A new analysis of the data available to the public about
drone strikes, conducted by the human-rights group Reprieve, indicates that
even when operators target specific individuals – the most focused effort of
what Barack Obama calls “targeted killing” – they kill vastly more people than
their targets, often needing to strike multiple times. Attempts to kill 41 men
resulted in the deaths of an estimated 1,147 people, as of 24 November.
Some 24 men specifically targeted in Pakistan resulted in
the death of 874 people. All were reported in the press as “killed” on multiple
occasions, meaning that numerous strikes were aimed at each of them. The vast
majority of those strikes were unsuccessful. An estimated 142 children were
killed in the course of pursuing those 24 men, only six of whom died in the
course of drone strikes that killed their intended targets.
In Yemen, 17 named men were targeted multiple times. Strikes
on them killed 273 people, at least seven of them children. At least four of
the targets are still alive.
Like all weapons, drones will inevitably miss their targets
given enough chances. But the secrecy surrounding them obscures how often
misses occur and the reasons for them. Even for the 33 named targets whom the
drones eventually killed – successes, by the logic of the drone strikes –
another 947 people died in the process. Someone with the same name as a terror
suspect on the Obama administration’s “kill list” was killed on the third
attempt by US drones. His brother was captured, interrogated and encouraged to
“tell the Americans what they want to hear”: that they had in fact killed the right
person.
The data questions the accuracy of US intelligence guiding
strikes that US officials describe using words like “clinical” and “precise.” What
little US officials say about the strikes typically boils down to assurances
that they apply “targeted, surgical pressure to the groups that threaten us,”
as John Brennan, now the CIA director, said in a 2011 speech. “The only people
that we fire a drone at are confirmed terrorist targets at the highest level
after a great deal of vetting that takes a long period of time. We don’t just
fire a drone at somebody and think they’re a terrorist,” the secretary of
state, John Kerry, said at a BBC forum in 2013.
“Drone strikes have been sold to the American public on the
claim that they’re ‘precise’. But they are only as precise as the intelligence
that feeds them. There is nothing precise about intelligence that results in
the deaths of 28 unknown people, including women and children, for every ‘bad
guy’ the US goes after,” said Reprieve’s Jennifer Gibson. “If even his
government doesn’t know who is filling the body bags every time a strike goes
wrong, his claims that this is a precise programme look like nonsense, and the
risk that it is in fact making us less safe looks all too real,” Gibson said.
The Council on Foreign Relations assesses that 500 drone
strikes outside of Iraq and Afghanistan have killed 3,674 people.
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