Bangkok Post

‘117 civilians’ died in strikes last term

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WASHINGTON: As many as 117 civilians have been killed in drone and other counterter­ror attacks in Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere during President Barack Obama’s presidency, according to a report released late Thursday by US intelligen­ce officials.

It was the second public assessment the Obama administra­tion has issued in response to mounting pressure for more informatio­n about lethal US operations overseas.

Human rights and other groups have criticised the administra­tion, saying it has undercount­ed civilian casualties. They also are worried that President-elect Donald Trump will more aggressive­ly conduct drone strikes, which are subject to little oversight from Congress or the judiciary.

The reports by National Intelligen­ce Director James Clapper said the US conducted 526 counterter­ror strikes, including those by unmanned drones, between January 2009 and December 2016. The reports do not mention where the strikes occurred, but the defence department and CIA have pursued targets in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and Libya. The data didn’t include strikes in Iraq, Syria and Afghanista­n, which the US considers areas of active hostilitie­s.

Between 2,803 and 3,022 combatants were killed in strikes during Mr Obama’s eight-year presidency, according to the reports. Between 64 and 117 non-combatants were killed.

Non-government­al organisati­ons have estimated that hundreds more have been killed. Senior US officials have cited several reasons for the discrepanc­y, including the government’s access to sensitive intelligen­ce that helps it more accurately identify the deceased. Human rights groups say some of the discrepanc­ies in conflictin­g numbers could be cleared up if the government disclosed the names of civilians killed and the dates, locations and other details about the strikes.

In a speech earlier this year, Mr Obama acknowledg­ed critics who don’t support the drone programme, but he said they need to weigh the alternativ­es. “Drone strikes allow us to deny terrorists a safe haven without air strikes, which are less precise, or invasions that are much more likely to kill innocent civilians as well as American service members,” Mr Obama said.

Mr Trump has not addressed the drone policy, but has said he wants to “take out terrorists” and expects he will continue using drones in counterter­ror operations.

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