by
Clark Kent
US Air Force file photo shows an unmanned Predator aerial vehicle
with a Hellfire missile attached (AFP Photo/US Air Force)


Depending
on whom you ask, the Obama administration has either executed
hundreds of civilians abroad with poorly planned drone strikes
or none at all. A new report, however, finally offers insight
into those conflicting conclusions.
A
New York Times article published on Tuesday unearths a lot of
information about the White House’s largely secretive drone
program: despite being a hallmark of the presidency of Barack
Obama, authorities working under the commander-in-chief — as
well as Obama himself — are for the most part mum when questions
arise about the administration’s ongoing air strikes by way
of unmanned robotic aircraft. In particular, the question of
civilian casualties and the death toll of innocent Afghans and
Pakistanis who have lost their life at the hands of Washington’s
war machine are often left unanswered or, even worse, addressed
differently. According to the Times’ latest write-up, though,
the Obama administration has some scandalous opinions on who
can and can’t be killed by its murder program.
The
White House convinces itself that the Obama-ordered air strikes
overseas have not killed many civilians because, according to
the president, any and all men near around a drone target are
considered enemies of America and can be executed without being
added to the count of civilian casualties.
“It
in effect counts all military-age males in a strike zone as
combatants, according to several administration officials, unless
there is explicit intelligence posthumously proving them innocent,”
is how the Times report it. “Counterterrorism officials insist
this approach is one of simple logic: people in an area of known
terrorist activity, or found with a top Qaeda operative, are
probably up to no good.”
The
article was published on May 29 and was penned by Jo Becker
and Scott Shane, who discussed the drone operations with several
sources close to the president.
Within
hours after the article hit the presses, Shane went on PBS’
Newshour program to extrapolate more on Obama’s explanation:
“The
president apparently reacted quite strongly to a bad strike,
an errant strike in Pakistan very early in the first days of
his presidency, and has kept pressing the agencies involved
to minimize civilian casualties,” Shane said. “But there’s also
been some dispute over the way civilian casualties are counted.
The CIA often counts able-bodied males, military-age males who
are killed in strikes as militants, unless they have concrete
evidence to sort of prove them innocent, and some folks at the
State Department and elsewhere have questioned that kind of
a process.”
The
Times article goes on to explain that President Obama is incredibly
instrumental when it comes to targeted drone strikes and oversees
counterterrorism operations involving the unmanned aerial aircraft
so much so that he says who can and can’t be killed. To Newshour,
Shane said, “Instead of wanting deniability and wanting to keep
at a distance from this lethal program, he actually wanted to
be very much part of it.” According to that Times’ report, it
now makes a lot of sense why the commander-in-chief has never
condemned the continuing strikes.
Speaking
to an international audience during a virtual townhall earlier
this year, President Obama said that drones had “not caused
a huge number of civilian casualties” and he added that it’s
“important for everybody to understand that this thing is kept
on a very tight leash.” But when the Bureau of Investigative
Journalism released the findings of a drone strike stud last
year, the UK-based agency said, that the number of civilians
killed in US drone strikes were probably 40 percent higher than
what the American authorities were actually reporting: between
2004 and 2011, they put the estimate of civilian deaths at a
figure of 385, but added in the research that the toll could
actually come close to tallying 775 casualties.
Now
it’s revealed that the leash may not have much slack, but the
noose at the end is frighteningly all too encompassing.