It is time to end America’s use of
airstrikes that too often kill the innocent.
By Ahmed Ali Jaber
December 21, 202:
Information Clearing House-- " President Joe
Biden recently announced an end to America’s
“forever wars.” If only we could take him at
his word in Yemen. While the number of known
and suspected drone strikes has
dropped from dozens each year to
single digits in 2021, they are still
coming. A November
blast in central Yemen is suspected to
have been the work of a U.S. drone, one more
to add to the hundreds of strikes that have
terrorized our communities in the past two
decades. [Editor's note: On Dec. 18, the
New York Times
released hundreds of previously
unreleased Pentagon documents pertaining to
such strikes.]
My uncle and my cousin were collateral
damage in America’s drone wars. To this day,
the U.S. still has not admitted to, much
less apologized for, their deaths.
My uncle, Salem, was an imam who
denounced Al Qaeda and mobilized resistance
against them. My cousin, Waleed, was the
sole police officer in our village. I was
with them moments before the first missile
hit on Aug. 29, 2012. The second missile
followed immediately afterwards. There was
fire everywhere and the sky turned black. As
I ran towards the site of the strike, the
third and fourth rockets exploded.
Everything went dark.
Salem’s mother passed away from grief.
Salem’s and Waleed’s children, including my
now-wife Muznah, grew up without their
fathers.
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The fact that President Biden declared an
end to the “forever wars” and in almost the
same breath promised further strikes is a
reminder of how easily my loved ones and
other victims of the forever drone wars are
forgotten. The secrecy surrounding the
program means our names are often never even
reported. The recent
revelation that the U.S. hid an
airstrike that killed dozens of civilians in
Syria is just one example of many.
I still have nightmares about being
unable to protect my children from rockets.
My wife wakes screaming her father’s name.
But drones don’t just haunt our dreams, they
hover over our villages. We stay close to
home so when we hear the phantom buzz, we
can quickly bundle our children inside. We
turn on the radio to try to drown out the
noise – and the fear.
After recently killing ten members of the
Ahmadi family in Afghanistan, the U.S.
apologized and offered compensation.
This was far from the first time a U.S.
drone had wiped out an entire family,
though. There has never been apologies and
compensation for the rest of us.
What I have learned is when the media
cycle moves on, the strikes continue as if
the damage never happened. Faces are
forgotten. And the killing continues with
impunity. Nobody is held accountable. Nobody
stops to ask: how long can this go on?
President Biden is reportedly still
carrying out a
review of the program – a review that
has now taken ten months and counting. Yet
nobody has sought to interview me about my
experiences. No official from this
administration – or any previous
administration – has ever asked me about
Salem and Waleed, and the hole their deaths
have left in our in our community.
For years my family have sought answers
and accountability. With support from the
human rights organization Reprieve, my uncle
Faisal
travelled to the United States to
address Congress in 2013. A
leaked memo confirmed that U.S.
officials knew Salem and Waleed were
civilians. Still there was no official
acknowledgement of the strike. When Faisal
took the United States to court seeking only
an apology, U.S. officials fought against
him. The court held they
could not hear his case because the
killing was a “political question.”
Judge Janice Rogers Brown wrote the
killing of Salem and Waleed was a sign that
U.S. democracy was “broken” and
congressional oversight over the program was
“a joke,” highlighting the high number of
civilians killed by the program. She also
noted that in other democracies, courts have
oversight over military action ordered by
the executive.
That was six years ago. Nothing has
changed. Nobody knows that better than the
Ahmadi family.
A few months ago, Muznah phoned me
begging me to come home because there was a
drone overhead. I rushed back to find her
huddled over our children, crying as she
tried to shield them.
The drone didn’t strike that day. But it
could have. And it is this ever-present
terror that traumatizes and makes normal
life impossible.
I feel overwhelming fear and anxiety for
the future of my children. They deserve so
much better. I want them to be able to go
about their lives – to move around their
home and village freely, without fear. I
want them to be able to watch fireworks not
drones strikes. I don’t want my family to
cry every time they hear a drone.
I want my children to live in peace. I
want America’s forever wars to be forever,
truly over.
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