IN TRANSPARENT ACT, OBAMA ADMINISTRATION ERASES CIVILIAN DEATHS FROM DRONE STRIKES
https://shadowproof.com/2016/06/30/spooked-author-discusses-chronicle-cia-influence-press-hollywood/
30
June, 2016
President
Barack Obama’s administration claims 64 to 116 “non-combatants”
have been killed by CIA or United States military drone strikes. The
number is preposterously low, and the best evidence yet of how the
government propagandizes the public into believing drones are
“precise” and rarely kill anyone but targeted “terrorists.”
The
casualty counts, along with an executive order on “pre- and
post-strike policies,” were released right before Fourth of July
weekend, a clear act aimed at ensuring the least amount of attention
was given to the administration’s latest effort to conceal the
truth of who is killed by targeted assassinations.
A
“summary of information” released by the Director for National
Intelligence (DNI) maintains 473 strikes “against terrorist targets
outside areas of active hostilities.” It states somewhere between
2,372 and 2,581 “combatants” were killed.
“The
assessed range of non-combatant deaths provided to the DNI reflects
consideration of credible reports of non-combatant deaths drawn from
all-source information, including reports from the media and
non-governmental organizations,” the summary states. “The
assessed range of non-combatant deaths includes deaths for which
there is an insufficient basis for assessing that the deceased is a
combatant.”
However,
the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, based in London, has
documented news reports of U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan, Somalia,
and Yemen for years. The New York Times, BBC, and Dawn.com in
Pakistan have each used the data compiled by the Bureau.
According
to the
Bureau,
drone strikes by the Obama administration have killed over 400
civilians in Pakistan, including dozens of children. In Yemen, at
least 65 civilians have been killed in drone strikes, as well as 68
civilians in “other covert operations.” There have been at least
10 civilians killed in Somalia by drone strikes or “other covert
operations.”
This
indicates the Obama administration effectively erased the deaths of
more than 400 civilians, including children. However, even the
Bureau’s data is incomplete, simply because it is extremely
difficult for news media to identify the dead after drone strikes.
The
number of strikes in the assessment is lower than the Bureau’s
number. The Bureau’s data suggests over 530 strikes have been
launched by the Obama administration. The Bureau’s total number
killed in strikes in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia is 2,609.
That
figure is not that much higher than the DNI’s number, which is
2,436. When considering the fact that DNI counted fewer strikes than
the Bureau, it becomes clear the discrepancy in numbers is entirely a
result of how the Obama administration decides who is and is not a
civilian or “non-combatant.”
The
international human rights organization, Reprieve, declares in a
recent report [PDF],
“Every previous (rare) public, on-record statement made by the
Obama administration on the program has been shown to be false or
deeply misleading. Moreover, the administration has repeatedly
shifted the goal posts, secretly redefining who can be targeted and
what it means to be a civilian. Therefore, simply announcing numbers
without context, or the names of civilian victims, will do nothing.”
Documents
provided to The Intercept by a whistleblower and published as “The
Drone Papers” showed the military designates people killed in
strikes as EKIA or “enemies killed in action.”
Journalist
Jeremy Scahill wrote in his book, “The Assassination Complex,”
which is based on “The Drone Papers”:
Unless evidence posthumously emerged to prove the males killed were not terrorists or ‘unlawful enemy combatants,’ EKIA remained their designation, according to the source. That process, he said, “is insane. But we’ve made ourselves comfortable with that. The intelligence community, JSOC, the CIA, and everybody that helps support and prop up these programs, they’re comfortable with that idea.” The source described official U.S. government statements minimizing the number of civilian casualties inflicted by drone strikes as “exaggerating at best, if not outright lies.”
The
DNI’s assessment does not ignore the fact that there is a
discrepancy between government numbers and numbers of
“non-governmental organizations.” It argues the government’s
numbers are correct because information “unavailable to
non-governmental organizations” was used.
“The
U.S. government draws on all available information (including
sensitive intelligence) to determine whether an individual is
part of a belligerent party fighting against the United States in an
armed conflict; taking a direct part in hostilities against the
United States; or otherwise targetable in the exercise of
national self-defense,” the assessment contends. “Thus, the U.S.
government may have reliable information that certain individuals are
combatants, but are being counted as non-combatants by
non-governmental organizations.”
How
is it possible that non-governmental organizations or media sources
might be wrong?
“Further
analysis of an individual’s possible membership in an organized
armed group may include, among other things: the extent to which an
individual performs functions for the benefit of the group that are
analogous to those traditionally performed by members of a country’s
armed forces; whether that person is carrying out or giving orders to
others within the group; or whether that person has undertaken
certain acts that reliably connote meaningful integration into the
group,” the DNI asserts.
In
other words, whether those individuals killed were targeted or not,
if they die, it may be acceptable because they performed tasks, which
benefited a designated terrorist group, like they were a maid, a
driver, or perhaps a mechanic, who worked on a terrorist group’s
car. It may be possible after the person died to go back and assess
their online activities and conclude they shared ideology with the
group, and thus, justify their death.
As
the DNI states, post-strike reviews involve “video observations,
human sources and assets, signals intelligence, geospatial
intelligence, accounts from local officials on the ground, and open
source reporting. Information reviewed may “confirm” a person’s
“combatant status.” The information can provide “insights that
are likely unavailable to non-governmental organizations.”
The
DNI also suggests that the figures may not match reports because of
the “deliberate spread of misinformation by some actors, including
terrorist organizations, in local media reports.” However, the DNI
gives no examples and so it is impossible to confirm whether this is
more than just some wild suggestion intended to justify how the
government counts casualties.
The
Obama administration previously maintained CIA drone strikes only
were authorized against “specific senior operational leaders of al
Qaida and associated forces,” believed to have been involved in the
September 11, 2001, attacks, who are plotting attacks, which pose an
“imminent” threat to Americans. Yet, leaked intelligence
documents reported on
by McClatchy Newspapers proved this was not true.
“The
intelligence reports list killings of alleged Afghan insurgents whose
organization wasn’t on the U.S. list of terrorist groups at the
time of the 9/11 strikes; of suspected members of a Pakistani
extremist group that didn’t exist at the time of 9/11; and of
unidentified individuals described as ‘other militants’ and
‘foreign fighters,'” [Note: The DNI’s figures did not include
Afghan casualties because those are in a declared battlefield.]
Obama
also issued an
executive order to revamp “pre- and post-strike measures” for
addressing “civilian casualties.”
It
states the government will “review or investigate incidents
involving civilian casualties, including by considering relevant and
credible information from all available sources.” But if the
government has a system biased toward confirming deaths as justified
“combatant” casualties, what triggers a review or investigation?
And how do those reviews or investigations seek to conceal what
happened by seeking out any little bit of information that might make
it possible to posthumously label that person a “combatant” or
terrorist?
There
will now supposedly be a process for the U.S. government to grant
condolence payments to families of civilians killed. If this even
happens, there will be hundreds of civilians, whose families never
are eligible to receive such payments because of the government’s
process for post-strike reviews.
In
response to this transparent act of government deception, Jennifer
Gibson, an attorney for Reprieve, declared, “For three years now,
President Obama has been promising to shed light on the CIA’s
covert drone program. Today, he had a golden opportunity to do just
that. Instead, he chose to do the opposite.
He published numbers that
are hundreds lower than even the lowest estimates by independent
organizations.”
“The
only thing those numbers tell us is that this administration simply
doesn’t know who it has killed. Back in 2011, it claimed to have
killed ‘only 60’ civilians,” Gibson added. “Does it really
expect us to believe that it has killed only 4 more civilians since
then, despite taking hundreds more strikes?”
Not
a single civilian is named. It is a disgraceful offense to the
families of civilians who have been killed.
Faisal
bin Ali Jaber, a Yemeni engineer, who has sued the
Obama administration for killing his family, reacted, “The Obama
Administration is wrong to think that publishing statistics makes up
for the pain his secret drone program has caused families like mine.”
“It’s
no surprise that the White House didn’t bother to consult the
victims of drone strikes before publishing these figures—the U.S.
has never even acknowledged its role in the deaths of our loved ones.
My brother-in-law was an Imam who was leading a campaign against al
Qaida’s ideology, particularly their targeting of young boys,”
Jaber said. “He spoke out against al Qaida in his sermons just few
days before he was assassinated. We all expected that one day he
would be killed by al Qaida, but instead he was killed by a U.S
drone.”
“Obama’s
secret drone wars have also killed schoolteachers, policemen, women,
and children. What we need from President Obama is an apology—and a
promise that these terrible crimes will not be repeated.”
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