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The Ghost and the Machine: Drone Warfare and Accountability
Fazillah, age 25, lives in Maidan Shar, the central city of Afghanistan’s Wardak province. She married about six years ago, and gave birth to a son, Aymal, who just turned five without a father. Fazillah tells her son, Aymal, that his father was killed by an American bomber plane, remote-controlled by computer.
That July, in 2007, Aymal’s father was sitting in a garden with four other men. A weaponized drone, what we used to call an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle or UAV, was flying, unseen, overhead, and fired missiles into the garden, killing all five men.
Now Fazillah and Aymal share a small dwelling with the deceased man’s mother. According to the tradition, a husband’s relatives are responsible to look after a widow with no breadwinner remaining in her immediate family. She and her son have no regular source of bread or income, but Fazillah says that her small family is better off than it might have been: one of the men killed alongside her husband left behind a wife and child but no other living relatives that could provide them with any source of support, at all.
Aymal’s grandmother becomes agitated and distraught speaking about her son’s death, and that of his four friends. “All of us ask, ‘Why?’” she says, raising her voice. “They kill people with computers and they can’t tell us why. When we ask why this happened, they say they had doubts, they had suspicions. But they didn’t take time to ask ‘Who is this person?’ or ‘Who was that person?’ There is no proof, no accountability. Now, there is no reliable person in the home to bring us bread. I am old, and I do not have a peaceful life.”
Listening to them, I recall an earlier conversation I had with a Pakistani social worker and with Safdar Dawar, a journalist, both of whom had survived drone attacks in the area of Miran Shah, in Pakistan’s Waziristan province. Exasperated at the increasingly common experience which they had survived and which too many others have not, they began firing questions at us.
“Who has given the license to kill and in what court? Who has declared that they can hit anyone they like?”
“How many ‘high level targets’ could there possibly be?”
“What kind of democracy is America,” Safdar asks, “where people do not ask these questions?”
One question Fazillah cannot answer for her son is whether anyone asked the question at all of whether to kill his father. Forbes Magazine reports that the Air Force has sixty-five to seventy thousand analysts processing drone video surveillance; A Rand review states they actually need half again that number to properly handle the data. Asked to point to the human who actually made the decision to kill her husband, she can only point to another machine.
In June 2010, Philip G. Alston, then the UN’s Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, appeared before the UN Human Rights Council and testified that “targeted killings pose a rapidly growing challenge to the international rule of law … In a situation in which there is no disclosure of who has been killed, for what reason, and whether innocent civilians have died, the legal principle of international accountability is, by definition, comprehensively violated.”
“Such an expanded and open-ended interpretation of the right to self defense comes close to destroying the prohibition on the use of armed force contained in the United Nations Charter. If invoked by other states in pursuit of those they deemed to be terrorists and to have attacked them, it would cause chaos.”
This past week, on February 23, the legal action charity” Reprieve” spoke up on behalf of more than a dozen Pakistani families who had lost loved ones in drone strikes, and asked the UN Human Rights Council to condemn the attacks as illegal human rights violations.
“In Pakistan, the CIA is creating desolation and calling it peace,” said Reprieve’s Director Clive Stafford Smith. “The illegal programme of drone strikes has murdered hundreds of civilians in Pakistan. The UN must put a stop to it before any more children are killed. Not only is it causing untold suffering to the people of North West Pakistan – it is also the most effective recruiting sergeant yet for the very ‘militants’ the US claims to be targeting.”
The lawyer representing the families, Shahzad Akbar of Pakistan’s “Foundation for Fundamental Rights”, said:
“If President Obama really believes the drone strikes have ‘pinpoint’ accuracy, it has to be asked where the deaths of kids like Maezol Khan’s eight-year-old son fit into the CIA’s plan. If the US is not prepared to face up to the reality of the suffering the strikes are causing, then the UN must step in. The international community can no longer afford to ignore the human rights catastrophe which is taking place in North West Pakistan in the name of the ‘War on Terror’.”
Drone warfare, ever more widely used from month to month from the Bush through the Obama administrations, has seen very little meaningful public debate. We don’t ask questions – our minds straying no nearer these battlefields than in the coming decades the bodies of our young people will – that is, if the chaos our war making engenders doesn’t bring the battlefields to us. An expanding network of devastatingly lethal covert actions spreading throughout the developing world passes with minimal concern or comment.
So who does Fazillah blame? Who does one blame when confronted with the actions of a machine? Our Pakistani friend asks, “What kind of a democracy is America where people do not ask these questions?” Becoming an actual democracy, with an actual choice at election-time between war and peace rather than between political machines vying for the chance to bring us war, seems to many Americans, if some of the less-reported polls are to be believed, a near-unachievable goal. The U.S. has become a process that churns out war – today Afghanistan and (in any real sense) Iraq; tomorrow Iran and Pakistan, with China securely, however distantly, on the horizon - and for those of us with any concern for peace, a principled opposition to war ultimately requires a determination to make the U.S. at long last into a democracy, striving as Dr. King enjoined us, in “molding a recalcitrant status quo with bruised hands until we have fashioned it into a brotherhood.”
It must begin with compassion - powerless compassion perhaps, perhaps only the ghost of dissent, but compassion for people like Fazillah and Aymal, - and with deciding to be human, maybe only the ghost of a human, but alive in some way and alive to what our assent, and perhaps especially our silence are accomplishing in the world. Humanity is the first thing to be won back - and then, if we have the strength, relentlessly defended - against indifference, complacency, and, above all, inaction. If enough of us refuse to be machines, if enough of us refuse enough, can democracy, and even peace, not be at last achieved? But first comes the refusal.
Fazillah wants a peaceful life. She doesn’t want to see any more people killed, any more ghosts like that of her husband. Any more bodies, burned (as she recalls) so charred that they are almost unrecognizable one from another.
“I don’t want this to happen to anyone,” says Fazillah. I don’t want any children to be left without parents.”
And,” she adds, “I want the U.S. troops to leave.”
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Show AllNothing in my view is more reprehensible than those habits of mind in the intellectual that induce avoidance, that characteristic turning away from a difficult and principled position which you know to be the right one, but which you decide not to take. You do not want to appear too political; you are afraid of seeming controversial; you want to keep a reputation for being balanced, objective, moderate; your hope is to be asked back, to consult, to be on a board or prestigious committee, and so to remain within the responsible mainstream; someday you hope to get an honorary degree, a big prize, perhaps even an ambassadorship.
For an intellectual these habits of mind are corrupting par excellence. If anything can denature, neutralize, and finally kill a passionate intellectual life it is the internalization of such habits. Personally I have encountered them in one of the toughest of all contemporary issues, Palestine, where fear of speaking out about one of the greatest injustices in modern history has hobbled, blinkered, muzzled many who know the truth and are in a position to serve it. For despite the abuse and vilification that any outspoken supporter of Palestinian rights and self-determination earns for him or herself, the truth deserves to be spoken, represented by an unafraid and compassionate intellectual.
Edward Said.
"It's a still life water color,
Of a now late afternoon,
As the sun shines through the curtained lace
And shadows wash the room.
And we sit and drink our coffee
Couched in our indifference,
Like shells upon the shore
You can hear the ocean roar
In the dangling conversation
And the superficial sighs,
The borders of our lives".
Ensnared by the same trappings of King Midas, we forsake the contemplative beauty that abounds....and all that which could be for a trip to our local retailers selling vanity and derivatives of ... – but MR BIGABULL, this is not a Toyota (and I’m wondering if organ transplants fall to the same marketing scheme) it’s a Lexus!! I admire the sophisticated well cultured individual that specifies OEM parts or is willing to die. Never was there a better mold in the practice of human craftsmanship that exuded as much. Blessed be their spirits I say there is a shortage of them. So what has really happened to the people lost on the first story of their journey? The second story was added to the structure with glass surround so the inside was always on the outside. But they say that blindness is not half as bad as people who loose their vision; and that tools we make with technology will eventually end up shaping us - with a remote control in hand, scanning the thousand and one channels of wasteland that in turn becomes a tool for the Grendels seeking dominance in the world order. At the moment, empire and its minions are riding the crest of a wave with lungs filled with semi filtered oxygen for energy and it appears that the order to commission a new structured masterpiece on canvas for the archive has been given. The hall leading to the room where humanity lives is bare and in need of decoration. Tears filled with follies (purchased wholesale no doubt) plummets our daily consciousness as a hawk nearing its prey. There are no magic formulas to stem this tide much like Voltaire had to invent the garden he could not find; we must invent that mind which produces less noise…. "The borders of our lives" should have a common similarity with people the world over and children the right to discover their ever changing curiosities. "In the dangling conversation" people are heard saying, soil is being fired in kilns and cast into gold coins. "And shadows wash the room" as gold cubits are served well done at the five star hotel.
The gold rush never ended it seems; and Thich Nhat Hanh had it correct when he said, the miracle is not to walk on water or thin air but to walk on earth.
You are a beautiful lady Kathy, Thank You!
The author brilliantly calls attention to America's terminal addiction to souless capitalist technological "advances" that extirpate our humanity. How ultimately can the swallows NOT come home to roost?
But what CAN we do? Like most in those not-mentioned polls, I doubt we can bring democracy to America. Not when most are so passive, so willing to believe the lies, which is certainly much easier and safer. I don't even go to demonstrations anymore, especially peace demonstrations, as I've seen over 40 years that even the largest get little media coverage and have no effect on policy. The only real check on war after Vietnam was resistance to being drafted--and the "all volunteer army," together with the perpetual recession caused by the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs, pretty much took care of that. Now with drones, they don't even have to find people willing to risk their lives and souls for a steady paycheck. Their souls, yes, but that's relatively minor. It seems the ruling class is worried, though--they are busy manufacturing real and artificial terrorists, and using them to pass laws revoking the Bill of Rights. Presumably this is because they plan to keep cutting back on the bread, and beyond a certain point, stepped-up circuses don't compensate for lack of bread. International solidarity of the 99%, and the revelations of Wikileaks, and the threat of Anonymous, must also have them worried.
Meanwhile they continue to ignore the twin real threats of climate change and peak oil, which at least have, between them, the potential to soon bring this whole filthy system down--and I'm afraid that's the only thing that will bring relief to the likes of Fazilla and Aymar.
“What kind of democracy is America,” Safdar asks, “where people do not ask these questions?”
We don't live in a democracy. Probably never have.
We protested the Iraq war. Hell, the whole world did. They didn't listen.
We are protesting now with OWS and getting the shit beaten out of us for using our 1st Amendment Right to do so.
I bet even if no one showed up to vote, there would still be a winner.
But the people here are too stupid to understand that their votes do not matter, nor do their voices in what they want Kongress to do.
I do not want billions of my taxes going to Israel or other corrupt companies.
Or to pay for a soccer field at Gitmo.
The article says it costs $800,000 per prison a year at Gitmo.
But we have no money for schools. No money for children's health care, or elderly care.
It is all eaten up by our corrupt government.
“What kind of democracy is America,” Safdar asks, “where people do not ask these questions?”
“What kind of democracy is America,” Safdar asks, “where people do not ask these questions?”
I was going to jump all over that statement but you beat me to it. Good analysis.
This is the kind of article that belongs in all the major newspaper publications of this country. Unfortunately it is highly unlikely that the N.Y. Times has any intention of doing this despite the fact that their slogan claims that The Times publishes "all the news that's fit to print." Anthony DiMaggio also bring out the point of how different [as in honest] the coverage of news events is in other countries as compared to the timidity of newspapers in the United States in his well written book When Media Goes to War: Hegemonic Discourse, Public Opinion, and the Limits of Dissent.
"When the rich wage war, it's the poor who die"-Jean-Paul Sartre
And to think that those on the right have the gall to state that a newspaper like The Times is a bastion of liberal thinking. If it were it certainly would be publishing this extremely fine article by Ms. Kelly who has the temerity to point out how murderous the foreign policy of the United States is and the pernicious effect that these drone missiles have on its victims and families.
"What a country calls its vital... interests are not things that help its people live, but things that help it make war. Petroleum is a more likely cause of international conflict than wheat."-Simone Weil, Ecrits historiques et politiques [1960]
War means poor people killing poor people for the benefit of the rich. Thank you Kathy Kelly for your work.
We must remember that the richest people in the world finance these wars, they finance the factories that build the weapons, and they finance the campaigns of the mass murderers who issue the orders. Every time your read or watch a feel good piece on Warren Buffett or Bill Gates, remember these guys have robbed us blind and enslaved us for years. Buffett gained more than any single individual from TARP, and he personally pushed for TARP, twisting the arms of Pelosi and other biggies. Gates bought 500,000 shares of Monsanto in 2010. These people for sure have made tons from the wars. Gates by selling computers to the MIC and probably much more.
Thanks again for another great story Kathy. I love the way Kathy personolizes her stories as she does here with Fazilla, her husband, and now fatherless Aymal. One of the most repulsive things about drones is that they are armed with hellfire missiles. That's why even if they could identify one guy they want to execute, they can't do it. And that's why the drone that killed Fazilla's husband also took out the guys who were with him too.The pentagon will show you video clips of their drones at work, and it does not take a lot of study to figure why every one of these "targeted" attacks always kills a lot more people, even if their target is among them, which he probably is not. Hellfire missiles can never made precise- they are simply too hugely destructive.
"Kathy Kelly doesn't receive the flocking hero(ine) worship you see on CD directed to some figures, which is good."
For sure. Sometimes if you call out the author of an article on CD about some point or another, the abuse just starts flying!
Another thing I find interesting is how people posting at CD will just flatly call somebody "Wrong" without really backing it up with WHY they poster was wrong. Just because someone believes something different than you do, doesn't necessarily make them plain wrong. If someone is quoting facts that are wrong, that's a different thing, correct them with the correct facts (with citations if possible). IF someone is expressing an opinion, you can't just dismiss them as "wrong" because it differs from your opinion.
Kathy Kelly should be read and heard by all Americans. Thank you , Kathy