Not
Even the White House Knows the Drones’ Body Count
By
Noah Shachtman
29
September, 2012
Government
officials claim they’re ultra-precise
killing machines that
never, ever miss their targets. Outside groups say they’re covered
in children’s blood.
The fact is no one has a clue exactly how many militants and how many
innocents have been slain in the U.S. drone war that spans from
Pakistan to Somalia. Remember that before you start your next Twitter
feud about the drone war.
Neither
the American government nor the independent agencies have the
consistent presence on the ground needed to put together true
assessments of the damage drone strikes do. Most of the evidence is
third-hand, whispered from a local soldier to a far-off reporter. The
death toll claims, which vary wildly, are all educated guesswork.
It’s
one of many conclusions in a new
report on the covert, robotic air war that
doesn’t fit neatly into the dominant narratives about the drone
campaign, pro or con. (The report is due to publish at midnight GMT
on Sunday.) Using interviews with dozens of people in northwest
Pakistan — one of the epicenters
of the unmanned air assaults —
The Center for Civilians in Conflict and Columbia Law School’s
human rights clinic have crafted a nuanced view of the civilian
impact of this most controversial component of the Obama
administration’s counterterror efforts. Table your preconceived
notions about the drone war before you read — starting with the
notions about who the drones are actually taking out.
In
May, an administration official told The
New York Times that
civilian casualties from the Pakistan drone war were in the
“single
digits.”
Perhaps that official only meant for one year. Meanwhile, the Bureau
of Investigative Journalism estimates the minimum civilian death toll
to be 447 during the campaign. One of the many costs of secret wars
is that ”nobody knows how many civilians have been killed by
covert drone strikes. Nobody — that means the Obama Administration,
the Pakistan government, and the media,” emails Sarah
Holewinski,
the executive director of the Center for Civilians in Conflict.
“There
are few boots on the ground to do an investigation after a strike,
aerial surveillance is through a soda straw so can miss a lot and —
unlike the military which has relatively transparent assessments and
investigations in Afghanistan — the CIA and Special Forces are a
black hole,” she adds. “The Obama administration says civilian
casualties are ‘not
a huge number.’
If that’s true, evidence could put the debate to rest, but we
haven’t seen any.”
The
drone campaign’s impact can be measured in more than just body
counts, however. There’s the psychological impact of drones
constantly buzzing overhead. An investigator at the UK charity
Reprieve met a man, Tariq Aziz, shortly before he was killed in a
March 17, 2011 strike. “I asked him, ‘Have you seen a drone,’
and I expected him to say, ‘Yes, I see one a week.’ But he said
they saw 10 or 15 every day,” the investigator notes. “And he was
saying at nighttime, it was making him crazy, because he couldn’t
sleep.” (One reason why, perhaps, is that the Obama administration
considers every
military-aged male in
a hostile region to be legitimate targets.)
The
CIA relies on local informants to help guide the strikes; that sows
suspicion in these communities, pitting one neighbor against the
next. The fear and backbiting sometimes causes villages to
largely empty out — which creates its own cascade of problems.
“Drone-related displacement disrupts long-term stability by
decreasing the capacity of local people to respond through civil
society initiatives that foster stability, democracy and moderation
and increase displaced people’s vulnerability to insurgent
recruitment,” Lisa Schirch of 3P Human Security explains in
the report.
The
covert nature of the drone campaign produces strange imbalances in
the ways civilians are treated from warzone to warzone. If an
American aircraft drops a bomb on your house in Afghanistan, U.S.
officers will usually offer some
kind of financial compensation for
your loss. It may not be much, but at least it’s a recognition of
the harm done. If an American aircraft drops a bomb on your
house in neighboring Pakistan, however, you get nothing. There are no
American officers in the vicinity — at least not officially.
There’s no one to provide that financial or psychological
recompense.
The
report relates the tale of Usman Wazir, who “was at his job selling
fruits when a drone hit his house, killing his younger brother, his
wife, their 15-year-old son, and 13-year-old daughter.” He wanted
some kind of payback. But there is “no known process in Pakistan,
Yemen, or Somalia by which they can apply for compensation…. The
secrecy surrounding the drone program, combined with its operation in
many areas that are inaccessible, has meant that civilians harmed by
drones have no recourse and no point of contact to hold accountable
for the sudden devastation they face. This vacuum of accountability
can lead to anger, despair, and even hatred, directed at their own
government or at the U.S.”
Sometimes,
innocents caught in the robotic crossfire get punished a second
time. The drones are believed to be beyond-precise, which
naturally leads to the conclusion that whoever has been targeted must
be bad. “Victims face the double burden of dealing with the
physical attack and also clearing their name,” according to the
report. Meanwhile, the rest of us take our best guesses about the
toll of these shadow wars.
And
that’s its own problem. The drone strikes, the centerpiece of the
Obama administration’s counterterrorism efforts, inspire heated
opinions in the United States. That’s as it should be: Wars ought
to
be debated. But by keeping the drone war, and especially its
consequences, wrapped in secrecy, the Obama administration and its
foreign enablers shut off the basis for that debate. Second-order
questions (Would other tactics be more or less brutal? Do the drones
breed more radicalization than dead radicals?) that are necessary to
intelligently assess the wisdom of the drone war can’t be answered.
And so various factions yell at each other, each convinced they’ve
grasped the truth of a war that has practically none to offer.
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