How
Extrajudicial Executions Became "War" Policy in
Washington
By Rebecca
Gordon and Tom Engelhardt
July 18,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Tom
Dispatch" -
Strangely,
amid the spike in racial tensions after the killing
of two black men by police in Louisiana and
Minnesota, and of five white police officers by a
black sharpshooter in Dallas, one American reality
has gone unmentioned. The U.S. has been fighting
wars – declared, half-declared, and undeclared – for
almost 15 years and, distant as they are, they’ve
been coming home in all sorts of barely noted ways.
In the years in which the U.S. has up-armored
globally, the country has also seen an arms race
developing on the domestic front. As vets have
returned from their Iraq and Afghan tours of duty,
striking numbers of them have gone
into police work at a time when American
weaponry, vehicles, and military equipment –
including, for instance,
MRAPs (mine-resistant ambush protected vehicles)
– have
poured off America’s distant battlefields and,
via the Pentagon, into police departments
nationwide. And while the police were
militarizing, gun companies have been
marketing battlefield-style assault rifles to
Americans by
the millions, at the very moment when it has
become ever more possible for citizens to carry
weapons of every sort in a concealed or
open fashion in public.
The result
in Dallas: Micah Johnson, a disturbed Army Reserves
veteran, who spent a tour of duty in Afghanistan and
practiced military tactics in
his backyard, armed with an
SKS semi-automatic assault rifle, wearing full
body armor, and angry over police killings of black
civilians, took out those five white officers. One
of them was a Navy vet who had
served three tours of duty in Iraq and another a
former Marine who had
trained local police for DynCorp, a private
contractor, in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile,
civilian protesters,
also armed with assault rifles (quite legal in
the streets of Dallas), scattered as the first shots
rang out and were, in some cases, taken in by the
police as suspects. And at least two unarmed
protesters were
wounded by Johnson. (Think of that, in his
terms, as “collateral damage.”) In the end, he would
be killed by a Remotec Andros F5 robot, built by
weapons-maker Northrop Grumman,
carrying a pound of C4 plastic explosive, and
typical of robots that police departments now
possess.
In other
words, this incident was capped by the first use of
deadly force by a drone in the United States.
Consider that a war-comes-home upping of the ante.
Already,
reports the Defense One website, makers of
military-grade robots – a burgeoning field for the
Pentagon – are imagining other ways to employ such
armed bots not only on our distant battlefields but
at home in a future in which they will be “useful,
cheap, and ubiquitous,” and capable of
Tasing as well as killing.
Of course,
among the
many things that have also
come home from the country’s wars, Predator and
Reaper drones are now flying over “the homeland” on
missions for
the Pentagon, not to mention the
FBI, the
Border Patrol, and other domestic agencies. So
the future stage is set. Once you’ve used any kind
of drone in the U.S. to kill by remote control, it’s
only logical – given some future extreme situation –
to extend that use to the skies and so consider
firing a missile at some U.S. target, as the CIA and
the Air Force have been doing regularly for years in
places like Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, and
Somalia. And of course, in our domestic arms race,
with small drones commercially available to anyone
and the first of them
armed (no matter the rudimentary nature of that
armament), it’s not hard to imagine a future Micah
Johnson, white or black, using one of them sooner or
later. After all, Johnson was already talking about
planting “IEDs”
(the term for insurgent roadside bombs in our war
zones) and a flying IED is a relatively modest step
from there.
So,
welcome to the “home front,” folks. And speaking of
drones, it’s worth giving a little thought to what
might, in fact, still come home, to the sort of
example that two administrations have set by turning
the president into an
assassin-in-chief and regularly creating law for
themselves when it comes to the targeting of distant
peoples. In that light,
TomDispatch regular Rebecca Gordon
considers America’s Trojan Horse technology of death
and just what it may someday smuggle into “the
homeland.” ~ Tom
The Trojan Drone
An Illegal Military Strategy Disguised as
Technological Advance
By
Rebecca Gordon
Think of it
as the Trojan Drone, the ultimate techno-weapon of
American warfare in these years, a single remotely
operated plane sent to take out a single key figure.
It’s a shiny video game for grown ups – a
Mortal Kombat or
Call of
Duty where the animated enemies bleed real
blood. Just like the giant wooden horse the Greeks
convinced the Trojans to bring inside their gates,
however, the drone carries something deadly in its
belly: a new and illegal military strategy disguised
as an impressive piece of technology.
The
technical advances embodied in drone technology
distract us from a more fundamental change in
military strategy. However it is achieved – whether
through conventional air strikes, cruise missiles
fired from ships, or by drone – the United States
has now embraced extrajudicial executions on foreign
soil. Successive administrations have implemented
this momentous change with little public discussion.
And most of the discussion we’ve had has focused
more on the new instrument (drone technology)
than on its purpose (assassination). It’s a case of
the means justifying the end. The drones work so
well that it must be all right to kill people with
them.
The Rise
of the Drones
The Bush
administration
launched the assassination program in October
2001 in
Afghanistan, expanded it in 2002 to
Yemen, and went from there. Under Obama, with an
actual White House “kill
list,” the use of drones has again expanded,
this time nine-fold, with growing numbers of attacks
in Pakistan, Yemen, Libya, and Somalia, as well as
in the Afghan, Iraqi, and
Syrian war zones.
There’s an
obvious appeal to a technology that allows pilots
for the CIA, Joint Special Operations Command, or
the Air Force to sit safely in front of video
screens in Nevada or elsewhere in the U.S., while
killing people half a world away. This is especially
true for a president running a global war with a
public that does not easily accept American
casualties and a Congress that prefers not to be
responsible for war and peace decision-making. Drone
assassinations have allowed President Obama to
spread the “war on terror” to ever more places (even
as he quietly
retired that phrase), without U.S. casualties or
congressional oversight and approval.
One problem
has, however, dogged the drone program from the
beginning: just like
conventional air strikes, remotely targeted
missiles and bombs tend to kill the wrong people.
Over the last seven years, the count of civilians
killed by drones has been mounting. Actual figures
are hard to come by, although a number of
nongovernmental organizations and
journalists have done a good job of collating
information from a variety of sources and offering
reasonable estimates.
Analysis
from all these sources suggests that there are at
least three reasons why civilians die in such
attacks.
1. The
intelligence information on the individual targeted
is often wrong. He isn’t
where they think he is, or he isn’t even who
they think he is. For example, in 2014 a British
human rights organization, Reprieve, compiled
data on drone strikes that targeted specific
individuals in Yemen and Pakistan.
According to the Guardian, Reprieve’s
work
“indicates
that even when operators target specific individuals
– the most focused effort of what Barack Obama calls
‘targeted killing’ – they kill vastly more people
than their targets, often needing to strike multiple
times. Attempts to kill 41 men resulted in the
deaths of an estimated 1,147 people, as of 24
November [2014].”
Some of
these men were reported in the media as killed
multiple times. Even if they didn’t die in the
first, second, and in some cases third attempts,
other people certainly did. Reprieve also
reports one particularly egregious case of
mistaken identity:
“Someone
with the same name as a terror suspect on the Obama
administration’s ‘kill list’ was killed on the third
attempt by U.S. drones. His brother was captured,
interrogated, and encouraged to ‘tell the Americans
what they want to hear’: that they had in fact
killed the right person.”
2. There
isn’t even a named target. The CIA has long
based drone assassination targeting for many
missions not on direct intelligence about a
particular individual, but on what it calls the
“signature” of possible terrorist activity (that is,
the behavior or look of people below). Such
“signature strikes” target unidentified individuals
based on some suspicious activity, usually picked up
through drone surveillance. Such a “signature” can
be as
ill defined as “a gathering of men, teenaged to
middle-aged, traveling in convoys or carrying
weapons” in countries where many men may be armed.
Unfortunately, while such a gathering may indeed
indicate some kind of military activity, it may also
describe a rural wedding in, say,
Yemen, involving driving in convoy from the
groom’s town to the bride’s, accompanied sometimes
by celebratory gunfire.
Not
everyone in the government is convinced that
signature strikes are a good idea. In 2012, the
New York Times
reported this joke at the State Department:
“When the C.I.A. sees ‘three guys doing jumping
jacks,’ the agency thinks it is a terrorist training
camp.”
The fact
that signature strikes continue to this day suggests
that Secretary of State John Kerry was not entirely
truthful when, in 2013, he
said at a BBC forum: “The only people that we
fire a drone at are confirmed terrorist targets at
the highest level after a great deal of vetting that
takes a long period of time. We don’t just fire a
drone at somebody and think they’re a terrorist.”
3. They
were in the way, and so became “collateral
damage.” This is the term military
theorists regularly use to describe human beings or
civilian infrastructure unavoidably destroyed in an
attack on a legitimate military target. Of course, a
drone operator’s understanding of the term
“unavoidable” may be different from that of a woman
who
has just lost three of her four sons as they
were returning home from shopping for supplies to
celebrate Eid-al-Fitr, the end of the holy month of
Ramadan.
In
addition, drone strikes don’t just kill people,
including women and children; they also destroy
buildings and other property. For example, the
Bureau of Investigative Journalism
says that, in Pakistan, more than 60% of all
strikes target domestic buildings – people’s houses.
In other words, “collateral damage” often refers to
the destruction of the homes of any survivors of a
drone attack.
Not
surprisingly, people don’t like living in terror of
deadly missiles screaming out of a clear blue sky.
Many observers have
argued that terrorist organizations have used
widespread fear and anger over drone attacks as a
recruiting tool. Al-Qaeda and ISIS appear to offer
Pakistanis, Yemenis, and others an alternative to
simply waiting for an attack they can’t prevent. The
CIA itself recognized the counterproductive
potential of drone killings, which they call “HVT
[High Value Target] operations.” A leaked July 2009
CIA report on “Best Practices in
Counter-Insurgency” outlines the issues:
“Potential
negative effects of HVT operations include
increasing the level of insurgent support, causing a
government to neglect other aspects of its
counterinsurgency strategy, altering insurgent
strategy or organization in ways that favor the
insurgents, strengthening an armed group’s bond with
the population, radicalizing an insurgent group’s
remaining leaders, creating a vacuum into which more
radical groups can enter, and escalating or
deescalating a conflict in ways that favor the
insurgents.”
So there
are long-term strategic problems with targeted
killings by drone. In addition, drones may help
spread and intensify terror movements and
insurgencies, rather than destroying them or their
leaderships. Often, as Andrew Cockburn has made
clear in his book
Kill Chain, the successors to leaders
assassinated by drone
turn out to be younger, more effective, and more
brutal.
There is,
however, another problem with this sort of warfare.
Such killings – at least when they take place
outside a declared war zone – are almost certainly
illegal; that is, they are murders, plain and
simple.
Targeted
Killing Is Murder
In my
household we have a rule: we’re not allowed to kill
something just because we’re afraid of it. This has
saved the lives of countless spiders and other
creatures sporting (in my view at least) too many
legs.
Whatever your view on arachnids, should it really be
permissible to kill people simply because we
are afraid of them? After all, that’s what these
drone assassinations are – extrajudicial executions
of people someone believes we should be afraid of.
It is easier to see an illegal execution for what it
is when the killer is not separated from the target
by thousands of miles and a video screen. Drone
technology is really a Trojan Horse, a distracting,
glitzy means of smuggling an illegal and immoral
tactic into the heart of U.S. foreign relations.
Not all
killing is illegal, of course. There are situations
in which both international and U.S. laws permit
killing. One of these is self-defense; another is
war. However, a “war” waged against a tactic
(terrorism), or even more vaguely, against an
emotion (terror) is only metaphorically a war. Under
international law, real wars, in which it is legal
to kill the enemy, involve sustained combat between
organized military forces.
Outside of
the fighting in Iraq, Afghanistan, and now possibly
Syria (where Congress has arguably never even
declared war), the “war on terror” is not a war at
all. It is instead a conflict with an ever-expanding
list of targets, no defined geographical boundaries,
and no foreseeable endpoint. It is a campaign
against any conceivable potential U.S. enemy, fought
in fits and starts in many countries on several
continents. It involves ongoing covert operations
largely hidden from everyone except its targets. As
an undertaking, it lacks the regular, sustained
conflict between armies that characterizes war in
the legal sense. Such operations fit another
category far better: assassination, illegal at least
since President Jimmy Carter’s
Executive Order 12036, which stated, “No person
employed by or acting on behalf of the United States
Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage
in, assassination.”
Nor is the
Middle East the only region where the United States
is using targeted killing outside a shooting war.
The U.S. military also
deploys drones in parts of Africa. In fact,
President Obama’s nominee to head U.S. Africa
Command, Marine Lieutenant General Thomas
Waldhauser, recently
told Senator Lindsay Graham that he thinks he
should be free to order drone killings on his own
authority.
So much for
war and “war.” What about self-defense? At every
stage of the “war on terror,” Washington has claimed
self-defense. That was the explanation for
rounding up hundreds of Muslims living in the
U.S. immediately after the attacks of 9/11,
torturing some of them, and holding them
incommunicado for months in a Brooklyn, New York,
jail. It was the excuse offered for beginning
torture programs in CIA “black
sites” and at Guantánamo. It was the reason the
U.S. gave for invading Afghanistan, and later for
invading Iraq – before, as Bush administration
representatives and
the president himself kept saying, “the smoking
gun” of Saddam Hussein’s supposed weapons of mass
destruction turned into “a mushroom cloud” over,
presumably, some American city.
And
self-defense has been the Justice Department’s
rationale for targeted killing as well. In a
November 2011
paper prepared by that department for the White
House, its author (identity unknown) outlined the
necessary conditions to make a targeted killing
legal:
“(1) an
informed, high-level official of the U.S. government
has determined that the targeted individual poses an
imminent threat of violent attack against the United
States;
(2) capture is infeasible, and the United States
continues to monitor whether capture becomes
feasible; and
(3) the operation would be conducted in a manner
consistent with applicable law of war principles.”
That would
seem to rule out most U.S. targeted killings. Few of
their targets were people on the verge of a violent
attack on the United States or U.S. soldiers in the
field. Ah, but in the through-the-looking-glass
logic of the Obama Justice Department, “imminent”
turns out not to mean “imminent” in the sense that
something is about to happen. As that document
explains: “The condition that an operational leader
present an ‘imminent’ threat of violent attack
against the United States does not require the
United States to have clear evidence that a specific
attack on U.S. persons and interests will take place
in the immediate future.”
It turns
out that the threat from any “operational leader” is
always imminent, because “with respect to al-Qaeda
leaders who are continually planning attacks, the
United States is likely to have only a limited
window of opportunity within which to defend
Americans.” In other words, once a person has been
identified as an al-Qaeda or allied group “leader,”
he is by definition “continually planning attacks,”
always represents an imminent danger, and so is a
legitimate target. Q.E.D.
In fact,
few enough of these targeted killings, including the
signature ones can be defended as instances of
self-defense. We should call them what they really
are: extrajudicial executions.
The U.N.
Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary, or
Arbitrary Executions has agreed with this view. In
his 2013 report to the General Assembly, Christof
Heyns
noted that international human rights law
guarantees a right to life. This right is enshrined
in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and given legal force in, among other treaties, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, to which the United States is a party. There
certainly are legal limits to the right to life,
including – in countries that have the death penalty
– the state’s right to execute a person after a
legitimate trial. To execute someone without a
trial, however, is an “extrajudicial killing” and a
human rights crime.
Obama
“Comes Clean”
By the
middle of President Obama’s second term in office,
criticism of this extrajudicial killing program, and
especially of the civilian deaths involved, had
mushroomed. So, in May 2013, at least 11 years after
the program was launched, the president
announced a shift in drone strategy, telling an
audience at the National Defense University that the
U.S. would engage in “targeted killings” of al-Qaeda
militants only when there was a “near-certainty”
that no civilians would be injured. He added that he
was planning to make the drone program more
transparent than it had been and to transfer most of
its operations from the CIA to the Pentagon.
In the two
years since, little of this has happened. Although
Obama has continued the job of
personally approving drone targets, the CIA
still runs much of the program.
On July
1st, he did finally take a step towards providing
greater transparency. The Office of the Director of
National Intelligence
issued a report stating that, outside of more
conventional war zones like those in Syria,
Afghanistan, and Iraq, U.S. airstrikes have killed
“64 to 116 civilian bystanders and about 2,500
members of terrorist groups.” These estimates are,
in fact, quite a bit lower than those supplied by
the various groups that track such killings. Note as
well that, legally speaking, not only the
“collateral damage” victims, but all those that
Americans identified as “members of terrorist
groups” died via illegal, extrajudicial executions.
The
document fulfills one of the requirements of a newly
issued
executive order, which, among other things,
requires the government to release a report by May
1st of each year containing “information about the
number of strikes undertaken by the U.S. Government
against terrorist targets outside areas of active
hostilities [i.e., outside genuine war zones]” for
the previous calendar year.
Attached to
the executive order was a “fact
sheet,” which noted that one goal of the new
executive order is to “set standards for other
nations to follow.” How happy would the United
States really be if other nations decided that they
had the right to kill anyone who scares them? How
would the United States react if Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad decided to take out a U.S. general
or two, on the grounds that, since the U.S. is
supporting forces that seek to depose him, those
generals are (as the Fact Sheet puts it) “targetable
in the exercise of national self-defense”?
Some
critics of the Obama drone program have
welcomed the executive order, which does include
a new emphasis on protecting civilians. But the
larger effect of the order is to make the practice
of illegal assassination a permanent feature of U.S.
policy. It assumes that we can expect an annual
murder toll announcement for years to come. No
future is contemplated in which the United States
will not be raining death from the sky on people who
cannot defend themselves. The drones will continue
to fly, but the Trojan Drone’s work is complete.
Rebecca Gordon, a
TomDispatch regular, teaches
philosophy at the University of San Francisco. She
is the author of Mainstreaming Torture and
most recently of
American Nuremberg: The U.S. Officials Who Should
Stand Trial for Post-9/11 War Crimes.
She can be contacted at www.mainstreamingtorture.org.
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Copyright
2016 Rebecca Gordon |