How The US Government
and US Military Became Murder, Inc.
By Paul Craig Roberts
March 25, 2015 "ICH"
- Andrew Cockburn has written a must-read
book. The title is Kill Chain: The Rise Of
The High-Tech Assassins. The title could
just as well be: How the US Government and
US Military Became Murder, Inc.
The US military no longer
does war. It does assassinations, usually of
the wrong people. The main victims of the US
assassination policy are women, children,
village elders, weddings, funerals, and
occasionally US soldiers mistaken for
Taliban by US surveillance operating with
the visual acuity of the definition of legal
blindness.
Cockburn tells the story
of how the human element has been displaced
by remote control killing guided by
misinterpretation of unclear images on
screens collected by surveillance drones and
sensors thousands of miles away. Cockburn
shows that the “all-seeing” drone
surveillance system is an operational
failure but is supported by defense
contractors because of its high
profitability and by the military brass
because general officers, with the exception
of General Paul Van Ripper, are brainwashed
in the belief that the revolution in
military affairs means that high-tech
devices replace the human element. Cockburn
demonstrates that this belief is immune to
all evidence to the contrary. The US
military has now reached the point that
Secretary of Defense Hagel deactivated both
the A-10 close support fighter and the U-2
spy plane in favor of the operationally
failed unmanned Global Hawk System. With the
A-10 and U-2 went the last platforms for
providing a human eye on what is happening
on the ground.
The surveillance/sensor
technology cannot see human footprints in
the snow. Consequently, the drone technology
concluded that a mountain top was free of
enemy and sent a detachment of unsuspecting
SEALS to be shot up. Still insisting no
enemy present, a second group of SEALS were
sent to be shot up, and then a detachment of
Army Rangers. Finally, an A-10 pilot flew
over the scene and reported the enemy’s
presence in force.
By 2012 even the US Air
Force, which had been blindly committed to
the unmanned drone system, had experienced
more failure than could any longer be
explained away. The Air Force admitted that
the 50-year old U-2 could fly higher and in
bad weather and take better pictures than
the expensive Global Hawk System and
declared the Global Hawk system scrapped.
The decision was supported
by the 2011 report from the Pentagon’s test
office that the drone system was “not
operationally effective.” Among its numerous
drawbacks was its inability to carry out
assigned missions 75% of the time. The
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told
Congress that in addition to the system’s
unacceptable failure rate, the drone system
“has fundamentally priced itself out of our
ability to afford it.”
As Cockburn reports: “It
made no difference. Congress, led by House
Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck
McKeon and Democratic Congressman Jim Moran
(whose northern Virginia district hosts the
headquarters of both Northrop and Raytheon)
effortless brushed aside these pleas,
forcing the Air Force to keep buying the
unwanted drone.”
Cockburn provides numerous
examples of the utter failure of the
unmanned revolution ushered in by
unrealistic dreamers, such as Andrew
Marshall, John Foster, William Perry, and
David Deptula, who have done much harm to
the US military and American taxpayers. The
failure stories are legion and sad. Almost
always the victims are the innocent going
about their everyday affairs.
The book opens with the
story of three vehicles crammed with people
from the same village heading to Kabul. Some
were students returning to school in Kabul,
some were shopkeepers heading to the capital
to buy supplies, others were unemployed men
on their way to Iran seeking work, and some
were women bringing gifts for relatives.
This collection of ordinary people,
represented on screens by vague images, was
willfully mistaken, as the reproduced
conversations between drone operators and
assassins show, for a senior Taliban
commander leading forces to attack a US
Special Forces patrol. The innocent
civilians were blown to smithereens.
The second chapter tells
of the So Tri, an indigenous people in the
remote wilderness of southeastern Laos who
were bombed for nine years because the
stupid American military sowed their
environment with sensors that called down
bombs when human presence was detected.
High-tech warfare misidentified the
villagers with Viet Cong moving through
jungle routes.
One heartbreaking story
follows another. If surveillance suspects
the presence of a High Value Target in a
restaurant, regardless of nominal
restrictions on the number of innocents who
can be murdered as the “collateral damage”
part of the strike, the entire restaurant
and all within are destroyed by a hellfire
missile. Remember that the Israelis denounce
terrorists for exploding suicide vests
inside Israeli restaurants. What the US
military does is even worse.
On other occasions the US
assassinates an underling of a High Value
Target on the
assumption that the Target will attend the
funeral which is obliterated from the air
whether the Target is present or not.
As the murders are
indiscriminate, the US military defines all
males killed to be valid targets. Generally,
the US will not admit the deaths of
non-Targets, and some US officials have
declared there to be no such deaths. Blatant
and obvious lies issue without shame in
order to protect the “operationally
ineffective” and very expensive high-tech
production runs that mean billions of
taxpayer dollars for the military/security
complex and comfortable 7-figure employment
salaries with contractors after retirement
for the military brass.
When you read this book
you will weep for your country ruled as it
is by completely immoral and inhumane
monsters. But Cockburn’s book is not without
humor. He tells the story of Marine Lt.
General Paul Van Riper, the scourge of the
Unmanned Revolution in Military affairs, who
repeatedly expressed contempt for the
scientifically unsupported theories of
unmanned war. To humiliate Gen. Ripper with
a defeat in a massive war game as leader of
the enemy Red force against the high-tech
American Blue force, he was called out of
retirement to participate in a war game
stacked against him.
The Blue force armored
with a massive database (Operational Net
Assessment) and overflowing with acronyms
was almost instantly wiped out by General
Ripper. He sank the entire aircraft carrier
fleet and the entire Blue force army went
down with it. The war was over. The 21st
century US high-tech, effects-based military
was locked into a preset vision and was
beaten hands down by a maverick Marine
general with inferior forces.
The Joint Forces Command
turned purple with rage. Gen. Ripper was
informed that the outcome of the war game
was unacceptable and would not stand. The
sunken fleet magically re-floated, the dead
army was resurrected, and the war was again
on, only this time restriction after
restriction was placed on the Red force.
Ripper was not allowed to shoot down the
Blue force’s troop transports. Ripper was
ordered to turn on all of the Red force’s
radars so that the Red forces could be
easily located and destroyed. Umpires ruled,
despite the facts, that all of Ripper’s
missile strikes were intercepted. Victory
was declared for high-tech war. Ripper’s
report on the total defeat of the Blue
force, its unwarranted resurrection, and the
rigged outcome was promptly classified so
that no one could read it.
The highly profitable
Revolution in Military Affairs had to be
protected at all costs along with the
reputations of the incompetent generals that
comprise today’s high command.
The infantile behavior of
the US military compelled to create a
victory for its high-tech, but legally
blind, surveillance warfare demonstrates how
far removed from the ability to conduct real
warfare the US military is. What the US
military has done in Afghanistan and Iraq is
to create far more enemies than it has
killed. Every time high-tech killing murders
a village gathering, a wedding or funeral,
or villagers on the way to the capital,
which is often, the US creates hundreds more
enemies. This is why after 14 years of
killing in Afghanistan, the Taliban now
control most of the country. This is why
Islamist warriors have carved a new country
out of Syria and Iraq despite eight years of
American sacrifice in Iraq estimated by
Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes to have
cost Americans a minimum of $3 trillion. The
total failure of the American way of war is
obvious to all, but the system rolls on
autonomously.
The Revolution in Military
Affairs has decapitated the US military,
which no longer has the knowledge or ability
or human tools to conduct war. If the crazed
Russophobic US generals get their way and
end up in confrontation with Russia, the
American forces will be destroyed. The
humiliation of this defeat will cause
Washington to take the war nuclear.
Here is Stanislav Mishin’s
view of what awaits the foolish West: http://russia-insider.com/en/2015/03/22/4790