Why
America Stopped Sending ‘Terrorists’ To Gitmo And Started Bombing
Them
Last week John Bellinger, the lawyer who drafted the legal framework for drone strikes under George W. Bush, accused the Obama administration of overusing drone strikes because of a reluctance to capture suspected terrorists.
David
Kelley
9
May, 2013
.
The
evidence for the statement is obvious: shortly after Obama took
office, the CIA ostensibly shut
down its
network of secret interrogation centres (i.e. black sites), the
presidentpromised
to close the
Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility, and the U.S. ramped
up drone
strikes.
The
shift to drones was made for legal and political reasons — despite
significant moral concerns and the potential for abuse.
New
York Times author Mark Mazzetti, author of the book “The
Way of the Knife,”
wrote that a May 2004 report by
CIA inspector general John Helgerson was “perhaps
the single most important reason for
the C.I.A.’s shift from capturing to killing terrorism suspects.”
Between
9/11 and December 2002, the U.S. detained more
than 3,000 al-Qaeda operatives or associates in more
than 100 countries.
Helgerson’s
report raised questions about the legality of CIA torture tactics
and suggested that CIA officers might face
criminal prosecution for
the interrogations carried out in the secret prisons. So the Agency
shifted its strategy.
Between
2004 and now, in
Pakistan alone there
have been 368 CIA drone strikes that havekilled a
total of 2,541 to 3,533 people, according to the Bureau of
Investigative Journalism.
In
the book “Dirty
Wars,”
Jeremy Scahill notes that President Obama inherited an escalating
drone program from Bush and subsequently authorised as many strikes
in 10 months as Bush did in 8 years.
Another
reasons for the dramatic shift, international affairs analyst Joshua
Foust told
BI, involve the fact that Americans don’t like indefinite
detention but they love
drones.
“The
outcry over extraordinary
rendition —
which was how President Bush went about capturing and interrogating
a lot of these suspected individuals — was incredibly unpopular …
abroad [and] in the U.S.,” Foust said. “Frankly,
killing people polls better,
and it polls strongly across the aisle.”
A recent
poll indicates
that 54%
of Americans believe
Gitmo should stay open while 27% per cent believe it should be shut
down. Meanwhile 83%
of Americans approve of
the Obama Administration’s use of drones against suspected
terrorists.
In
the words of Bellinger: ”This administration has decided they
don’t want to do detention, because the Bush administration got
into trouble with detention, so now they’re just going to kill
people.”
Foust
explained that capturing targets had become a “political
black hole of what to do with detainees,” after the shuttering of
black sites left no standard process for arrests and
extradition in hot spots such as Yemen and Pakistan.
“That
poses a lot of really big challenges to doing this in an up front,
legal way,” Foust said.
“It doesn’t mean it’s impossible, just that it would take a
lot of work to put that into place … You
end up creating this ecosystem where killing is easier, more
politically palatable, and more popular than capture.”
But
there are clear downsides to drone strikes.
Bellinger
noted that ”drone strikes are causing us great damage in the
world.”
Yemeni
journalist Farea al-Muslimi told the U.S. Senate that people
from his village now thought
of America with terror:
”[W]hen they think of Americans they think of the terror
they feel from the drones overhead that hover, ready to fire
missiles at any time. What the violent militants have previously
failed to achieve, one drone strike accomplished in an instant.
There is now an intense anger towards America in Wessab.”
The
bigger problem, according to Foust, is that the aggressiveness of
the targeted killing program against al-Qaeda invites overuse.
The
U.S. justification for drone strikes in non-battlefield countries
such as Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia are questionable, and expansion
to al-Qaeda affiliates in Mali, Syria,
and Iraqwould
be difficult to defend.
“It’s
a slippery slope of essentially taking anyone who is attempting to
brand themselves with the terror brand [i.e.al-Qaeda] and labelling
them a threat to the U.S., which then opens up this whole menu of
options that includes drone strikes,” Foust said. “That’s the
kind of slippery slope policy making that concerns me.”
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