Then a United plane followed. But the next
aircraft looked different. It was a bit
smaller and had no markings or taillights. A
propeller whirled at the back. And instead
of the high-pitched screech of a jet, the
sound was more like… a drone.
During the next half-hour I saw three
touch-and-go swoops by drones, their wheels
scarcely reaching the runaway before
climbing back above Syracuse’s commercial
airport. Nearby, pilots were at the controls
in front of Air Force computers, learning
how to operate the MQ-9 Reaper drone that is
now a key weapon of U.S. warfare from
Afghanistan to the Middle East to Africa.
Since last summer the Defense Department has
been using the runway and airspace at the
Syracuse Hancock International Airport to
train drone operators, who work at the
adjoining Air National Guard base. Officials
say it’s the first time that the federal
government has allowed military drones to
utilize a commercial airport. It won’t be
the last time.
No longer will the pilots who steer drones
and fire missiles while staring at computer
screens be confined to remote areas like the
Nevada desert. With scant public information
or debate, sizable American communities are
becoming enmeshed in drone warfare on other
continents. Along the way, how deeply will
we understand — in human terms — what the
drone war is doing to people far away? And
to us?
*** *** ***
The takeoffs and landings of military drones
at the Syracuse airport get little attention
in New York’s fifth-largest city. Already
routine, the maneuvers are hardly noticed.
In an elevator at a hotel near the airport,
I mentioned the Reaper drone exercises to an
American Airlines flight attendant who had
just landed on the same runway as the
drones. “I had no idea,” she said.
The Reaper drones using the Syracuse runway
are unarmed, the Air Force says. But when
trainees go operational, their computer work
includes aiming and launching Hellfire
missiles at targets many thousands of miles
away.
Despite the official claims that drone
strikes rarely hit civilians, some evidence
says otherwise. For example,
leaked classified
documents (obtained by The Intercept)
shed light on a series of U.S. airstrikes
codenamed Operation Haymaker. From January
2012 to February 2013, those drone attacks
in northeast Afghanistan killed more than
200 people, but only about one-sixth of them
were the intended targets.
Even without a missile strike, there
are traumatic effects of drones hovering
overhead. The former New York Times reporter
David Rohde has described what he
experienced during captivity by the Taliban
in tribal areas of Pakistan: “The drones
were terrifying. From the ground, it is
impossible to determine who or what they are
tracking as they circle overhead. The buzz
of a distant propeller is a constant
reminder of imminent death.”
As civic leaders in Syracuse and elsewhere
embrace the expanding domestic involvement
in day-to-day drone warfare, clear mention
of the human toll far away is almost taboo.
Elected officials join with business groups
and public-relations officers from the
military in extolling the benefits and
virtues. Rarely does anyone acknowledge that
civilians are maimed and killed as a result
of the extolled activities, or that — in the
name of a war on terror — people in foreign
lands are subjected to the airborne presence
of drones that is (to use Rohde’s word)
“terrifying.”
Such matters are a far cry from Syracuse,
where the local airport’s role in drone
warfare is visible yet virtually unseen. My
random conversations with dozens of Syracuse
residents in many walks of life turned up
scant knowledge or concern about the nearby
drone operations. What’s front and center is
the metropolitan area’s economic distress.
Unlike the well-financed Air National Guard
base, the city’s crumbling infrastructure
and budgets for relieving urban blight are
on short rations. When I talked with people
in low-income neighborhoods of Syracuse —
one of the poorest cities in the United
States — despair was often unmistakable. A
major study by the Century Foundation
identified Syracuse as the city with the
highest concentrations of poverty among
African Americans and Hispanics in the
United States. Locally, the latest influx of
federal largesse is for the drone war, not
for them.
*** *** ***
A group called Upstate
Drone Action has
been protesting at the Air National Guard
base on the outskirts of Syracuse with
frequent vigils and persistent civil
disobedience. A recent demonstration, on
Good Friday, included nine arrests. The
participants said in a joint statement:
“What if our country were constantly being
spied upon by drones, with some of us killed
by drones? What if many bystanders,
including children, were killed in the
process? If that were happening, we would
hope that some people in that attacking
country would speak up and try to stop the
killing. We’re speaking up to try and stop
the illegal and immoral drone attacks on
countries against which Congress has not
declared war.”
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The last couple
of months have not gone well for authorities
trying to discourage civil disobedience —
what organizers call “civil resistance” — at
the base. In early March, a jury in the
Dewitt Town Court took just half an hour to
acquit four
defendants on all charges from an action two
years ago that could have resulted in a year
behind bars for disorderly conduct,
trespassing and obstruction of government
administration.
Later in March, citing a lack of
jurisdiction, a local judge
dismissed
charges against four people who set up a
“nativity tableau” in front of the main gate
at the Hancock Air Force Base two days
before Christmas last year. In a press
release, Upstate Drone Action said that the
activists had been “protesting the
hunter/killer MQ-9 Reaper drones piloted
over Afghanistan by the 174th Attack Wing of
the New York National Guard” at the base.
*** *** ***
The U.S. drone war is escalating in numerous
countries. A year ago the head of the Air
Combat Command, Gen. Herbert Carlisle, told
a Senate subcommittee that “an insatiable
demand” was causing U.S. drone operations to
grow at a “furious pace.” That pace has
become even more furious since President
Trump took office. In early April a
researcher at the Council on Foreign
Relations, Micah Zenko, calculated that
President Trump had approved an average of
one drone attack per day — a fivefold
increase from the rate under the Obama
administration.
Upstate New York is leading the way for the
Pentagon’s plan to expand its drone program
from isolated areas into populous
communities, which offer ready access to
workers. One hundred and sixty miles to the
west of Syracuse, just outside the city of
Niagara Falls, an Air National Guard base —
the largest employer in the county — is in
the final stages of building a cutting-edge
digital tech center with huge bandwidth.
There, pilots and sensor operators will do
shifts at computer consoles, guiding MQ-9
drones and firing missiles on kill missions.
The center is on track to become fully
operational in a matter of months.
At the main gate of the Niagara Falls Air
Reserve Station, a sergeant from the
public-affairs office was upbeat about the
base “operating the MQ-9 remotely piloted
aircraft.” At city hall the mayor of Niagara
Falls, a liberal Democrat, sounded no less
pleased, while carefully sidestepping my
questions about whether he could see any
downsides to the upcoming drone role. A
local businessman who chairs the Niagara
Military Affairs Council — a private
organization that has long spearheaded
efforts to prevent closure of the base —
told me that getting the drone mission was
crucial for keeping the base open.
In such ways, functioning locally while
enabling globally, the political economy and
mass psychology of militarism do the work of
the warfare state.
Norman Solomon is the author of “War
Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death.” He is a co-founder of
RootsAction.org and the executive director
of the Institute for Public Accuracy. This
article was first published by ExposeFacts,
a program of IPA. Published by
ExposeFacts.