Giving the
Deep State More Leeway to Kill With Drones
President Trump is poised to compound the most grave
moral failing of his predecessor by making targeted
killings less safe, less legal, and less rare.
By Conor Friedersdorf
September
23, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The Trump administration believes that the
targeted-killing policy of its predecessor is too
restrictive, and officials intend to give what some
call “the administrative state” and others call “the
deep state” the ability to use lethal force with
less oversight.
Expect
more secretive killings
by the CIA.
Former President Barack Obama presided over
roughly 10 times as many
lethal air strikes as George W. Bush in covert
war-on-terror operations outside the war zones of
Iraq and Afghanistan. The killings targeted
terrorists belonging to groups like al-Qaeda and
ISIS, as well as other militants that posed threats
to allied regimes but not the United States.
American officials described those operations as
“exceptionally surgical and precise,” as if innocent
men, women, and children had nothing to fear from
the strikes. But U.S. strikes in just three
countries—Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen—killed at
least 384 innocent civilians and as many as 807, in
addition to terrorists, according to a
credible tally kept
by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. Put
another way, attempts to preempt terrorism from
those countries killed at least 128 times more
innocents than the Boston Marathon bombing.
A surgeon
as sloppy as that would be indicted.
The U.S.
government has never explained how it calculates
whether the cost of a given targeted killing
outweighs the benefits. One wonders how many
terrorists, or sworn enemies of America, are created
on average when our drones kill an innocent. If the
Pentagon or CIA has a working theory, official
secrecy makes it impossible to vet.
On the
other side of the ledger, al-Qaeda and ISIS kill far
more civilians outside the United States than inside
it. Some drone strikes surely spare more foreign
innocents than they kill.
The
trend of more secretive killings in successive
presidencies will now continue. The Trump
administration “is preparing to dismantle key
Obama-era limits on drone strikes and commando raids
outside conventional battlefields,” according to a
New York Times
article by Charlie
Savage and Eric Schmitt, trusted bylines on this
subject.
Two rule
changes loom largest:
First, the
targets of kill missions by the military and the
C.I.A., now generally limited to high-level
militants deemed to pose a “continuing and
imminent threat” to Americans, would be expanded
to include foot-soldier jihadists with no
special skills or leadership roles. And second,
proposed drone attacks and raids would no longer
undergo high-level vetting.
The article
adds that officials agree “they should keep in place
one important constraint for such attacks: a
requirement of ‘near certainty’ that no civilian
bystanders will be killed.” What that constraint
means in practice has long been unclear since
civilian bystanders have, in fact, been killed every
year it has been in place.
Given the
horrific possibility of killing innocents and the
risk of subsequent blowback, why would U.S.
officials want to expand permissible targets from
those who pose a “continuing or imminent threat” to
Americans to “foot-soldier jihadists”?
Luke
Hartig
articulates the
logic at Just Security:
Over 16
years of operations, our counterterrorism
professionals have become adept at analyzing the
structure of terrorist networks and targeting
them based on the understanding that there are
particular nodes that, if removed, could have a
devastating impact on the entire network.
In many
cases, those nodes may be couriers, bodyguards,
or propagandists who, while lawful military
targets under the laws of war, may not pose a
continuing, imminent threat to U.S. persons. The
new policy appears to give operators greater
leeway to target according to what will be
considerably more effective in disrupting and
defeating terrorist networks. The challenge …
will be establishing governing principles that
limit the pace of strikes (as the continuing,
imminent-threat standard did), since there are
few countries outside of hot war zones that will
give the U.S. blanket approvals for unfettered
drone campaigns.
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That logic
is seductive but incomplete.
- It may
sound like common sense to target “couriers,
bodyguards, or propagandists” that are assisting
al-Qaeda or ISIS. But consider how many
innocents U.S. drone strikes killed when
ostensibly targeting only “imminent” threats. As
the number of targets increase, danger to
innocents will, too.
- A
thought experiment can make these trade-offs
less abstract. Forget about Yemen, a country
most Americans cannot begin to picture, and
consider this truth: A propagandist for ISIS or
al-Qaeda could conceivably live in the apartment
or house next to yours. Or he could work next
door to your child’s school. If that were the
case, would you want the CIA to fire a Hellfire
missile at him, knowing that neighboring
buildings are sometimes struck and that
innocents are sometimes killed? Americans accept
“collateral damage,” including dead children, in
Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen that they would
never tolerate in their own communities.
-
Homegrown terrorism poses a much bigger risk to
Americans than terrorists in Pakistan, Somalia,
or Yemen. And an ongoing drone policy that kills
lots of innocents abroad increases the
likelihood that people here will become
radicalized against the United States, as bygone
terrorists who’ve cited such grievances
illustrate.
- Drone
strikes, especially those conducted in secret by
the CIA, make it easier for elected and
appointed elites to wage endless war all over
the globe without securing the explicit
permission of the people or even their
representatives in Congress.
- The
institutional player that would normally push
back against the Pentagon and the CIA, the State
Department, is presently less able to clarify
the costs of excessively blowing people up for
the president, because the president has failed
to properly staff Foggy Bottom and seemingly
doesn’t understand its purpose.
Al-Qaeda
and ISIS are dangerous abominations. Fighting them
is just, even if the fight involves the inadvertent
killing of innocents, but only if due care is taken
to avoid those deaths whenever possible. The entire
history of the CIA suggests that it is not an
organization one can trust to use lethal force with
sufficient prudential and moral restraint,
particularly when it needn’t risk its personnel or
even public scrutiny to kill.
Obama’s
inadequate safeguards guaranteed that U.S. policy on
targeted killing would result in more dead innocents
than was necessary to achieve like results. The
Trump administration is poised to make changes that
are even more hubristic and that guarantee even
worse outcomes. What’s needed are more checks on
killing, not fewer.
This article was first published by
The Atlantic
-
See
also -
Trump Regime Is Looking to
Make It Easier to Kill More People:
Trump is reportedly poised to kill more people in
more countries around the world, from Nigeria to the
Philippines.
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