The secrecy surrounding drones
Published: Thursday, December 6, 2012 at 4:53 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, December 6, 2012 at 4:53 p.m.
When President
The number of people killed by the strikes
And that has led to second thoughts, not principally for ethical reasons (officials say they have always tried to minimize civilian casualties) but for practical ones. Drone strikes are undeniably effective at eliminating terrorists. But too many drone strikes can also provoke a political backlash, recruiting as many terrorists as they kill.
Increasingly, that critique is coming not only from human rights organizations or cautious diplomats at the State Department but from veterans of the secret war against terrorism.
In Yemen, where U.S. drone strikes have killed dozens of suspected terrorists, the local affiliate of al-Qaida has grown, not diminished. Grenier is not alone. Henry A. Crumpton, who spurred the development of the first armed drones as the CIA’s counterterrorism chief, has said he fears the agency has fallen into an Inside the administration, some officials have been arguing for stricter limits on drone operations, especially to curb what are known as There are even signs that some new limits have been imposed with no public announcement. In Somalia, for example, the United States has carried out no drone strikes against the al-Shabab militia since February, reportedly because the Pentagon’s general counsel ruled that the guerrillas, while undeniably a menace to the local government, posed no direct threat to the United States. But it will be difficult to disentangle the United States and its drones from the internal conflicts of Yemen, where the administration is backing a fragile government against a local al-Qaida offshoot, or Pakistan, where the military supports U.S. On those battlegrounds, argues Micah Zenko of the Council on Foreign Relations, Nobody contests the right of the United States to strike at terrorists who pose an imminent danger to U.S. citizens. But when the United States secretly uses armed force in another country’s internal conflict, Is the Obama administration listening? It can be hard to tell, since most of the drone program is shrouded in secrecy. But in recent statements, administration officials from Obama on down have emphasized the importance of limiting the drone strikes. So far, Zenko and other critics say, the administration’s practice doesn’t fully match its aspirations. But in a little-noticed remark, Obama proposed that Congress replace its hastily drafted Authorization for Use of Military Force passed in the aftermath of 9/11. Doyle McManus is a columnist for All rights reserved. This copyrighted material may not be re-published
without permission. Links are encouraged.. .