The United States' use
of unmanned drones to strike terrorists is coming under increasing scrutiny.
Those in favor say the drone strikes have been highly effective, but critics
suggest they could violate international law. The New
York Times claimed
Sunday it had uncovered a secret deal between the U.S. and Pakistan over the
use of drones in Pakistani airspace.
Unmanned drones are
being used with increasing frequency in fighting terrorist groups like
al-Qaida.
A recent analysis by
the New America Foundation estimated drone strikes in Pakistan and Yemen since
2004 have killed up to 3,238 militants and as many as 368 civilians.
Professor Christopher
Coker of the London School of Economics is author of Warrior
Geeks: How 21st Century Technology Is Changing The Way We Fight And Think About
War.
“There are six American
bases - four in the United States, one in Germany and one in South Korea - and
that’s where most of the drone strikes are launched from. And they have
chaplains and psychologists now in the room monitoring; they have machines
monitoring stress levels, also monitoring concentration levels," said
Coker. "And there is, of course, a chain of command. So you [the pilots]
spend about eight hours looking at the screen day after day and occasionally
you get the command to actually fire.”
The New
York Times
newspaper alleged Sunday that Pakistan is allowing U.S. drones in its airspace
in return for targeted killings of Pakistan’s enemies by the drones. The
Pakistani government strongly denied the allegations; the U.S. government did
not comment.
The drone strikes have
prompted street protests in Pakistan. Arif Niazi is a lawyer in Islamabad.
"These ongoing
attacks are blatant aggression, an intrusion into my country and a violation of
its sovereignty," said Niazi.
Marco Roscini, an
expert on international law at the University of Westminster, says the legality
of current drone strikes is murky.
“There is a huge need
for clarification and there’s a huge need for transparency," said Roscini.
"You know that most of the strikes are now allegedly carried out by the
CIA and their covert operations. So we don’t know why, who or when an
individual is put on the targeted list.”
The decision on whom to
target is a key distinction between CIA drone strikes and the military, says
Professor Christopher Coker of the London School of Economics.
“The military can only
actually take out someone if they know 100 percent that it’s a bad guy,"
he said. "The CIA will take you out on the basis that your behavior leads
them to suspect that you may be a bad guy.”
Supporters of drone
strikes point to the killing of numerous high-profile targets - such as last
year's strike in Pakistan that killed the then number two in al-Qaida, Abu
Yahya al-Libi.
At his nomination
hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee in February, CIA Director John
Brennan was questioned about the use of drones to kill U.S. citizens suspected
of joining terror groups.
“I think any Americans
who did that, should know well, that they are in fact part of an enemy against
us, and the United States will do everything possible to destroy that enemy to
save American lives," said Brennan.
With most NATO ground
forces withdrawing from Afghanistan at the end of 2014, analysts says drones
could play a bigger role in the West’s fight against al-Qaida and other
terrorist groups.
Sources :
http://www.voanews.com/content/us_drone_strikes_under_scrutiny/1638067.html
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