Drone strikes kill, maim and traumatize too many civilians, U.S. study says
September 25, 2012 -- Updated 1435 GMT (2235 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- A study by Stanford and NYU claims only about 2% of killed targets are "high-level"
- Innocent civilians are killed, maimed and traumatized by drone strikes, the report says
- Drones in Pakistan killed 176 children from 2004 to 2012, an independent group says
- Obama has said a target must meet "very tight and very strict standards"
The study by Stanford Law
School and New York University's School of Law calls for a
re-evaluation of the practice, saying the number of "high-level" targets
killed as a percentage of total casualties is extremely low -- about
2%.
The report accuses
Washington of misrepresenting drone strikes as "a surgically precise and
effective tool that makes the U.S. safer," saying that in reality,
"there is significant evidence that U.S. drone strikes have injured and
killed civilians."
It also casts doubts on
Washington's claims that drone strikes produce zero to few civilian
casualties and alleges that the United States makes "efforts to shield
the drone program from democratic accountability."
Drones in Action
The drone strike program
has long been controversial, with conflicting reports on its impact from
U.S. and Pakistani officials and independent organizations.
President Barack Obama told CNN last month that a target must meet "very tight and very strict standards."
In contrast to more
conservative U.S. statements, the Stanford/NYU report -- titled "Living
Under Drones" -- offers starker figures published by The Bureau of
Investigative Journalism, an independent organization based at City
University in London.
"TBIJ reports that from
June 2004 through mid-September 2012, available data indicate that drone
strikes killed 2,562 - 3,325 people in Pakistan, of whom 474 - 881 were
civilians, including 176 children. TBIJ reports that these strikes also
injured an additional 1,228 - 1,362 individuals," according to the
Stanford/NYU study.
Based on interviews with
witnesses, victims and experts, the report accuses the CIA of
"double-striking" a target, moments after the initial hit, thereby
killing first responders.
It also highlights harm
"beyond death and physical injury," publishing accounts of psychological
trauma experienced by people living in Pakistan's tribal northwest
region, who it says hear drones hover 24 hours a day.
"Before this we were all
very happy," the report quotes an anonymous resident as saying. "But
after these drones attacks a lot of people are victims and have lost
members of their family. A lot of them, they have mental illnesses."
People have to live with
the fear that a strike could come down on them at any moment of the day
or night, leaving behind dead whose "bodies are shattered to pieces,"
and survivors who must be desperately sped to a hospital.
The report concedes that
"real threats to U.S. security and to Pakistani civilians exist in the
Pakistani border areas now targeted by drones." And it acknowledges that
drone strikes have "killed alleged combatants and disrupted armed actor
networks."
But it concludes that
drone strikes, which are conducted by the CIA in a country not at war
with the United States, are too harmful to civilians, too sloppy,
legally questionable and do more harm to U.S. interests than good.
"A significant
rethinking of current U.S. targeted killing and drone strike policies is
long overdue," it says. "U.S. policy-makers, and the American public,
cannot continue to ignore evidence of the civilian harm and
counter-productive impacts of U.S. targeted killings and drone strikes
in Pakistan."
The study recommends
that Washington undertake measures to rectify collateral damage --
including making public detailed legal justification for strikes,
implementing mechanisms transparently to account for civilian
casualties, ensuring independent investigations into drone strike
deaths, prosecuting cases of civilian casualties and compensating
civilians harmed by U.S. strikes in Pakistan.
Nine months of research
went into the report, according to its authors, which included "two
investigations in Pakistan, more than 130 interviews with victims,
witnesses, and experts, and review of thousands of pages of
documentation and media reporting."
U.S. authorities have largely kept quiet on the subject of drone strikes in Pakistan.
However, the use of
armed drones to target and kill suspected terrorists has increased
dramatically during the Obama administration, according to Peter Bergen,
CNN's national security analyst and a director at the New America
Foundation, a Washington-based think tank that monitors drone strikes.
Obama has already
authorized 283 strikes in Pakistan, six times more than the number
during President George W. Bush's eight years in office, Bergen wrote
earlier this month. As a result, the number of estimated deaths from the
Obama administration's drone strikes is more than four times what it
was during the Bush administration -- somewhere between 1,494 and 2,618.
However, an analysis by
the New America Foundation says that the civilian casualty rate from
drone strikes has been dropping sharply since 2008 despite the rising
death toll.
"The number of civilians
plus those individuals whose precise status could not be determined
from media reports -- labeled 'unknowns' by NAF -- reported killed by
drones in Pakistan during Obama's tenure in office were 11% of
fatalities," said Bergen. "So far in 2012 it is close to 2%. Under
President Bush it was 33%."
The foundation's
analysis relies on credible media outlets in Pakistan, which in turn
rely on Pakistani officials and local villagers' accounts, Bergen said,
rather than on U.S. figures.
The drone program is
deeply unpopular in Pakistan, where the national parliament voted in
April to end any authorization for it. This, however, was "a vote that
the United States government has simply ignored," according to Bergen.
Obama told CNN's Jessica Yellin this month that the use of armed drones was "something that you have to struggle with."
"If you don't, then it's
very easy to slip into a situation in which you end up bending rules
thinking that the ends always justify the means," he continued. "That's
not been our tradition. That's not who we are as a country."
Obama also addressed his
criteria for lethal action in the interview, although he repeatedly
declined to acknowledge any direct involvement in selecting targets.
"It has to be a target
that is authorized by our laws. It has to be a threat that is serious
and not speculative. It has to be a situation in which we can't capture
the individual before they move forward on some sort of operational plot
against the United States," Obama said.
The rights organization
Reprieve, which said that with the help of a partner organization in
Pakistan it had facilitated access to some of the people interviewed for
the study, backed its findings.
"This shows that drone
strikes go much further than simply killing innocent civilians. An
entire region is being terrorized by the constant threat of death from
the skies," said Reprieve's director, Clive Stafford Smith.
"Their way of life is
collapsing: kids are too terrified to go to school, adults are afraid to
attend weddings, funerals, business meetings, or anything that involves
gathering in groups. Yet there is no end in sight, and nowhere the
ordinary men, women and children of North West Pakistan can go to feel
safe."
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