US
drone strikes target rescuers in Pakistan – and the west stays
silent
Attacking
rescuers – a tactic long deemed by the US a hallmark of terrorism –
is now routinely used by the Obama administration
Glenn
Greenwald
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20
August, 2012
The
US government has long maintained, reasonably enough, that a defining
tactic of terrorism is to launch a follow-up attack aimed at those
who go to the scene of the original attack to rescue the wounded and
remove the dead. Morally, such methods have also been widely
condemned by the west as a hallmark of savagery. Yet, as was
demonstrated yet again this weekend in Pakistan,
this has become one of the favorite tactics of the very same US
government.
A 2004
official alert from
the FBI warned that "terrorists may use secondary explosive
devices to kill and injure emergency personnel responding to an
initial attack"; the bulletin advised that such terror devices
"are generally detonated less than one hour after initial
attack, targeting first responders as well as the general
population". Security experts have long noted that the evil of
this tactic lies in its exploitation of the natural human tendency to
go to the scene of an attack to provide aid to those who are injured,
and is specifically potent for sowing terror by instilling in the
population an expectation that attacks can, and likely will, occur
again at any time and place:
"'The problem is that once the initial explosion goes off, many people will believe that's it, and will respond accordingly,' [the Heritage Foundation's Jack] Spencer said … The goal is to 'incite more terror. If there's an initial explosion and a second explosion, then we're thinking about a third explosion,' Spencer said."
A 2007
report from
the US department of homeland security christened the term "double
tap" to refer to what it said was "a favorite tactic of
Hamas: a device is set off, and when police and other first
responders arrive, a second, larger device is set off to inflict more
casualties and spread panic." Similarly, the US justice
department has highlighted this tactic in its prosecutions of some of
the nation's most notorious domestic terrorists. Eric Rudolph,
convicted of bombing gay nightclubs and abortion clinics, was
said to
have "targeted federal agents by placing second bombs nearby set
to detonate after police arrived to investigate the first explosion".
In
2010, when WikiLeaks published
a video of the incident in which an Apache helicopter in Baghdad
killed two Reuters journalists, what sparked the greatest outrage was
not the initial attack, which the US army claimed was aimed at armed
insurgents, but rather the follow-up attack on those who arrived at
the scene to rescue the wounded. From the
Guardian's initial report on
the WikiLeaks video:
"A van draws up next to the wounded man and Iraqis climb out. They are unarmed and start to carry the victim to the vehicle in what would appear to be an attempt to get him to hospital. One of the helicopters opens fire with armour-piercing shells. 'Look at that. Right through the windshield,' says one of the crew. Another responds with a laugh.
"Sitting behind the windscreen were two children who were wounded.
"After ground forces arrive and the children are discovered, the American air crew blame the Iraqis. 'Well it's their fault for bringing kids in to a battle,' says one. 'That's right,' says another.
"Initially the US military said that all the dead were insurgents."
In
the wake of that video's release, international
condemnation focused
on the shooting of the rescuers who subsequently arrived at the scene
of the initial attack. The New Yorker's Raffi
Khatchadourian explained:
"On several occasions, the Apache gunner appears to fire rounds into people after there is evidence that they have either died or are suffering from debilitating wounds. The rules of engagement and the law of armed combat do not permit combatants to shoot at people who are surrendering or who no longer pose a threat because of their injuries. What about the people in the van who had come to assist the struggling man on the ground? The Geneva conventions state that protections must be afforded to people who 'collect and care for the wounded, whether friend or foe.'"
He
added that "A 'positively identified' combatant who provides
medical aid to someone amid fighting does not automatically lose his
status as a combatant, and may still be legally killed," but –
as is true for drone attacks – there is, manifestly, no way to know
who is showing up at the scene of the initial attack, certainly not
with "positive identification" (by
official policy,
the US targets people in Pakistan and elsewhere for death even
without knowing who they are). Even commentators who
defended the
initial round of shooting by the Apache helicopter by claiming there
was evidence that one of the targets was armed typically noted, "the
shooting of the rescuers, however, is highly disturbing."
But
attacking rescuers (and arguably worse, bombing
funerals of America's drone victims)
is now a tactic routinely used by the US in Pakistan. In February,
the Bureau of Investigative Journalism documented that
"the CIA's drone campaign in Pakistan has killed dozens of
civilians who had gone to help rescue victims or were attending
funerals." Specifically: "at least 50 civilians were killed
in follow-up strikes when they had gone to help victims." That
initial TBIJ report detailed numerous civilians killed by such
follow-up strikes on rescuers, and established precisely the terror
effect which the US government has long warned are sown by such
attacks:
"Yusufzai, who reported on the attack, says those killed in the follow-up strike 'were trying to pull out the bodies, to help clear the rubble, and take people to hospital.' The impact of drone attacks on rescuers has been to scare people off, he says: 'They've learnt that something will happen. No one wants to go close to these damaged building anymore.'"
Since
that first bureau report, there have been numerous
other documented cases of
the use by the US of this tactic: "On [4 June],
US drones attacked
rescuers in Waziristan in western Pakistan minutes after an initial
strike, killing 16 people in total according to the BBC. On 28 May,
drones were also reported to have returned to the attack in
Khassokhel near Mir Ali." Moreover, "between May 2009 and
June 2011, at least 15 attacks on rescuers were reported by credible
news media, including the New York Times, CNN, ABC News and Al
Jazeera."
In
June, the UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial killings, summary or
arbitrary executions, Christof Heyns, said that
if "there have been secondary drone strikes on rescuers who are
helping (the injured) after an initial drone attack, those further
attacks are a war crime." There is no doubt that there have
been.
(A
different UN official, the UN special rapporteur on human
rights and
counterterrorism, Ben Emmerson, this
weekend demanded that
the US "must open itself to an independent investigation into
its use of drone strikes or the United
Nations will
be forced to step in", and warned that the demand "will
remain at the top of the UN political agenda until some consensus and
transparency has been achieved". For many American progressives,
caring about what the UN thinks is so very 2003.)
The
frequency with which the US uses this tactic is reflected by this
December 2011 report from ABC News on
the drone killing of 16-year-old Tariq Khan and his 12-year-old
cousin Waheed, just days after the older boy attended
a meeting to
protest US drones:
"Asked for documentation of Tariq and Waheed's deaths, Akbar did not provide pictures of the missile strike scene. Virtually none exist, since drones often target people who show up at the scene of an attack."
Not
only does that tactic intimidate rescuers from helping the wounded
and removing the dead, but it also ensures that journalists will be
unwilling to go to the scene of a drone attack out of fear of a
follow-up attack.
This
has now happened yet again this weekend in Pakistan, which witnessed
what Reuters calls "a
flurry of drone attacks" that "pounded northern Pakistan
over the weekend", "killing 13 people in three separate
attacks". The attacks "came as Pakistanis celebrate the end
of the holy month of Ramadan with the festival of Eid al-Fitr."
At least one
of these weekend strikes was
the type of "double tap" explosion aimed at rescuers which,
the US government says, is the hallmark of Hamas:
"At least six militants were killed when US drones fired missiles twice on Sunday in North Waziristan Agency.
"In the first strike, four missiles were fired on two vehicles in the Mana Gurbaz area of district Shawal in North Waziristan Agency, while two missiles were fired in the second strike at the same site where militants were removing the wreckage of their destroyed vehicles."
An
unnamed Pakistani official identically told
Agence France-Presse that
a second US drone "fired two missiles at the site of this
morning's attack, where militants were removing the wreckage of their
two destroyed vehicles". (Those killed by US drone attacks in
Pakistan are more
or less automatically deemed "militants"
by unnamed "officials", and then uncritically called such
by most of the western press – a practice that inexcusably
continues despite revelations that the Obama
administration has
redefined "militants"
to mean "all military-age males in a strike zone".)
It
is telling indeed that the Obama administration now routinely uses
tactics in Pakistan long denounced as terrorism when used by others,
and does so with so little controversy. Just in the past several
months, attacks on funerals of victims have taken place in
Yemen (purportedly
by al-Qaida) and in
Syria (purportedly,
though without evidence, by the Assad regime), and such attacks –
understandably – sparked outrage. Yet, in the west, the silence
about the Obama administration's attacks on funerals and rescuers is
deafening.
But
in the areas targeted by the US with these tactics, there is anything
but silence. Pakistan's most popular politician, Imran Khan, has
generated intense public support with his scathing denunciations of
US drone attacks, and tweeted
the following on
Sunday:
As
usual, US policies justified in the name of fighting terrorism –
aside from being rather terroristic themselves – are precisely
those which fuel the anti-American hatred that causes those attacks.
The
reason for the silence about such matters, and the reason commentary
of this sort sparks such anger and hostility, is two-fold: first, the
US likes to think of terror as something only "others"
engage in, not itself, and more so; second, supporters of Barack
Obama, the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, simply do not want to
think about him as someone who orders attacks on those rescuing his
victims or funeral attendees gathered to mourn them.
That,
however, is precisely what he is, as this mountain of evidence
conclusively establishes.

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