Assassination Nation
By Ron Jacobs
January 17, 2015 "ICH"
- "Dissident
Voice"
-
Imagine living in a town or
neighborhood where a serial killer is on the
loose. The killer’s primary weapon is a pipe
bomb filled with small metal projectiles
like BBs and nails. The bombs are designed
to kill and maim those in the vicinity of
the explosion. The killer’s weapons are
usually aimed at male targets, but quite
often several others in the vicinity are
also killed, including women and children.
Oftentimes, a note is sent to the media
after the attacks warning of future attacks
unless the people being targeted give in to
the killer or killers’ demands. The fact of
the attacks’ unpredictability has created a
perennial fear in the region, leaving every
resident uncertain of their future and their
family’s safety.
Now imagine the killer is
the United States military and CIA. The pipe
bombs are armed drones packing explosives
powerful enough to kill everyone within a
few hundred meters. Although the drones are
not randomly aimed, the appearance to those
targeted on the ground is that they are. In
other words, nobody in the targeted vicinity
knows when or exactly where the drone will
hit and who it is intended to kill. In
response, the local residents of the
targeted area stay inside, not sending their
children to school or going to work all the
while hoping their families will not be
murdered in the next attack. Then the drone
strikes, killing at first a man and his
fellow tea drinkers. The screams of the
wounded and dying attract his neighbors, who
go to retrieve the wounded. Some approach
quickly while others much more tentatively,
knowing of the likelihood of a second drone
strike designed to kill the rescuers. Then,
the silence.
Since the use of killer
drones by the United States began, more than
3500 people have been killed. Many of those
killed were civilians. The number of
civilians killed depends on how one counts
civilians. The US government tends to
consider every male in a targeted area over
the age of fourteen to be a militant (itself
a rather ambiguous term) and does not count
their deaths as civilian deaths even when it
is clear they were not involved in
hostilities. If we were to apply this metric
to the deaths that occurred when the planes
flew into the WTC on September 11, 2001,
then it seems safe to assume that the number
of civilian deaths in that event would drop
quite a bit. I am not suggesting that we do
this, merely pointing out that the
statistics regarding deaths by drone
published by the US government (and related
corporations) are self-serving and, at best,
only somewhat truthful when it comes to the
numbers of civilian dead.
Marjorie Cohn is an
attorney who teaches both international
human rights law and criminal law. She is a
former head of the National Lawyers Guild
and the editor of the recently released book
Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral,
and Geopolitical Issues. This text
includes entries written by attorneys,
religious leaders, antiwar activists and
others. The writers, while predominantly
from the United States, also include (among
others) Bishop Desmond Tutu from South
Africa and human rights activist Ishai
Menuchin from Israel. As the title
indicates, the essays cover the topic of
assassination by drone and Special Forces
hit squads through a variety of prisms.
However, the primary prism is the prism of
international law. The unanimous consensus
of every writer is that these killings are
illegal by virtually every measure and
precedent that exists in the field of
international law.
From Richard Falk’s
academic destruction of the US government’s
rationale for its policy to activist Medea
Benjamin’s much more personal and
emotionally wrenching tale of the murder of
Karim Khan’s children in a drone strike on
December 31, 2009 in northwestern Pakistan,
Drones and Targeted Killing makes a
cogent and powerful argument demanding an
end to this most recent tactic in
Washington’s war on the world. Investigative
reporter Alice K. Ross expands on the
proposition put forth by other writers
challenging not just the lack of official
documentation but also the criterion used to
determine casualties in the documentation
that does exist. Other writers compare the
killings point-by-point with established
just war causa bellis and international law
only to find the drone assassination policy
sadly lacking. Begin with description of
Israeli assassination and us opposition.
In short, this book is a
rapid-fire attack on the US policy of
targeted assassination by drone or other
means. It is also a look at the origins of
this policy in Tel Aviv’s onslaught against
the Palestinians and its assassination of
Palestinian leaders by missile strike and
commando. Most importantly it is a reasoned
and legalistic addition to the demand that
this policy end now and forever. After
reading this book, the best words I could
come up with to describe the nature of the
US policy of targeted killing and
assassination by drone or other means are
the same words spoken by Barack Obama in the
wake of the recent murders of twelve
journalists in Paris by men quickly labeled
terrorists. To quote the US president, these
killings are “cowardly, evil attacks.”
Ron Jacobs is the
author of The
Way The Wind Blew: A History of the Weather
Underground and
Tripping Through the American Night,
and the novels
Short Order Frame Up and
The Co-Conspirator's Tale. His
third novel
All the Sinners, Saints
is a companion to the previous two and was
published early in 2013.