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Drones in Pakistan: Equal Time for Killers?
The New York Times has a long piece (8/12/11) looking at the question of how many civilians in Pakistan are killed by CIA drones. The agency doesn't even speak about the program on the record, except to make the far-fetched claim that no civilians have died in the past year or so.
The article, written by Scott Shane, includes some useful criticism of the CIA, and it's hard not to conclude that the agency's claims are not very credible.
But the real problem with the piece is that it gives much weight to the CIA's defense at all, using their almost entirely anonymous claims as one side in a dispute:
The government's assertion of zero collateral deaths meets with deep skepticism from many independent experts. And a new report from the British Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which conducted interviews in Pakistan's tribal area, concluded that at least 45 civilians were killed in 10 strikes during the last year.
Shane writes that a "closer look at the competing claims... suggests reasons to doubt the precision and certainty of the agency's civilian death count." He adds, though, that "if there are doubts about the CIA claim, there are also questions about the reliability of critics' reports of noncombatant deaths."
Shane also reports that "American officials" do not trust Pakistani lawyer Mirza Shahzad Akbar, who has been a key player and is suing the CIA-- which apparently discredits the British Bureau of Investigative Journalism study:
American officials said the Bureau of Investigative Journalism report was suspect because it relied in part on information supplied by Mr. Akbar, who publicly named the CIA's undercover Pakistan station chief in December when announcing his legal campaign against the drones.
If you read some of the British press about this study (as I did, thanks to CommonDreams.org), you get a very different impression than the one you get from the New York Times. From the Telegraph:
168 Children Killed in Drone Strikes in Pakistan Since Start of CampaignNew research to send shockwaves through Pakistan
by Rob Crilly, Islamabad
In an extensive analysis of open-source documents, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism found that 2,292 people had been killed by U.S. missiles, including as many as 775 civilians.
An opinion piece at the Guardian:
The Civilian Victims of the CIA's Drone WarA new study gives us the truest picture yet--in contrast to the CIA's own account--of drones' grim toll of 'collateral damage'
In that piece, Smith writes:
This week, a new report from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism gives us the best picture yet of the impact of the CIA's drone war in Pakistan. The CIA claims that there has been not one "noncombatant" killed in the past year. This claim always seemed to be biased advocacy rather than honest fact. Indeed, the Guardian recently published some of the pictures we have obtained of the aftermath of drone strikes. There were photos of a child called Naeem Ullah killed in Datta Khel and two kids in Piranho, both within the timeframe of the CIA's dubious declaration.
The BIJ reporting begins to fill in the actual numbers. It's a bleak view: more people killed than previously thought, including an estimated 160 children overall. This study should help to create a greater sense of reality around what is going on in these remote regions of Pakistan. This is precisely what has been lacking in the one-sided reporting of the issue--and it doesn't take an intelligence analyst to realize that vague and one-sided is just the way the CIA wants to keep it.
The Times account obeys normal journalistic "rules" about balance and giving official sources their say. Which, in this case, amounts to giving space to anonymous killers to defend their actions.
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5 Comments so far
Show AllEven Hart is soft by using the term "anonymous killers" instead of Terrorists. And as for Accuarcy in Reporting, where is the needed contextual note saying the CIA is a known terrorist organization with a long history of lawlessness protected by the US [In]Justice System and official US policy, which also means the US is also a terrorist organization of long standing with its own long history of lawlessness--It's the Supreme Outlaw Nation.
I imagine if journalists and reporters presented their 'news' and views as accurately as they may be feeling or seeing things they would begin to disappear or have strangely coincidental accidents that remove their voices.
It seems this author gets pretty close to calling the spade a spade in his use of the term 'anonymous killers'. The fact that the word killer is used is, to me, as sufficient as saying terrorist. Not all terrorists acually kill people....anonymous killers, however, more than implies that death was the result of their actions.
And I completely agree that the US is the Supreme Outlaw Nation.
"Not all terrorists acually kill people"
True enough. But those usually not considered Terrorists are as they do kill--consider "The Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" a prime example of terrorism imbedded in policy, and quite longstanding.
What human being can ever have anything to do with prople who work for the CIA?
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