Contributed by Sherwood Ross
Far from the drone attacks being “on a very tight leash,” as President
Obama claimed, they have generated widespread terror across Muslim populations
in the attack regions as they disrupt civilian lives and activities, literally
driving people mad, reliable authorities state.
According to an article in the UK
Guardian, the Pakistani ambassador to the UN Zamir Akram charged that
more than 1,000 Pakistani civilians have been killed by U.S. drone
strikes. The use of drones, he said, “leads to greater levels of terror rather
than reducing them.” Other estimates put the Pakistan death toll from drone
attacks as much higher---between 2,000 and 3,500 killed.
Author Gregory Johnsen told McClatchy News Service the drones attacks in Yemen are
“exacerbating and expanding” resistance. “We have seen AQAP (al-Qaida on the
Arabian Peninsula) expanding from 200-300 fighters in 2009, when the U.S. bombing
campaign began, to more than 1,000 fighters today.” Johnsen is author of The
Last Refuge, a new book on Yemen
and al-Qaida.
And retired Marine General James Cartwright told The Nation magazine
the drones cause anger, bitterness, and resentment among Muslim populations and
predicted their use will cause “blowback” attacks against America .
Yet both President Obama and his new CIA Director John Brennan have
claimed the drone attacks are not indiscriminate assassination efforts but
carefully selected strikes. Obama claimed the program is “kept on a very tight
leash” and Brennan said it has “rigorous standards and process of review.”
The Administration has also claimed the human targets are only against
“specific senior operational leaders of al-Qaida and associated forces,” who
are plotting “imminent” violent attacks against USA , McClatchey News Service
reported.
However, McClatchey’s Jonathan Landay writes, sifting through U.S. intelligence reports shows “that
drone-strikes in Pakistan
during a four-year period didn’t adhere to those standards.”
The Stanford International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution
Clinic(Stanford Clinic), which has made an intensive study of the drone
controversy, finds that drones have not only been launched against specific
suspected terrorists----they have also been fired at first responders.
The crisis has become so dire in Pakistan that those wounded by the
drone attacks often lie unaided because first responders are fearful they will
become targets of a follow-up strike. It seems incredible that CIA officials
launching the drone strikes would go after first responders----medics, fire
fighters, etc.----but there are numerous reports of this.
Christof Heyns, the UN special rapporteur on the issue told a Geneva conference that the CIA strikes in Pakistan , Yemen , and elsewhere “would
encourage other states to flout long-established human rights standards,” The Guardian
said. Heynes described the CIA strikes as attacks on “international law
itself.”
According to the Stanford clinic, “the constant presence of U.S. drones
overhead leads to substantial levels of fear and stress in the civilian
communities. One man said the sound of the drones causes people to scream in
terror. Another person interviewed for the Stanford report said, “God knows
whether they’ll strike us again or not. But they’re always surveying us,
they’re always over us, and you never know when they’re going to strike and
attack.”
Still another interviewee who lost both legs in a drone attack told
Stanford, “Everyone is scared all the time. When we’re sitting together to have
a meeting, we’re scared there might be a strike. When you can hear the drone
circling in the sky, you think it might strike you. We’re always scared. We
always have this fear in our head.”
Akhunzada Chitan, a parliamentarian who travels to his family home in Waziristan , said people there “often complain that they
wake up in the middle of the night screaming because they are hallucinating
about drones.” Other residents have been driven mad and must be kept
under lock and key. Some children have dropped out of school because they
cannot focus. Merchants fear to open their doors and shoppers fear to go
to market, while parents commonly do not let children outside to play.
Distress in Pakistan
is so widespread that the U.S.
has become more hated there than India , polls indicate. “The U.S. has gone far beyond what the U.S. public---and perhaps even
Congress---understands the government has been doing and claiming they have a
legal right to do,” says Mary Ellen O’Connell, a Notre
Dame Law School professor who contends that CIA drone
operations in Pakistan
violate international law,” Landay wrote in The Miami Herald April 10th.
Sherwood
Ross formerly reported for the Chicago
Daily News and several major wire services. Reach him at sherwood.ross@gmail.com
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