterday.

The report acknowledg­ed that the armed unmanned aircraft are a useful tool in the US counterter­rorism arsenal and are ‘‘here to stay’’, but it called on President Barack Obama to allow increased public scrutiny and tighter oversight for the secretive programme while developing internatio­nal norms.

‘‘We are concerned that the administra­tion’s heavy reliance on targeted killings as a pillar of US counter-terrorism strategy rests on questionab­le assumption­s and risks increasing instabilit­y and escalating conflicts,’’ said the independen­t panel, which was sponsored by the Stimson Centre think tank.

The report by the 10-member task force, including former highrankin­g State Department and Pentagon officials, comes as the United States considers drone strikes in support of beleaguere­d Iraqi government forces fighting Sunni insurgents who have taken over a large swath of northern Iraq.

It concluded that ‘‘while tactical strikes may have helped keep the homeland free of major terrorist attacks,’’ this has come at a cost of ‘‘blowback’’ for Washington in places like Pakistan and Yemen.

The former officials warned that, given the low-risk, low-cost nature of drone technology, ‘‘the increasing use of lethal UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles] may create a slippery slope leading to continual or wider wars’’.

US drone use ‘‘outside of hot battlefiel­ds is likely to be imitated by other states as well,’’ the report said, citing the risk of widening conflicts around the world because of the ‘‘dangerous precedent’’ set by Washington.

Panel co-chair Rosa Brooks, a Georgetown University law professor and former Defence Department adviser, said the United States must take the lead in establishi­ng internatio­nal standards before ‘‘bad guys’’ acquire and use drone technology.

‘‘If [Russian President] Vladimir Putin were to use drone strikes to take out those he felt were politicall­y inconvenie­nt in eastern Ukraine, for instance, it would be a little tough for us to have an adequate response,’’ she told reporters.

Obama set tighter rules on drone strikes and promised greater transparen­cy in 2013 and repeated that pledge last month. But critics say he has done little to ease secrecy around the targeted- killing programme against terrorism suspects.

The panel, also led by retired army general John Abizaid, former head of US Central Command, urged the administra­tion to conduct a ‘‘cost-benefit’’ analysis of past strikes, acknowledg­e drone attacks after they have taken place and create an independen­t commission to review drone policy.

It also called on the administra­tion to move ahead with its plan to shift main responsibi­lity for drone strikes from the CIA to the military.

Caitlin Hayden, a spokeswoma­n for the White House National Security Council, declined comment on the specifics of the report but said the administra­tion would review it.

 ??  ?? Not in our backyard: Hafiz Saeed, head of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa organisati­on and founder of Lashkar-eTaiba, second from right, addresses supporters in Lahore during a protest against US drone attacks in the Pakistani tribal region. Photo: REUTERS
Not in our backyard: Hafiz Saeed, head of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa organisati­on and founder of Lashkar-eTaiba, second from right, addresses supporters in Lahore during a protest against US drone attacks in the Pakistani tribal region. Photo: REUTERS
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