EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Transcript: Today's Live Q&A With NSA Leaker, Edward Snowden
- 'Tip of the Iceberg': Senators Warn Far More Data May Not Be Safe
- Playing the Obama Bumper Sticker Game
- Intentional and Evil: Court Marshall Sexually Assaults Woman, Then Arrests Her When She Protests
- David Brooks, Tom Friedman, Bill Keller Wish Snowden Had Just Followed Orders
- Transcript: Today's Live Q&A With NSA Leaker, Edward Snowden
- The Terror Con
- Remembering Satyajit Ray’s Hirok Rajar Deshe: On Edward Snowden, Resistance and Inverted Totalitarianism
- Pentagon Bracing for Public Dissent Over Climate and Energy Shocks
- Bank of America Lied to Homeowners and Rewarded Foreclosures, Former Employees Say
Popular content
Today's Top News
America Detached from War: Bush’s Pilotless Dream, Smoking Drones, and Other Strange Tales from the Crypt
Admittedly, before George W. Bush had his fever dream, the U.S. had already put its first unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) or drone surveillance planes in the skies over Kosovo in the late 1990s. By November 2001, it had armed them with missiles and was flying them over Afghanistan.
In November 2002, a Predator drone would loose a Hellfire missile on a car in Yemen, a country with which we weren't at war. Six suspected al-Qaeda members, including a suspect in the bombing of the destroyer the USS Cole would be turned into twisted metal and ash -- the first "targeted killings" of the American robotic era.
Just two months earlier, in September 2002, as the Bush administration was "introducing" its campaign to sell an invasion of Iraq to Congress and the American people, CIA Director George Tenet and Vice President Dick Cheney "trooped up to Capitol Hill" to brief four top Senate and House leaders on a hair-raising threat to the country. A "smoking gun" had been uncovered.
According to "new intelligence," Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein had in his possession unmanned aerial vehicles advanced enough to be armed with biological and chemical weaponry. Worse yet, these were capable -- so the CIA director and vice president claimed -- of spraying those weapons of mass destruction over cities on the east coast of the United States. It was just the sort of evil plan you might have expected from a man regularly compared to Adolf Hitler in our media, and the news evidently made an impression in Congress.
Democratic Senator Bill Nelson of Florida, for example, said that he voted for the administration's resolution authorizing force in Iraq because "I was told not only that [Saddam had weapons of mass destruction] and that he had the means to deliver them through unmanned aerial vehicles, but that he had the capability of transporting those UAVs outside of Iraq and threatening the homeland here in America, specifically by putting them on ships off the eastern seaboard."
In a speech in October 2002, President Bush then offered a version of this apocalyptic nightmare to the American public. Of course, like Saddam's supposed ability to produce "mushroom clouds" over American cities, the Iraqi autocrat's advanced UAVs (along with the ships needed to position them off the U.S. coast) were a feverish fantasy of the Bush era and would soon enough be forgotten. Instead, in the years to come, it would be American pilotless drones that would repeatedly attack Iraqi urban areas with Hellfire missiles and bombs.
In those years, our drones would also strike repeatedly in Afghanistan, and especially in the tribal borderlands of Pakistan, where in an escalating "secret" or "covert" war, which has been no secret to anyone, multiple drone attacks often occur weekly. They are now considered so much the norm that, with humdrum headlines slapped on ("U.S. missile strike kills 12 in NW Pakistan"), they barely make it out of summary articles about war developments in the American press.
And yet those robotic planes, with their young "pilots" (as well as the camera operators and intelligence analysts who make up a drone "crew") sitting in front of consoles 7,000 miles away from where their missiles and bombs are landing, have become another kind of American fever dream. The drone is our latest wonder weapon and a bragging point in a set of wars where there has been little enough to brag about.
CIA director Leon Panetta has, for instance, called the Agency's drones flying over Pakistan "the only game in town" when it comes to destroying al-Qaeda; a typically anonymous U.S. official in a Washington Post report claims of drone missile attacks, "We're talking about precision unsurpassed in the history of warfare"; or as Gordon Johnson of the Pentagon's Joint Forces Command told author Peter Singer, speaking of the glories of drones: "They don't get hungry. They are not afraid. They don't forget their orders. They don't care if the guy next to them has been shot. Will they do a better job than humans? Yes."
Seven thousand of them, the vast majority surveillance varieties, are reportedly already being operated by the military, and that's before swarms of "mini-drones" come on line. Our American world is being redefined accordingly.
In February, Greg Jaffe of the Washington Post caught something of this process when he spent time with Colonel Eric Mathewson, perhaps the most experienced Air Force officer in drone operations and on the verge of retirement. Mathewson, reported Jaffe, was trying to come up with an appropriately new definition of battlefield "valor" -- a necessity for most combat award citations -- to fit our latest corps of pilots at their video consoles. "Valor to me is not risking your life," the colonel told the reporter. "Valor is doing what is right. Valor is about your motivations and the ends that you seek. It is doing what is right for the right reasons. That to me is valor."
Smoking Drones
These days, CIA and administration officials troop up to Capitol Hill to offer briefings to Congress on the miraculous value of pilotless drones: in disrupting al-Qaeda, destroying its leadership or driving it "deeper into hiding," and taking out key figures in the Taliban. Indeed, what started as a 24/7 assassination campaign against al-Qaeda's top leadership has already widened considerably. The "target set" has by now reportedly expanded to take in ever lower-level militants in the tribal borderlands. In other words, a drone assassination campaign is morphing into the first full-scale drone war (and, as in all wars from the air, civilians are dying in unknown numbers).
If the temperature is again rising in Washington when it comes to these weapons, this time it's a fever of enthusiasm for the spectacular future of drones (which the Air Force has plotted out to the year 2047), of a time when single pilots should be able to handle multiple drones in operations in the skies over some embattled land, and of a far more distant moment when those drones should be able to handle themselves, flying, fighting, and making key decisions about just who to take out without a human being having to intervene.
When we possess such weaponry, it turns out, there's nothing unnerving or disturbing, apocalyptic or dystopian about it. Today, in the American homeland, not a single smoking drone is in sight.
Now it's the United States whose UAVs are ever more powerfully weaponized. It's the U.S. which is developing a 22-ton tail-less drone 20 times larger than a Predator that can fly at Mach 7 and (theoretically) land on the pitching deck of an aircraft carrier. It's the Pentagon which is planning to increase the funding of drone development by 700% over the next decade.
Admittedly, there is a modest counter-narrative to all this enthusiasm for our robotic prowess, "precision," and "valor." It involves legal types like Philip Alston, the United Nations special representative on extrajudicial executions. He recently issued a 29-page report criticizing Washington's "ever-expanding entitlement for itself to target individuals across the globe." Unless limits are put on such claims, and especially on the CIA's drone war over Pakistan, he suggests, soon enough a plethora of states will follow in America's footprints, attacking people in other lands "labeled as terrorists by one group or another."
Such mechanized, long-distance warfare, he also suggests, will breach what respect remains for the laws of war. "Because operators are based thousands of miles away from the battlefield," he wrote, "and undertake operations entirely through computer screens and remote audio-feed, there is a risk of developing a 'PlayStation' mentality to killing."
Similarly, the ACLU has filed a freedom of information lawsuit against the U.S. government, demanding that it "disclose the legal basis for its use of unmanned drones to conduct targeted killings overseas, as well as the ground rules regarding when, where, and against whom drone strikes can be authorized, and the number of civilian casualties they have caused."
But pay no mind to all this. The arguments may be legally compelling, but not in Washington, which has mounted a half-hearted claim of legitimate "self-defense," but senses that it's already well past the point where legalities matter. The die is cast, the money committed. The momentum for drone war and yet more drone war is overwhelming.
It's a done deal. Drone war is, and will be, us.
A Pilotless Military
If there are zeitgeist moments for products, movie stars, and even politicians, then such moments can exist for weaponry as well. The robotic drone is the Lady Gaga of this Pentagon moment.
It's a moment that could, of course, be presented as an apocalyptic nightmare in the style of the Terminator movies (with the U.S. as the soul-crushing Skynet), or as a remarkable tale of how "networking technology is expanding a homefront that is increasingly relevant to day-to-day warfare" (as Christopher Drew recently put it in the New York Times). It could be described as the arrival of a dystopian fantasy world of one-way slaughter verging on entertainment, or as the coming of a generation of homegrown video warriors who work "in camouflage uniforms, complete with combat boots, on open floors, with four computer monitors on each desk... and coffee and Red Bull help[ing] them get through the 12-hour shifts." It could be presented as the ultimate in cowardice -- the killing of people in a world you know nothing about from thousands of miles away -- or (as Col. Mathewson would prefer) a new form of valor.
The drones -- their use expanding exponentially, with ever newer generations on the drawing boards, and the planes even heading for "the homeland" -- could certainly be considered a demon spawn of modern warfare, or (as is generally the case in the U.S.) a remarkable example of American technological ingenuity, a problem-solver of the first order at a time when few American problems seem capable of solution. Thanks to our technological prowess, it's claimed that we can now kill them, wherever they may be lurking, at absolutely no cost to ourselves, other than the odd malfunctioning drone. Not that even all CIA operatives involved in the drone wars agree with that one. Some of them understand perfectly well that there's a price to be paid.
As it happens, the enthusiasm for drones is as much a fever dream as the one President Bush and his associates offered back in 2002, but it's also distinctly us. In fact, drone warfare fits the America of 2010 tighter than a glove. With its consoles, chat rooms, and "single shooter" death machines, it certainly fits the skills of a generation raised on the computer, Facebook, and video games. That our valorous warriors, their day of battle done, can increasingly leave war behind and head home to the barbecue (or, given American life, the foreclosure) also fits an American mood of the moment.
The Air Force "detachments" that "manage" the drone war from places like Creech Air Force Base in Nevada are "detached" from war in a way that even an artillery unit significantly behind the battle lines or an American pilot in an F-16 over Afghanistan (who could, at least, experience engine failure) isn't. If the drone presents the most extreme version thus far of the detachment of human beings from the battlefield (on only one side, of course) and so launches a basic redefinition of what war is all about, it also catches something important about the American way of war.
After all, while this country garrisons the world, invests its wealth in its military, and fights unending, unwinnable frontier wars and skirmishes, most Americans are remarkably detached from all this. If anything, since Vietnam when an increasingly rebellious citizens' army proved disastrous for Washington's global aims, such detachment has been the goal of American war-making.
As a start, with no draft and so no citizen's army, war and the toll it takes is now the professional business of a tiny percentage of Americans (and their families). It occurs thousands of miles away and, in the Bush years, also became a heavily privatized, for-profit activity. As Pratap Chatterjee reported recently, "[E]very US soldier deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq is matched by at least one civilian working for a private company. All told, about 239,451 contractors work for the Pentagon in battle zones around the world." And a majority of those contractors aren't even U.S. citizens.
If drones have entered our world as media celebrities, they have done so largely without debate among that detached populace. In a sense, our wars abroad could be thought of as the equivalent of so many drones. We send our troops off and then go home for dinner and put them out of mind. The question is: Have we redefined our detachment as a new version of citizenly valor (and covered it over by a constant drumbeat of "support for our troops")?
Under these circumstances, it's hardly surprising that a "pilotless" force should, in turn, develop the sort of contempt for civilians that can be seen in the recent flap over the derogatory comments of Afghan war commander General Stanley McChrystal and his aides about Obama administration officials.
The Globalization of Death
Maybe what we need is the return of George W. Bush's fever dream from the American oblivion in which it's now interred. He was beyond wrong, of course, when it came to Saddam Hussein and Iraqi drones, but he wasn't completely wrong about the dystopian Drone World to come. There are now reportedly more than 40 countries developing versions of those pilot-less planes. Earlier this year, the Iranians announced that they were starting up production lines for both armed and unarmed drones. Hezbollah used them against Israel in the 2006 summer war, years after Israel began pioneering their use in targeted killings of Palestinians.
Right now, in what still remains largely a post-Cold War arms race of one, the U.S. is racing to produce ever more advanced drones to fight our wars, with few competitors in sight. In the process, we're also obliterating classic ideas of national sovereignty, and of who can be killed by whom under what circumstances. In the process, we may not just be obliterating enemies, but creating them wherever our drones buzz overhead and our missiles strike.
We are also creating the (il)legal framework for future war on a frontier where we won't long be flying solo. And when the first Iranian, or Russian, or Chinese missile-armed drones start knocking off their chosen sets of "terrorists," we won't like it one bit. When the first "suicide drones" appear, we'll like it even less. And if drones with the ability to spray chemical or biological weapons finally do make the scene, we'll be truly unnerved.
In the 1990s, we were said to be in an era of "globalization" which was widely hailed as good news. Now, the U.S. and its detached populace are pioneering a new era of killing that respects no boundaries, relies on the self-definitions of whoever owns the nearest drone, and establishes planetary free-fire zones. It's a nasty combination, this globalization of death.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...





55 Comments so far
Show All"He was wrong. It is a race between education and insanity."
–(Visiting Professor)
–I might add, 'a race' where insanity has been declared the victor, so much so, that 'insanity' has been reified to the point it has become organic–a given–and an innocuous aspect of the real, if not the totalization of 'the real.'
Such are the wonders of life in America. There is really no end to it.
A death state where everything emanates from death.
"Ain't no life, nowhere." –(Jimi Hendrix)
"Valor to me is not risking your life," the colonel told the reporter. "Valor is doing what is right. Valor is about your motivations and the ends that you seek. It is doing what is right for the right reasons. That to me is valor."
Just shows you the mentality of the slave, justifying whatever his master decides is right.
So then could these PC-jockies get the equivalent of bronze and silver stars for obeying orders and risking little more than carpal tunnel syndrome? I wonder how the guys on the ground feel about these guys when they shed blood and lose friends facing real enemies with real weapons, not pixels.
"I see you have a purple heart? What happened?"
"Carpal tunnel syndrome."
Hope they got to go to the VA :) (LOL)who never saw a purple heart for carpol-tunnel will at first deny it! So they'll have to hire lawers and explain how they got injured... that should embarras any "Man" from doing it!
>^^<
And I post again:
Public Law 107-40 -- the President was given the authority to use the US military to 'prevent future terrorism' by our enemies al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
Pres. Obama 12/01/09 -- 'that authority is still in effect'.
The President has the power, the President uses that power. To expect anything else is naive.
Potential 'future terrorists' can be found anywhere and everywhere. This is a global insanity.
Every country deals with future terrorism but only America declared war.
There is no victory, there is no exit strategy, there is no end to a war against future enemies until the bodies pile up too high to be ignored any more - for the SE Asia ('Vietnam') insanity, that meant 58, 261 names on a Wall.
It's over 1,000 so far for this insane DAFT war.
I suggest, yet again, that we stop ignoring the law that keeps us trapped.
>>
Public Law 107-40 -- the President was given the authority to use the US military to 'prevent future terrorism' by our enemies al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
Pres. Obama 12/01/09 -- 'that authority is still in effect'.
<<
Of course it could not get more Orwellian, as all it does is ensure future terrorism.
Underscoring your point is self-evident truth in the article that any child can grasp: "In the process, we may not just be obliterating enemies, but creating them wherever our drones buzz overhead and our missiles strike." The drones are even now patrolling our own borders, and, if not already, will soon be turned inward. (If only we had the wisdom of children we might enter the kingdom of heaven.)
The manifest insanity of our strategy can only be understood in the profit that it generates for the merchants of death. In this Brave New World odor, amid economic ruin, we now spend more of the next generation's birthright on killing than we ever did during the Cold War, when Commies were an identifiable enemy, and this will never end until the military-financial kleptocracy self-destructs. Just this morning Erik Prince (of Darkness) was on CNBS discussing the bright future of Blackwater turned XE in this new paradigm. What a curse we bring upon ourselves.
Locust...thanks for your patience in bringing this up. Of course, you are correct. Have you had any success in bringing others around? If so, how?
Has the law ever been challenged in court? Would standing be a huge problem?
Part of the problem is disassociation. During WWII and the Korean and the Vietnam wars hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands of bodies of US service men and women accumulated to be buried on the spot or shipped back to the homeland. In the Iraq and Afghan wars, the numbers have been miniscule. The physically and mentally broken return and disappear into the woodwork of our horribly broken society. There are just not enougt to raise a stir. It's like a replay of the movie "Brazil", a replay of 1984. People will now only respond if shrimp harvesting dies for the oil or the fields of Carolina die for lack of water or Social Security dies because one needs to choose between poverty or wars to protect us within our poverty.
I dislike this president just as much as the wingnuts. Better yet, I dislike this president just as much as I dislike the wingnuts. I cannot even stand to see his picture on the net. Ad-block zaps him off my screen. I would love to get a copy of Tom's book. He was just on Democracy Now!
Agreed!
Chelsea
Very interesting. So this drone thing is just one more technology showing up all over. As a military technology, America is one of the countries with a competitive advantage. But in the end it is just one more type of weapon. It may be pilotless but there are people involved at some point, maitainence, refueling, joy-stick operators, the workers that build them. At a certain point, a real enemy, not the poor peasants in Afghanistan, will use weapons, maybe their own drones, to attack these people behind the drones.
And these planes may be pilotless, but they still need fuel, hence the wars for oil, so cutting off America's fuel supply is another option. I remember, back in the day, the Germans had the most fabulous battle tanks, they were awesome, but unfortunately for the Nazis, they needed a lot of fuel, which became scarce. America, like Nazi Germany, doesn't have unlimited fuel supplies. So it might be wise to put international law back in place before the people who do have the petrol, start seeing the advantages of using war technology to take what they want by force.
Exceedingly inflammatory comment, even for me, deleted out of respect for all of the rest of you.
dkshaw
I agree. We have robotic planes being sent on their deadly missions by robots [i.e. those who are in the military] who willingly and meekly go along with the program. Perhaps they are waiting for their letter from the American Legion, which I just received, commending me for my service in the military and urging me to join their patriotic organization. I am debating whether or not it would be worth while writing back to them and explaining that I do not know why I should be grateful for having been in the military given the fact that I ended up contributing to the deaths of many innocent Vietnamese people. Likewise, the robots of today apparently cannot wait for that pat on the back from their fellow Americans who will tell them how grateful they are for their service. It appears that the last thing that the robots ever desire to do is to take the advice of former German playwright Bertolt Brecht who noted in one of his poems [General, Your Tank Is A Powerful Vehicle] that man has one defect which the military is in mortal fear of and that is that those in the military might finally recognize that they actually have the ability to [gasp!] think as well as to question and challenge the orders that they are given. They might also take to heart the words of former Master Sergeant and Green Beret Donald Duncan who wisely pointed out in the documentary Sir! No Sir! that:
"I was doing it right but I wasn't doing right"
If I were a younger man I would right now invest in a school that teaches doublethink for dummies. This is the future!!!
Beyond a doubt it would garner vast material support from the DOD and maybe even lead to a deputy secretary or (who knows!)higher level post in the government. The potential is awesome as there are virtually millions of nascent Christian Patriots willing and able, blank slates if you will courtesy of the trashing of education in favor of 'belief' who can fill untold thousands of classroom chairs or study at home in their spare time while eating cheeto's & praying and pay a good buck to do it. Like I say, I would do it myself but I am a senior citizen now and I am currently at a senior's tea-party retreat and I am exhausted after the homo-roast and still have to get through a refresher course in group screaming so I think this is a project for a younger patriot who's got more lead in his pencil and is smarter than the average bear.
"In the 1990s, we were said to be in an era of "globalization" which was widely hailed as good news."
Anyone not blinded buy our history of aggression and maximum profit at any cost capitalism, could see us on a collision course with the realities of 2010.
When the Berlin Wall fell, I wondered how long it would take the Pentagon and Wall Street to "go wild" on the planet. The answer: not long.
How we stop Them at this point is anybody's guess.
They've gone stark raving mad.
"Buy the Book" is by the book. But extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice, right?
Perhaps we need the draft ... Since the PTB have moved war out of the human scale, maybe putting flesh and blood on the line is what it will take to end this insanity.
The draft hasn't help Israel none. In fact, it's made the problem worse.
"Perhaps we need the draft ... "
perhaps you need your head examined...
the USA's "Murderer Drones" remind me of Hilter's "Buzz Bombs".
No worrys, this will be a case of Karma. once the US starts running armed drones over the border it'll only be a matter of time till some bright kid with no concience takes one or more of them over, and either holds the hostage for ransom, best case; or has their own personall game of WarCraft live in some border city, or maybe starts splashing on oil platforms cause their so pretty when lit!
>^^<
Hack the drones. Once hacked all bets are off.
With this type of warfere we are sure to gain a never ending supply of terrorists/freedom fighters as we create them every time we kill civilians. In this respect there will be no end to war. Maybe thats the idea. Unlike the drone pilots who work and live in the continental US our ground troops occupying foriegn lands are many, and many of them joined because the military was the only paycheck available. Things are not getting any better here at home. Less jobs, higher food and fuel prices, and an economy with no light at the end of the tunnel. So whats to come home to? Mom and dad are struggling to make ends meet, the military will atleast feed them till they can fill a bodybag. This war on terror is a perpetual meatgrinder with no end in sight.
some titles of books or articles often say :
"THE AMERICAN WAY of war"
the should ALL be changed to only one:
"THE AMERICAN way.. IS .... War".
as General Smedley Butler correctly and precisely described it - it applies to the ENTIRE American culture and mindset - whether in economics , or politics, or culture:
"OUR CULTURAL AND ECONOMIC ASSAULT" ...
THAT is war.
just ask the native indians.
America has truly become the evil empire.
Again, it's suggested that you turn to your website and read how THE CARLYLE GROUP plans to diminish the population of this planet to ONE BILLON humans.
Except for ballistic missiles through the stratosphere there has never been a delivery system of destruction for which no effective albeit not always 100% efficient answer was eventually developed. I am sure that the Chinese, the Russian, and probably our own military developers are already feverishly working on anti-drone defenses. Ultimately and inevitably these will get into the hands of insurgent armies.
America is detached from America...
there are two Americas...
the government claiming to represent America, is not the real America...
the deeds being attributed to 'America' actually belong to this group...I do not know what they would be called...
the real 'America', the people who live and work here, are not responsible for the deeds of the imposter 'America'...
with no representation, and no recourse, the real America has no control over the imposter America...
I simply ask that the imposter America be acknowledged...
perhaps a new name is in order...what would we call the group that has hijacked our government, and our military, and our banking and legal systems, among others?
Sorry you can't just pretend the blood on your/our hands isn't there. We know the crimes being commited by whom and whats being planned in the "Forteress of Doom" Washington D.C. Omission in action is as much a sin as any other.
I know no one person can stop it! there are too many enimies of the "Little People" and who said we have any greater right to survive anyhow? I'm just sayin if your gonna play the game you can't ignore the rules.
>^^<
Glenn Greenwald cites Orwell's "Notes On Nationalism" toward the end of his attack on "Right-wing Self-delusion":
"All nationalists have the power of not seeing resemblances between similar sets of facts. A British Tory will defend self-determination in Europe and oppose it in India with no feeling of inconsistency. Actions are held to be good or bad, not on their own merits, but according to who does them, and there is almost no kind of outrage -- torture, the use of hostages, forced labour, mass deportations, imprisonment without trial, forgery, assassination, the bombing of civilians -- which does not change its moral colour when it is committed by ‘our’ side . . . The nationalist not only does not disapprove of atrocities committed by his own side, but he has a remarkable capacity for not even hearing about them."
The context justifying the citation is no different from that described by Englehardt. But I would also say that it's not just the right-wing that's self-deluded; rather, I would say that over 90% of the US populace is self-deluded and might as well be dead.
Copyright is my guess. I just made him part of my regular reading sites, although I miss the better discussion of his essays that occurs here.
I would argue there are signs of a Pentagon Privitized which increasingly acquires the capability of spawning rogue groups. When the time came, how hard would it be - following some ardent undemocratic, anti-constitutionalist belief - to take out the White House and Congress and the Supreme Court with drones and Hellfire missiles? Surely I am not the first to think of this possibility.
Their not that hard to make either. Sure Raythean uses the most expensive IBM and Unisys parts but really all you need is an old Cessna a couple of laptops, internet cameras, and surplus Russian surface to air missles, and your in the drone business.
Suicide drones are easier just fill the empty spaces with explosives. There you go. Almost any ameatuer electrical or R/C hobbiest could put one togther in a day. Lots of private planes sitting about since avgas prices got so high.
Thats why we need to know who is in this country and for what cause and if they have any loyalty/citizenship to this country. Any mule can carry an A-Bomb over the border. It's someone with moderate skills, and the desire to reek destruction who is dangerous.
>^^<
Part of the problem is disassociation. During WWII and the Korean and the Vietnam wars hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands of bodies of US service men and women accumulated to be buried on the spot or shipped back to the homeland. In the Iraq and Afghan wars, the numbers have been miniscule. The physically and mentally broken return and disappear into the woodwork of our horribly broken society. There are just not enougt to raise a stir. It's like a replay of the movie "Brazil", a replay of 1984. People will now only respond if shrimp harvesting dies for the oil or the fields of Carolina die for lack of water or Social Security dies because one needs to choose between poverty or wars to protect us within our poverty.
Yes, richsmith2, drones are so calculated to minimize US bodies which the corporate media barely bothers to mention any more. And yes, how can we create a create a resonse to social security dying?!
The final war on the drone planet.
Given the current exponential rate of drone warfare development,
like any new war technology, it will not be too long before
there are many competing suppliers from many nations.
Also to be expected soon will be custom designed anti-drone missiles and anti-drone drones. Drone attacks on drone bases. War will drone on and on, until one side has destroyed all the drone capabilities of the other.
As the US has shown, in drone warfare, there are no rules or restraints in collateral damage, apart from the rules of target selection and the rule of power.
Target selection means the priority of targets, given limited drone numbers and weapons. Targets take priority over collateral damage.
Drone operators have taken up the right to create terror anywhere that an all consuming great dark power chooses. But its no different to well established horror results of mine warfare, which goes on killing long after the original strategic objectives for a mine laying have disappeared.
Like BP going for the deepest oil, drone warfare operates without even the thought of a blowout preventer. There is nothing like getting bombed and fried to engender hatred of one nation for another. If the US ever wanted to stir up terrorists and trouble against itself, it could not have designed a better method. The US is the supreme master at creating the blowback. There is no sign that any of the blinkered, single minded power processors in Washington, or anywhere else, have ever cared about the blowback problem, apart from it gives them an excuse to carry on creating more blowbacks.
No nation is immune to blowbacks created by the policy and technological excesses of sick societies, each one creating nightmares of consequence. We would still rather blame anyone but ourselves.
The person "flying" the drone is a terrorist. Its commanders are terrorists. And the outcome is no different from that caused by other terrorists. Again, Obama is the planet's #1 terrorist. Terrorists and their terrorism are uncivilized. Given human history, it must be asked if humans can ever become civilized. Perhaps after almost destroying the natural world and their means for support will the remnants of humanity decide they must become civilized or die off as a species. I don't believe large concentrations of humans have the capacity to become civilized; but do I contradict myself when I think it possible for individual humans to become civilized? Is it possible for terrorists to become civilized, or is it Once a terrorist, always a terrorist? Since the followers of Judaism, Christianity and Islam are all supposed to obey the Ten Commandments but clearly do not, is it possible for religion to civilize humans? And finally, given the need to live by killing, will it ever become possible for humans to become civilized since their very existence requires death, which contradicts the Ten Commandments--as far as I know, there's no qualifier regarding non-human life within Thou Shalt Not Kill?
He who lives by the gun, shall die by the gun
an old saying that I heard somewhere.
These drones are not invincible. It is only a matter of time before Russia or China comes up with anti-drone weaponry (if they haven't already). The most likely defense would involve electric pulses that would disable the guidance system, perhaps a system that could detect the drone and then fire a missile that would not need to hit it, only sending a crippling burst of energy designed to fry the on-board computers much like a surge of electricity in a household circuit during a thunderstorm, a surge that can disable PCs handily.
The Pentagon better enjoy their advantage in this kind of warfare while it lasts, because it won't last long.
Let me get this straight....hmmmm...if Saddam used a UAV, then he was a ruthless thug, but US Army use them and get medals of valor...hmmm.....
Indeed.
Now, wouldn't it be just fitting if one of them mad machines got lose in Washington, DC. Ooooh, the thought!
Bill Nelson.....is just another pathetic liar
and rationaliser, who has voted
for every war funding bill, if
he believes he was lied to then
the liar should quit funding these wars.
This is just *begging* some enterprising person who truly detests the US to read a fiction book called 'One Second After' in which the US, and much of the technological world, suffers a massive EMP attack, wiping out the capability of any kind of electronic communication, bank records, Internet, most cars produced after 1970, etc. In fact, if it is computerized or electronic, it dies.
Far fetched? Fantastic?
Do we *really* know what Russia is doing with the fissile material from it's semi-mothballed nuclear arsenal? Is it impossible that someone could undertake even briefcase version of an EMP attack to cripple Wall St.?
Sooner or later, there is going to be blowback on a horrific scale that will stun the US, and not be traceable to a single country or group for retaliation.
Non Serviam - I will not serve.
VALOR defined by the webster dictionary means;"boldness or determination in facing great danger,esp. in battle..." So by definition pressing a button to fire a missle to murder people who've never done you any harm 6000 miles is not valor. i consider these acts criminal. By our law they are criminal and war crimes to boot.
"I refuse to be silent any longer. I refuse to be party to an illegal and immoral war against people who did nothing to deserve our aggression. My oath of office is to protect and defend America's laws and its people. By refusing unlawful orders for an illegal war, i fulfill that oath today." US Army 1st LT. Ehren Watada. Now to me this is a man who shows valor for he faced great danger for showing moral courage to stand up to the howling 'patriotic' mob and say no, i will not join in this crime. Valor is people who stand up the majority in their militarism worshipping and false flag raising crimes against humanity,against their values and morals. No the real heroes of any war are those who refuse to bow down and subcumb to those brainwashed conformists who rah rah within the security of the crowd.
This ain't even war folks. Only congress can declare war and they never did. They punted the ball to bush and he ran with it but all of it illegal and still is so all who partake of it,support it and salute it are criminals. Google the War Powers Act of 1973. Read the Constitution, the supreme law of the land. Read the supremcy law. Heres a great one for you Star Trek fans that is right on for this 'war'. An epsisode called; "A Taste of Armageddon". It is about a war between two planets that is done without the horrible destruction of real war. All done by computers. Watch it. Great message about war. War should be ugly and horrible but we have made it quite tasteful and quite gift-wrapped nice and clean and we never see the horror of what we inflict on others as we go about our buisness...This is what they want. Forever war, war that we don't care about, war that we don't protest because it doesn't directly affect most of us as we SUPPORT THE TROOPS!.
Are we nuts? Are we so bubbled and shielded by our hedonic lives that we are so insensitve to what harm we do to others? They have a 6-week program called "D.A.R.E. to resist violence and Drugs" that the school put on a t-shirt for my kid and his class at school(they took some course and then 'graduate') as the local police chief(lives 4 houses down from me) with a loaded gun on his waist has all us parents stand for the pledge of alliegence(which is totally unameircan, which of course i would not do). And they just go along, like the germans did during ww2. This is the same cop who put a poster outside on his yard("Hell Yes we support the troops") after i wrote an article about war,veterens day and how we should eschew this violence, and not worship it in the local paper. i too have posters on my yard; "War is not the Answer","Support Peace" and one that has 7 kids from all over the world holding hands with the caption: "God Bless Peace For All the Children". Christmas night was raining, very windy,cold, snow and his poster by Christmas morn' was crumpled in a heap on top of the snow while mine were unscathed and fine..True story!
Folks you are all here because you exhibit valor and moral courage. "It requires the bearer to walk away from the warm embrace of comradship and denounce the myth of war as a fraud, to name it as an enterprise of death and immorality, to condemn himself, and those around him, as killers. It requires the bearer to become an outcast. There are times when taking a moral stance, perhaps the highest form of patriotism, means facing down the community, even the nation." "Only exceptional people resist atrocity."
YOu put it very well.
the DRONE WARS - aka "star wars" movie parlance - and quite literally "life imitating art"....are america's "war" version of american habits of corrupting language so that it represents something that is NOT the thing or something other than the thing itself:
example:
americans have a very nasty habit of corporatist "language" posing as something "tasteful"..such as calling a secretary the "adminstrative assistant"...a store CLERK the "customer representative"...some office or paper pusher worker close to the boss "a consultant"...all sorts of nomenclature to make something sound more IMPORTANT and functional than it REALLY is...or making war sound "tasteful"...
in america -- people "didn't argue - we had a difference of opinion"....
"someone didn't die in a fire -- she just inhaled carbon dioxide"...
a person in his or her 80's isn't OLD - she's just SENIOR ...
there's a joke among some people that goes:
"the french language is so beautiful in sound , even HELL sounds beautiful".
but that's as far as SOUND and phonetics goes...
in america Language ITSELF is used to give NEW MEANING to something...
something UGLY - like war - is now "noble" and "clean"...."efficient"...
but it is QUITE typical of american thought.
as an old chinese saying went:
the path to wisdom begins by naming a thing what it IS.
There is no war policy other than a never ending occupation to keep the military industrial complex well oiled in money.
Osama Bin Laden, CIA ghost will never be caught and will live to be 250 years old hiding in the mountains.
He has had a face change and lives very well in Saudi Arabia with his relatives.
Stop the bullshit, end these occupations for pipeline and oil resources.
Welcome to the United Stupid of America, soon to become the United Stazi of America.
9-11 was an inside red flag job, only the corporate Fascists have benefited by this murderous attack ,,,
Motive,Motive,Motive.
"There is no war policy other than a never ending occupation..."
Take a read:
http://news.antiwar[.]com/2010/06/24/obama-disavows-july-2011-afghan-drawdown-date/
---------------------------^^^-----------------------------
This sucker will end when this "Evil Empire" goes broke. What possible use are 2,000 tanks or 1200 warships or 10,000 jets if you can't pay the tankers or sailors or airmen? I guess that means I'm a "Big Government" man now. Spend, Spend, Spend. Spend 'til we're broke. The sooner, the better. Good riddance to bad garbage.
Please all, keep in mind that it is the satellites the US maintains that allows the drones to work. We are just a small step from having weapons platforms in space, but I am afraid we have already moved into the new arms race. The US military/ industrial complex sees itself as the single world superpower through it control of space based weapons; indeed "Masters of Space" is the slogan of the Huntsville Alabama research facility. There were a lot of Nazi scientists who defected to the US and helped in the development of the US space program at that facility, thus that slogan has a chilling ring.