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phloem
10-19-2009, 08:34 PM
For all of you so ignorantly still displaying your Obama groupie stick-ons, here's a bit of reality for you, brought to you by the Pakistani national morgue. In case some of you think that the children and other civilians killed by drone attacks are the "price we must pay" to carry on our blissful lives, you don't deserve to live in this country; you betray any sense of justice and values that must be the foundation for our collective future. Obama is as much a war criminal as were Bush, Clinton, Kissinger, and Reagan. Take the insipid signs of ignorance off your vehicles, or you will hear from me, loud and clear.


For OpEdNews: Sherwood Ross - Writer

Since taking office, President Obama has sanctioned at least 41 Central Intelligence Agency(C.I.A.) drone strikes in Pakistan that have killed between 326 and 538 people, many of them, critics say, “innocent bystanders, including children,” according to reliable reports. The drone is a remotely controlled, unmanned aircraft.

“Even if a precise account is elusive,” writes Jane Mayer in the October 26th The New Yorker, “the outlines are clear: the C.I.A. has joined the Pakistani intelligence service in an aggressive campaign to eradicate local and foreign militants, who have taken refuge in some of the most inaccessible parts of the country.”

Based on a study just completed by the non-profit, New America Foundation of Washington, D.C., “the number of drone strikes has risen dramatically since Obama became President,” Mayer reports.

In fact, the first two strikes took place on Jan. 23, the President's third day in office and the second of these hit the wrong house, that of a pro-government tribal leader that killed his entire family, including three children, one just five years of age.

At any time, the C.I.A. apparently has “multiple drones flying over Pakistan, scouting for targets,” the magazine reports. So many Predators and its more heavily armed companion, the Reaper, are being purchased that defense manufacturer General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, of Poway, Calif., can hardly make them fast enough. The Air Force is said to possess 200.

Mayer writes, “the embrace of the Predator program has occurred with remarkably little public discussion, given that it represents a radically new and geographically unbounded use of state-sanctioned lethal force.” Today, Mayer writes, “there is no longer any doubt that targeted killing has become official U.S. policy.” And according to Gary Solis, who teaches at Georgetown University's Law Center, nobody in the government calls it assassination. “Not only would we have expressed abhorrence of such a policy a few years ago; we did,” Solis is quoted as saying.

David Kilcullen, a counter-insurgency warfare authority who co-authored a study for the Center for New American Security, of Washington, D.C., has suggested the drone attacks have backfired. As he told The New Yorker, “Every one of these dead non-combatants represents an alienated family, a new revenge feud, and more recruits for a militant movement that has grown exponentially even as drone strikes have increased.”

And because of the C.I.A. program's secrecy, Mayer writes, “there is no visible system of accountability in place, despite the fact that the agency has killed many civilians inside a politically fragile, nuclear-armed country with which the U.S. is not at war.”

The New Yorker further reports the Obama Administration has also expanded the sphere of authorized drone assaults in Afghanistan. An August Senate Foreign Relations Committee report said the Pentagon's list of approved terrorist targets held 367 names and included some 50 Afghan drug lords “who are suspected of giving money to help finance the Taliban,” Mayer reports. She quotes the Senate report as stating, “There is no evidence that any significant amount of the drug proceeds goes to Al Qaeda.”

It is the military's version of the drone assaults that operates in Afghanistan and Iraq, while the C.I.A.'s drones hunt terror suspects in countries where U.S. troops are not based and is “aimed at terror suspects around the world,” Mayer writes. The C.I.A. effort was launched by Obama's predecessor, and a former aide to President George W. Bush says Obama has left nearly all the key personnel in place.

Running the C.I.A. program is a team of operators that handle Predator flights off runways in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Once aloft, the Predators are passed over to controllers at C.I.A. headquarters in Langley, Va., who maneuver joysticks and monitor events from a live video feed from the drone's camera.

The magazine article reports the government plans to commission “hundreds more” of the drones, including “new generations of tiny ‘nano' drones, which can fly after their prey like a killer bee through an open window.”

#

(Sherwood Ross is a Miami-based writer who formerly worked for the Chicago Daily News and other major dailies. Reach him at [email protected])

Tars
10-19-2009, 09:59 PM
You didn't provide a link to the article. Here's the website though:


https://www.opednews.com/images/oenearthlogo.gif (https://www.opednews.com/)
OpenEdNews.com (https://www.opednews.com/)


An interesting site. I'm surprised I haven't seen it before.

theindependenteye
10-19-2009, 10:39 PM
>>>For all of you so ignorantly still displaying your Obama groupie stick-ons, here's a bit of reality for you, brought to you by the Pakistani national morgue. In case some of you think that the children and other civilians killed by drone attacks are the "price we must pay" to carry on our blissful lives, you don't deserve to live in this country; you betray any sense of justice and values that must be the foundation for our collective future. Obama is as much a war criminal as were Bush, Clinton, Kissinger, and Reagan. Take the insipid signs of ignorance off your vehicles, or you will hear from me, loud and clear.

For you, your vehemence may be a natural expression of your caring, commitment, and righteous anger. To me, though, it makes me suspect you're just trying to discredit the Left by posing as a rabid screamer. If that's not the case, I sincerely apologize; but I have to say that that's the impression you'll leave with a lot of people.

--Conrad

Neshamah
10-20-2009, 11:24 AM
It takes a lot to step outside of the society we grow up in and see it as others may see it. Rome did awful things that were perfectly accepted or at least tolerated by the majority in its day. In 2,000 years, what most today consider acceptable may be seen as equally barbaric. So I do not doubt the sincerity of your statements, but you will not change anyone's mind by calling them ignorant.

I also think it is a bit much to put Barack Obama in the same category as George Bush. From some distant future where everyone is a vegetarian and no one condones the killing of living things, they may seem close, but within our society and among people likely to be elected by U.S. voters, they are night and day, at least when it comes to foreign policy. (Though admittedly their biggest difference is probably competence rather than morality.)

Personally, I think the Taliban's declaration they had no interest in harming Western interests (while certainly a lie) was nonetheless a perfect opportunity for the U.S. et al to declare victory and cease all combat operations in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Even a neocon should recognize when a policy has been so poorly implemented that it has dragged out eight years and stretched our resources to the limit.

~ Jess


For all of you so ignorantly still displaying your Obama groupie stick-ons, here's a bit of reality for you, brought to you by the Pakistani national morgue....