War
Costs’ latest video brings attention to the children who have died
as a result of drone strikes.
26
December, 2012
During
my recent trip to Pakistan as part of our upcoming documentary film,
Drones Exposed, I was struck most by the stories told to me by
children who had experienced a U.S. drone strike firsthand. The
impact of America’s drone war in the likes of Pakistan and Yemen
will linger on, especially for the loved ones of the 178 children
killed in those countries by U.S. drone strikes.
War
Costs’ latest video (with accompanying report) brings attention to
the children who have died as a result of drone strikes. The video
names some of the children who perished in these strikes, and points
out the obfuscation tactics of American officials who will not own up
to the significant amount of civilian casualties that have occurred
due to this legally- and morally-dubious policy.
In
addition to the video, War Costs offers this report detailing the
effects of drone strikes on children. The findings come mainly from
the diligent investigative reporting of TBIJ and the groundbreaking
reports on the impact of drone strikes by Stanford and New York
University researchers ( Living Under Drones: Death, Injury and
Trauma to Civilians from US Drone Practices in Pakistan) and
researchers at Columbia University ( The Civilian Impact of Drones:
Unexamined Costs, Unanswered Questions).
In
an effort to compel answers about why these innocent civilians have
died without acknowledgement or explanation from the U.S. government,
War Costs is calling on the U.S. House of Representatives to debate
and pass Rep. Dennis Kucinich's bill that calls for more
transparency regarding U.S. drone strike policy.
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