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Terminator Drones and Washington's Field of Screams
The Latest in Guarding the Empire
In the world of weaponry, they are the sexiest things around. Others countries are desperate to have them. Almost anyone who writes about them becomes a groupie. Reporters exploring their onrushing future swoon at their potentially wondrous techno-talents. They are, of course, the pilotless drones, our grimly named Predators and Reapers.
As CIA Director, Leon Panetta called them “the only game in town.” As Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates pushed hard to up their numbers and increase their funding drastically. The U.S. Air Force is already training more personnel to become drone “pilots” than to pilot actual planes. You don’t need it in skywriting to know that, as icons of American-style war, they are clearly in our future -- and they’re even heading for the homeland as police departments clamor for them.
They are relatively cheap. When they “hunt,” no one dies (at least on our side). They are capable of roaming the world. Someday, they will land on the decks of aircraft carriers or, tiny as hummingbirds, drop onto a windowsill, maybe even yours, or in their hundreds, the size of bees, swarm to targets and, if all goes well, coordinate their actions using the artificial intelligence version of “hive minds.”
“The drone,” writes Jim Lobe of Inter Press Service, “has increasingly become the [Obama] administration's 'weapon of choice' in its efforts to subdue al-Qaeda and its affiliates.” In hundreds of attacks over the last years in the Pakistani tribal borderlands, they have killed thousands, including al-Qaeda figures, Taliban militants, and civilians. They have played a significant and growing role in the skies over Afghanistan. They are now loosing their missiles ever more often over Yemen, sometimes over Libya, and less often over Somalia. Their bases are spreading. No one in Congress will be able to resist them. They are defining the new world of war for the twenty-first century -- and many of the humans who theoretically command and control them can hardly keep up.
Reach for Your Dictionaries
On September 15th, the New York Times front-paged a piece by the estimable Charlie Savage, based on leaks from inside the administration. It was headlined “At White House, Weighing Limits of Terror Fight,” and started this way:
“The Obama administration’s legal team is split over how much latitude the United States has to kill Islamist militants in Yemen and Somalia, a question that could define the limits of the war against al-Qaeda and its allies, according to administration and Congressional officials.”
Lawyers for the Pentagon and the State Department, Savage reported, were debating whether, outside of hot-war zones, the Obama administration could call in the drones (as well as special operations forces) not just to go after top al-Qaeda figures planning attacks on the United States, but al-Qaeda’s foot soldiers (and vaguely allied groups like the Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and al-Shabab in Somalia).
That those lawyers are arguing fiercely over such a matter is certainly a curiosity. As presented, the issue behind their disagreement is how to square modern realities with outmoded rules of war written for another age (which also, by the way, had its terrorists). And yet such debates, front-paged or not, fierce or not, will one day undoubtedly be seen as analogous to supposed ancient clerical arguments over just how many angels could dance on the head of a pin. In fact, their import lies mainly in the fascinating pattern they reveal about the way forces that could care less about questions of legality are driving developments in American-style war.
After all, this fierce “argument” about what constraints should be applied to modern robotic war was first played out in the air over Pakistan’s tribal borderlands. There, the CIA’s drone air campaign began with small numbers of missions targeting a few highly placed al-Qaeda leaders (not terribly successfully). Rather than declare its latest wonder weapons a failure, however, the CIA, already deeply invested in drone operations, simply pushed ever harder to expand the targeting to play to the technological strengths of the planes.
In 2007, CIA director Michael Hayden began lobbying the White House for “permission to carry out strikes against houses or cars merely on the basis of behavior that matched a ‘pattern of life’ associated with al-Qaeda or other groups.” And next thing you knew, they were moving from a few attempted targeted assassinations toward a larger air war of annihilation against types and “behaviors.”
Here’s another curiosity. The day after Charlie Savage’s piece appeared in the Times, the president’s top advisor on counterterror operations, John O. Brennan, gave a speech at a conference at Harvard Law School on “Strengthening our Security by Adhering to our Values and Laws,” and seemed to settle the “debate,” part of which he defined this way:
“Others in the international community -- including some of our closest allies and partners -- take a different view of the geographic scope of the conflict, limiting it only to the ‘hot’ battlefields. As such, they argue that, outside of these two active theatres, the United States can only act in self-defense against al-Qaeda when they are planning, engaging in, or threatening an armed attack against U.S. interests if it amounts to an ‘imminent’ threat.”
He then added this little twist: “Practically speaking, then, the question turns principally on how you define ‘imminence.’”
If there’s one thing we should have learned from the Bush years, it was this: when government officials reach for their dictionaries, duck!
Then, the crucial word at stake was “torture,” and faced with it -- and what top administration officials actually wanted done in the world -- Justice Department lawyers quite literally reached for their dictionaries. In their infamous torture memos, they so pretzled, abused, and redefined the word “torture” that, by the time they were through, whether acts of torture even occurred was left to the torturer, to what had he had in mind when he was “interrogating” someone. (“[I]f a defendant [interrogator] has a good faith belief that his actions will not result in prolonged mental harm, he lacks the mental state necessary for his actions to constitute torture.”)
As a result, “torture” was essentially drummed out of the dictionary (except when committed by heinous evil doers in places like Iran) and “enhanced interrogation techniques” welcomed into our world. The Bush administration and the CIA then proceeded to fill the “black sites” they set up from Poland to Thailand and the torture chambers of chummy regimes like Mubarak’s Egypt and Gaddafi’s Libya with “terror suspects,” and then tortured away with impunity.
Now, it seems, the Obama crowd is reaching for its dictionaries, which means that it’s undoubtedly time to duck again. As befits a more intellectual crowd, we’re no longer talking about relatively simple words like “torture” whose meaning everyone knows (or at least once knew). If “imminence” is now the standard for when robotic war is really war, don’t you yearn for the good old days when the White House focused on “what the meaning of the word 'is' is,” and all that was at stake was presidential sex, not presidential killing?
When legalisms take center stage in a situation like this, think of magicians. Their skill is to focus your attention on the space where nothing that matters is happening -- the wrong hand, the wrong face, the wrong part of the stage -- while they perform their “magic” elsewhere. Similarly, pay attention to the law right now and you’re likely to miss the plot line of our world.
It’s true that, at the moment, articles are pouring out focused on how to define the limits of future drone warfare. My advice: skip the law, skip the definitions, skip the arguments, and focus your attention on the drones and the people developing them instead.
Put another way, in the last decade, there was only one definition that truly mattered. From it everything else followed: the almost instantaneous post-9/11 insistence that we were “at war,” and not even in a specific war or set of wars, but in an all-encompassing one that, within two weeks of the collapse of the World Trade Center, President Bush was already calling “the war on terror.” That single demonic definition of our state of existence rose to mind so quickly that no lawyers were needed and no one had to reach for a dictionary.
Addressing a joint session of Congress, the president typically said: "Our war on terror begins with Al Qaeda, but it does not end there." And that open-endedness was soon codified in an official name that told all: “the Global War on Terror,” or GWOT. (For all we know, the phrase itself was the invention of a speechwriter mainlining into the zeitgeist.) Suddenly, “sovereignty” had next to no meaning (if you weren’t a superpower); the U.S. was ready to take out after terrorists in up to 80 countries; and the planet, by definition, had become a global free-fire zone.
By the end of September 2001, as the invasion of Afghanistan was being prepared, it was already a carte-blanche world and, as it happened, pilotless surveillance drones were there, lurking in the shadows, waiting for a moment like this, yearning (you might say) to be weaponized.
If GWOT preceded much thought of drones, it paved the way for their crash weaponization, development, and deployment. It was no mistake that, a bare two weeks after 9/11, a prescient Noah Shachtman (who would go on to found the Danger Room website at Wired) led off a piece for that magazine this way: “Unmanned, almost disposable spy planes are being groomed for a major role in the coming conflict against terrorism, defense analysts say."
Talk about “imminence” or “constraints” all you want, but as long as we are “at war,” not just in Afghanistan or Iraq, but on a world scale with something known as “terror,” there will never be any limits, other than self-imposed ones.
And it remains so today, even though the Obama administration has long avoided the term “Global War on Terror.” As Brennan made utterly clear in his speech, President Obama considers us “at war” anywhere that al-Qaeda, its minions, wannabes, or simply groups of irregulars we don’t much care for may be located. Given this mentality, there is little reason to believe that, on September 11, 2021, we won’t still be “at war.”
So pay no attention to the legalisms. Put away those dictionaries. Ignore the “debates” between the White House and Congress, or State and Defense. Otherwise you’ll miss the predatory magic.
Beyond Words
Within days after the news about the “debate” over the limits on global war was leaked to the Times, unnamed government officials were leaking away to the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal on an allied subject of interest. Both papers broke the news that, as Craig Whitlock and Greg Miller of the Post put it, the U.S. military and the CIA were creating “a constellation of secret drone bases for counterterrorism operations in the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula as part of a newly aggressive campaign to attack al-Qaeda affiliates in Somalia and Yemen.”
A new base, it seems, is being constructed in Ethiopia, another somewhere in the vicinity of Yemen (possibly in Saudi Arabia), and a third reopened on the Seychelles Islands in the Indian Ocean -- all clearly intended for the escalating drone wars in Yemen and Somalia, and perhaps drone wars to come elsewhere in eastern or northern Africa.
These preparations are meant to deal not just with Washington’s present preoccupations, but with its future fears and phantasms. In this way, they fit well with the now decade-old war on terror’s campaign against will-o-the-wisps. Julian Barnes of the Wall Street Journal, for example, quotes an unnamed “senior U.S. official” as saying: "We do not know enough about the leaders of the al-Qaeda affiliates in Africa. Is there a guy out there saying, 'I am the future of al-Qaeda'? Who is the next Osama bin Laden?” We don’t yet know, but wherever he is, our drones will be ready for him.
All of this, in turn, fits well with the Pentagon’s “legal” position, mentioned by the Times’ Savage, of “trying to maintain maximum theoretical flexibility.” It’s a kind of Field-of-Dreams argument: if you build them, they will come.
It’s simple enough. The machines (and their creators and supporters in the military-industrial complex) are decades ahead of the government officials who theoretically direct and oversee them. “A Future for Drones: Automated Killing,” an enthusiastic article that appeared in the Post the very same week as that paper’s base-expansion piece, caught the spirit of the moment. In it, Peter Finn reported on the way three pilotless drones over Fort Benning, Georgia, worked together to identify a target without human guidance. It may, he wrote, “presage the future of the American way of war: a day when drones hunt, identify, and kill the enemy based on calculations made by software, not decisions made by humans. Imagine aerial ‘Terminators,’ minus beefcake and time travel.”
In a New York Review of Books piece with a similarly admiring edge (and who wouldn’t admire such staggering technological advances), Christian Caryl writes:
“Researchers are now testing UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles] that mimic hummingbirds or seagulls; one model under development can fit on a pencil eraser. There is much speculation about linking small drones or robots together into ‘swarms’ -- clouds or crowds of machines that would share their intelligence, like a hive mind, and have the capability to converge instantly on identified targets. This might seem like science fiction, but it is probably not that far away.”
Admittedly, drones still can’t have sex. Not yet anyway. And they can’t choose which humans they are sent to kill. Not so far. But sex and the single drone aside, all of this and more may, in the coming decades, become -- if you don’t mind my using the word -- imminent. It may be the reality in the skies over all our heads.
It’s true that the machines of war the Obama administration is now rushing headlong to deploy cannot yet operate themselves, but they are already -- in Ralph Waldo Emerson’s words -- “in the saddle, and ride mankind.” Their “desire” to be deployed and used is driving policy in Washington -- and increasingly elsewhere as well. Think of this as the Drone Imperative.
If you want to fight over definitions, there’s only one worth fighting over: not the phrase “the Global War on Terror,” which the Obama administration tossed aside to no effect whatsoever, but the concept behind it. Once the idea took hold that the United States was, and had no choice but to be, in a state of permanent global war, the game was afoot. From then on, the planet was -- conceptually speaking -- a free-fire zone, and even before robotic weaponry developed to its present level, it was already a drone-eat-drone world to the horizon.
As long as global war remains the essence of “foreign policy,” the drones -- and the military-industrial companies and lobbying groups behind them, as well as the military and CIA careers being built on them -- will prove expansive. They will go where, and as far as, the technology takes them.
In reality, it’s not the drones, but our leaders who are remarkably constrained. Out of permanent war and terrorism, they have built a house with no doors and no exits. It’s easy enough to imagine them as beleaguered masters of the universe atop the globe’s military superpower, but in terms of what they can actually do, it would be more practical to think of them as so many drones, piloted by others. In truth, our present leaders, or rather managers, are small people operating on autopilot in a big-machine world.
As they definitionally twitch and turn, we can just begin to glimpse -- like an old-fashioned photo developing in a tray of chemicals -- the outlines of a new form of American imperial war emerging before our eyes. It involves guarding the empire on the cheap, as well as on the sly, via the CIA, which has, in recent years, developed into a full-scale, drone-heavy paramilitary outfit, via a growing secret army of special operations forces that has been incubating inside the military these last years, and of course via those missile- and bomb-armed robotic assassins of the sky.
The appeal is obvious: the cost (in U.S. lives) is low; in the case of the drones, nonexistent. There is no need for large counterinsurgency armies of occupation of the sort that have bogged down on the mainland of the Greater Middle East these last years.
In an increasingly cash-strapped and anxious Washington, it must look like a literal godsend. How could it go wrong?
Of course, that’s a thought you can only hang onto as long as you’re looking down on a planet filled with potential targets scurrying below you. The minute you look up, the minute you leave your joystick and screen behind and begin to imagine yourself on the ground, it’s obvious how things could go so very, very wrong -- how, in fact, in Pakistan, to take but one example, they are going so very, very wrong.
Just think about the last time you went to a Terminator film: Who did you identify with? John and Sarah Connor, or the implacable Terminators chasing them? And you don’t need artificial intelligence to grasp why in a nanosecond.
In a country now struggling simply to guarantee help to its own citizens struck by natural disasters, Washington is preparing distinctly unnatural disasters in the imperium. In this way, both at home and abroad, the American dream is turning into the American scream.
So when we build those bases on that global field of screams, when we send our armadas of drones out to kill, don’t be surprised if the rest of the world doesn’t see us as the good guys or the heroes, but as terminators. It’s not the best way to make friends and influence people, but once your mindset is permanent war, that’s no longer a priority. It’s a scream, and there’s nothing funny about it.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllWhen does the birth of John Conner occur?
I'd say about twenty years ago, but it could have been a bit earlier.
"the minute you leave your joystick and screen behind and begin to imagine yourself on the ground . . . "
Very few will allow themselves to imagine that. That well practiced seasoned brainwash military training in conjunction with the real fear of the consequences of bucking the system usually manages to keep what imagination they have from going there. The fact that drone controlling is much less a physical risk than more direct kinds of soldiering, and one does not have the experience of seeing the death and destruction one has caused other than through a monitor as a video game. The suicide rate among military people is skyrocketing (it's one of the 10 most censored stories), but I don't know if drone runners are susceptible to PTSD. I guess we'll see.
That inability to "imagine yourself on the ground" has so been programmed out of the American mind. It used to be called empathy and was a necessary attribute in order to live a moral life. Without the ability to put oneself in another's shoes, there is only fear and violence - love disappears. Exceptionalism drives everything, be it religion, nationalism and just about any other ism. If this country, or any country, is to escape this circular firing squad, people must learn empathy once more.
Lots of people have it but have been conditioned to suppress it. It can be reawakened but usually attempting to push the psychic buttons that can do the reawakening causes a defensive reaction that makes the lack of empathy all that much worse.
When many years ago, during my misbegotten yuppie years, when I worked at the world headquarters of one of those very large banks, I saw that the people I worked with did have empathy for each other, for their families, and for those on the officially sanctioned "less fortunate" list who got officially sanctioned charitable contributions. They were decent nice people who did not have any sense that their activities were causing harm (for the record and for my pathetic defense, I was not in a position to make or influence policy; I was strictly a document producer; I could have been honorable and refused to participate in the process, but I was a single parent with a child to support and it seemed to me then more irresponsible to tell this corporation to "take this job and shove it" than continuing to suck it up to remain my subatomic family's sole support).
Here's a quote I just ran across from C.S. Lewis's Screwtape Letters, from hell, which he characterizes as a huge bureaucracy:
"I live in a Managerial Age, in a world of 'Admin.' The greatest evil is now not done in those sordid 'dens of crime' that Dickens loved to paint. It is not done in concentration camps and labour camps. But it is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in cleaned, carpeted, warmed and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voices."
Matches my experience exactly. Sometimes you get ones who are conscious of their own villainy and gloat about it, like the those Enron and other property manipulating assholes who cackled about throwing granny out into the cold, but who were too dumb to avoid being caught on tape. But most of the people who are harming things think they're doing the right thing and are suppressing any empathy they might experience in order to keep from losing their positions.
Obama loves killing innocents with these cowardly drone attacks and he is supposed too be a man of peace according to the fairytale version of events. He is a classic American warmonger president who gets high watching his superpower army slaughter people in the third world.
More proof of Amerika as rogue nation as the world looks on. What's on our "Liberty and Justice" score-card these days:
1. Elections for which the vote count is under proprietary ownership
2. More citizens incarcerated, than anywhere else on earth
3. A health "care" system that leaves 50 million without
4. A growing secret MIC network answerable and/or accountable to no one (what will happen when these drones pass to people with the "conscience deficit" of an Eric Prince, or another mercenary army wannabe?)
5. The state's wilful slaughter of Troy Davis, a likely innocent man
6. The state's use of torture by pretending it's something other than what it is (due to tweaks of language)
7. A Gini co-efficient that places Amerika exceedingly low on the international list when it comes to gross income disparities
8. The War in Iraq, a naked war of aggression, executed on FIXED/false pretenses
9. Lies about the numbers slaughtered, a la "We don't do (foreign) body counts"
10. The vast majority of former industries off-shored in pursuit of cheap labor (and ways around Environmental Law)
11. The "free speech" zones and "protest zones," and arrests of citizens of conscience
12. That criminals like Bush, Cheney, Yoo, Rice and others walk free... when not peddling their books
13. A stage of (Repug) political "contenders" that make "The Three Stooges," "The Little Rascals," and "Abbot & Costello" look like geniuses.
14. Weapons of FINANCIAL mass destruction traded round the world, with the result, the potential collapse of the economies of Greece, Spain, Iceland, Italy, and our own
15. ACTUAL weapons of all sorts sold 'round the world to insure yet more wars, as that's what the U.S. features as its #1 export given that the great "peace keeping" force has so evidently turned rogue!
As Orwell pointed out in his seminal work, 1984, the state will either be at war with one zone or another; and in the case of his novel, its information clerks must "fix the books" so that the current war is perceived as the ONLY viable war... making yesterday's enemy = today's ally and trade partner. This is not only the case in fiction! Look at Russia, Germany and Vietnam, as but a few examples, today.
Using Orwell's metrics, the ally today--sold drones--could morph into the enemy in a rather quickly transpiring tomorrow. Then what? The Drones hit HOME? Same ones an upstanding outfit like The Carlye Group managed to sell them?
And with environmental activists loosely regarded as eco-terrorists, or with industries hiring spies to see what their competition is up to... what's to say that mini drones won't be used on either?
Also, given the power of corporations, some with incomes greater than entire nations, in this amoral nexus, what's to stop said corporation from using drones against principled activists or those protesting their products? If a loss of revenue is regarded as a direct attack on said corporation, with a Supreme Court that recognizes money as its highest guiding principle, would it rule that such a "person" (i.e. corporation) had cause to send drones after those undermining its profit shares? Mere self defense?
Keep in mind that yesterday's sci fi has often become today's reality. Terry Gilliam showed tiny spy cameras that worked like an organic swarm of insects looking for those the state had set its sights upon. In fact, in the macabre, quite prescient film, "Brazil," there's an underground network of eyeball replacement centers (like tatoo parlors) so those being sought after can elude these little surveillance monsters!
Something, perhaps the collapse of the natural world, MUST stop the MIC... it is THE enemy of the entire world, and all forms of sentient life. What is termed defense is an OFFENSE against The Living.
Great post Siouxrose. You managed to bundle up all the little irritants bouncing around in my brain. Now I'm totally pissed..you have a great day!
Thank you, Rob.
I suppose I left out 4 more vital national "sins":
* The treatment of "illegal" aliens and the attempt to fence the nation's borders (Is the U.S. becoming equivalent to the former Red China, whilst China becomes more like what formerly had been the U.S?)
* The lack of meaningful commitment to items like the Kyoto Protocols, or taking effective action in the way of Green Eneregy investments... instead of a menace to global health in the form of The Canadian Tar Sands development, added to the idiocy of the Keystone Pipeline. (Given that climate scientist James Hansen referenced this as "Game Over" for mankind.)
* The plan to bamboozle the workers' long-term savings in the form of embezzling from Social Security and Medicare
* The U.S. giving Israel cover for the abusive, neo-colonial treatment of Palestine's citizens (instead of operating as a fair broker for peace. Of course to fit that designation, the U.S. would have to DRASTICALLY alter its entire M.O. in all areas of its foreign policy)
I'm sure yet other trespasses of consequence could be added to the list.
It's not much to smile about, or pump up on (SNL "Hanz & Franz" style) ... in the way of Amerikan Expeptionalism. In fact, it brings to mind the title selected by Chalmers Johnson: THE SORROWS of Empire...
Ditto.
how would one know if the drone was piloted, or the drone's weapon deployed, by a human or a program?
all terrorism crap aside, the skies above our neighborhoods are the planned eventual homes for these devices...
Obama's joke to the Jonas Brothers regarding his daughters was telling...Predator Drone, indeed...the ultimate weapon...
the drone, alone, speaks to why we must curtail our energy use...
our future is to be ever within this 'net', helpless...unable to move or communicate without being utterly consumed by proactive surveillance, constantly evaluated for physical and psychological compliance, and vulnerable to scaleable discipline of nightmarish variety in scope and severity...
unless we smash the infrastructure...become wild, again...
..become wild, again... interesting thought
"wild" cultures have civilized people who live in healthy environments
"civilized" cultures have drones, human and mechanical, in toxic environments
wild works for me, but I'm surrounded by civilization
wilderness gets harder to find by the nanosecond
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They are also talking about using robots to fight future wars. I am having flashbacks to the Terminator movies, where the Skynet computer becomes self-aware and proceeds to wage war on its creators. This will not end well for the human race.
What awful correspondents. In praise of drones, do they not see the barbarity, the capricious nature of the drones?
Is the Fourth Amendment even in their brains?
Have they ever heard of "blowback"?
Wow. Engelhardt manages to write the word "sex" 4 times in an article about drones.... Don't know if I've ever seen that before.
It's important to be wary of the power that science has given us and futile to spread the idea that killing people with unmanned aircraft is much different or less moral than killing people with rocks.
it's WHY not HOW.
Ted Kaczynski was right and I knew it all along.
So there!
If some guy or gal is sitting in Nevada flying this thing; it seems, to me, if you know where it will attack, that you can have a laser or something like it that can bring it down. Any body ever bring one down? Once one is shot down it will go the way of the rock as a weapon. BUT and here is the big but; if they just go kill people out in the booneys where all they have is conventional weapons the drones will florish. Tony
yeah, they've reportedly been brought down, in Somalia (http://tinyurl.com/3swzv3k), Pakistan (http://tinyurl.com/3vvdmpa), and Iran (http://tinyurl.com/2uxwoxn) at least. And here (http://tinyurl.com/4y7g38w) is an article about how they tend to crash the things a lot, which also includes an admiral admitting some get shot down.