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Why Obama’s Killer Drones Violate International Law

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November 22, 2012
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/11/22/why-obamas-killer-drones-violate-international-law/
Breaking the Conspiracy of Silence
Why Obama’s Killer Drones Violate International Law
by JEFF BACHMAN

The United States has a long history of violating international law when its leaders believe foreign policy objectives justify doing so. The belief in the right of the United States to overthrow democratically elected governments (Guatemala, Iran, Congo), to train and arm insurgencies (Nicaragua), and to launch aggressive wars (Iraq) free of the inconvenience of the law grows out of the nationalistic fervor of “American Exceptionalism.”

Currently, President Obama is directly overseeing a drones program that potentially violates a number of international legal norms. In October 2009, Philip Alston, then UN Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions, stated that the drones program would be illegal if the U.S. was failing to take “all of the relevant precautions to make sure that civilians are not killed, in accordance with the relevant international rules.” Alston continued, “The problem is that we have no real information on this program.”

In May we learned that the President personally maintains a “Kill List” and holds weekly meetings during which, as judge, jury and executioner, he determines who lives and who dies. It was also revealed that the President counts all military-age males killed in drone strikes as militants. However, as a show of his compassion and fairness, the President does leave open the possibility for those killed to be proved innocent posthumously.

Such brazen counting and book cooking would make the sneakiest Wall Street accountants blush. It is also what allowed Counterterrorism Adviser John Brennan to maintain for over a year that there had not been a single civilian casualty from drone strikes. In May, Brennan corrected his patently absurd and dishonest claim, stating that innocent loss of life “is exceedingly rare, but it has happened.”

There is also the president’s personal authorization of the use of “signature strikes” in Pakistan and Yemen. Signature strikes target unidentified and unconfirmed individuals based in behavioral characteristics that are perceived to be those of militants or terrorists. Of course, it doesn’t actually matter whether an individual killed by a signature strike is a militant because he will be counted as one regardless.

President Obama’s method of distinguishing militants from civilians inherently violates the principle of distinction precisely because it fails to distinguish civilians from militants. It also potentially violates the principle of proportionality. There are limits to even unintentional civilian deaths in war. The number of civilians killed in a military action cannot be “excessive in relation to the concrete and direct overall military advantage anticipated.”

The president’s system of counting civilian deaths is only one potentially criminal component of his drones program. In February, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism and the Sunday Times published the results of a joint investigation into the practice of targeting rescuers who converge on the scene of an initial drone strike. They concluded that between 2009 and 2011, more than a dozen such attacks occurred, resulting in the deaths of at least 50 civilians.

After a brief lull, similar attacks were carried out numerous times this year. The most recent “double tap” occurred last month in Pakistan. Intentionally targeting rescuers and the wounded are clear violations of international humanitarian law and US rules of warfare. Of course, the president attempts to evade accountability by presuming all those killed in both the initial strike and the follow-up to be militants. Fire and medical personnel are terrorists?

Not everyone agrees. There is a growing international movement against the impunity with which President Obama runs his drones program. UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism Ben Emmerson has called for an independent investigation into each and every death that results from drone strikes. Such investigations are worthwhile in response to all future drone attacks, but are too little too late for those already victimized by President Obama’s potential war crimes.

We need more than an end to the “conspiracy of silence” concerning the president’s drone attacks; we need an investigation into the legality of the Obama Administration’s favored means of making war. U.S. foreign policy cannot be immunized from the very same laws used as the impetus for applying sanctions and making war against others. International law’s legitimacy is grounded in its consistent application. Selectively applying and enforcing international law undermines the law, as well as the moral high ground claimed by those who use it as a tool against “rogue” elements while immunizing themselves.

Jeff Bachman is a professor of human rights at American University, with a focus in state responsibility for violations of international human rights and humanitarian law.
 
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It would be easier to establish the claimed illegality of the drone attacks on Pakistan if Pakistan were to make a formal complaint to the ICJ and raise the matter at the United Nations. Silence is acquiescence, and does not help the case.
 
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A technical question, the article states many times that the drone strikes violate principles. What would make the article worth while is case quotes and examples of what law that the United States is a signatory to which the drone strikes are in breach of.

A principle "1.A fundamental truth or proposition that serves as the foundation for a system of belief or behavior or for a chain of reasoning" is a wonderfull thing but it is not a law.

Saying drone strikes are bad because they breach certain principles is a sound argument.
Saying drone strikes are illegal with out providing the law they break is rambling.
 
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Tell that to your fellow Pakistanis.

Mr.Bozo is probably not even a Pakistani...The one you just replied to,and does not reflect what Pakistanis think..He has his own Private vendetta against everything Pakistani...


Here is what your President said recently in his visit to Burma...

there’s no country on Earth that would tolerate missiles raining down on its citizens from outside its
borders. …So we are fully supportive of Israel’s right to defend itself from
missiles landing on people’s homes and workplaces and potentially
killing civilians. …Israel has every right to expect that it does not have missiles fired
into its territory.


Likewise Pakistan does not like foreign missiles raining down on her territory and on her civilians...
The option for USA is to seal their side of the border and let Pakistan do what they want "Withing her borders"
 
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Mr.Bozo is probably not even a Pakistani...The one you just replied to,and does not reflect what Pakistanis think..He has his own Private vendetta against everything Pakistani...


Here is what your President said recently in his visit to Burma...

Regarding Mr President's quote : We are not fighting Pakistan. We are fighting insurgents that kill us and YOU too. When these insurgents kill our troops and run inside Pakistan..what option is left with us? Every country has the right of self-defence. US just practice this right via drones.

If Pakistanis can come up with a better solution to deal with the problem , I'm all for it.
 
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Tell that to your fellow Pakistanis.

I did and got called a traitor.


Mr.Bozo is probably not even a Pakistani...The one you just replied to,and does not reflect what Pakistanis think..He has his own Private vendetta against everything Pakistani...


Here is what your President said recently in his visit to Burma...


Likewise Pakistan does not like foreign missiles raining down on her territory and on her civilians...
The option for USA is to seal their side of the border and let Pakistan do what they want "Withing her borders"

Talibans boldly beheaded tens of PA soldier and it was aired all over the national media. PA uses this as a sympathy tool to gain popular ground among the public and fools go into cheeleading for army never questioning the fact that world 7th best equipped army, trained to fight a 6 times bigger enemy is powerless against rag tag terrorist.

People who pass around personal insults instead of taking criticism and a moment of sanity to understand the gravity of situation are real traitors of Pakistan. A death of a nation is when constructive criticism and logical questioning is being silenced with religious or nationalist bigotry. Precisely the reason why Nazi Germany went downhill and why a majority of muslim countries are marginally better than a sh_t hole on social issues.

Countries do not have sovereignty just because it is written in the charter of UN, they have to work to preserve it. Post WW2 Germany, Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, coloniasation of India are all proof of people failing at governing their sovereignty and ending up surrendering it to foreign power - either at will or by force.
 
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Regarding Mr President's quote : We are not fighting Pakistan. We are fighting insurgents that kill us and YOU too. When these insurgents kill our troops and run inside Pakistan..what option is left with us? Every country has the right of self-defence. US just practice this right via drones.

If Pakistanis can come up with a better solution to deal with the problem , I'm all for it.

Kayani answer to having his troops beheaded and footage aired on national TV is refusal to conduct anti-terrorist operation and lame excuses of peace deal..seriously..is he even an army chief? If I were a military man i would feel disgraced to serve under this clown after seeing my colleges beheading video aired on national tv channels.

The use of firepower in war zone has to be decisive - Russia learned this the hard way in Afghanistan. Israel learned it in Lebanon war!
 
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Kayani answer to having his troops beheaded and footage aired on national TV is refusal to conduct anti-terrorist operation and lame excuses of peace deal..seriously..is he even an army chief? If I were a military man i would feel disgraced to serve under this clown after seeing my colleges beheading video aired on national tv channels.

The use of firepower in war zone has to be decisive - Russia learned this the hard way in Afghanistan. Israel learned it in Lebanon war!

I think it was more due to funds. $5 billion a year cannot allow for everything Pakistan wants. Preventing an Indian Invasion takes up a lot of resources.
 
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I think it was more due to funds. $5 billion a year cannot allow for everything Pakistan wants. Preventing an Indian Invasion takes up a lot of resources.

India has nothing to do with this.
They have not interested in invading Pakistan out of fear of disturbing their own economic process - this is a layman excuse.

Beside BLA, TTP and dozen others are doing more damage than India could only dream of. Its really a severe case of incompetency nothing else. General have gotten too fat on easy money, property schemes, etc.
 
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What options does United States have other than drones?



Teeta, US has a lot of options, first and foremost, it must change it's policy of hostility towards Pakistan - such a policy is a terrible negative for the US and for Pakistan - in the US some policy makers are convinced that Pakistan are a push over, this is not just poor analysis but a terrible, even tragic, long term mistake.

Had the US chosen a wiser course, that is to say, had not taken the advice of CIA radicals buffeted by certain think tanks in the US, Afghanistan would have been a done deal by now and the US would be a long way along in improving relations with Iran as well. Instead the US chose to allow Pakistanis to conclude that the US is a net negative, a losing proposition.

Had the US not chosen to lay the foundation of the international public perception that she is hostile towards Muslims, not just terrorists, and that the US needs the support of Muslim populations, things would be very different.

Less is More, the US really ought to consider how it can it leverage this notion - In Pakistan, with these AID programs, the US policy makers think they are making a dent in the negative perception of the populace, however, the reality is that these programs do not reach most people, and really it's unrealistic to imagine that they ever will -- what is required is the creation of the perception that the US is a friend - not a friend of the army or politicians but just simply, a friend, for this it must not be seen as too present in the affairs of Pakistan, in particular as a force in the creation of Policy - rest assured terrorism as an idea does not have the support in Pakistan, of any other than psychotics (though they mask their psychosis in religious rhetoric and imagery)

Drone are a great tool, effective even, however, they have become a political liability - think of Gen. Giap's comments on Tet.
 
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Teeta, US has a lot of options, first and foremost, it must change it's policy of hostility towards Pakistan - such a policy is a terrible negative for the US and for Pakistan - in the US some policy makers are convinced that Pakistan are a push over, this is not just poor analysis but a terrible, even tragic, long term mistake.

Its been a while since Afghan-soviet war is over and the world is well aware of Pakistani hand in manipulating Afghan civil war outcome. US has shown historic patience in the case of Pakistan - along with tons of aids as well. Not saying US is an angel but lets be fair to all sides.

Had the US chosen a wiser course, that is to say, had not taken the advice of CIA radicals buffeted by certain think tanks in the US, Afghanistan would have been a done deal by now and the US would be a long way along in improving relations with Iran as well. Instead the US chose to allow Pakistanis to conclude that the US is a net negative, a losing proposition.

US is turning into an empire too bulky to be efficiency. The goons in CIA are interested to secure their own long term career goals over actual national interests.

Had the US not chosen to lay the foundation of the international public perception that she is hostile towards Muslims, not just terrorists, and that the US needs the support of Muslim populations, things would be very different.

The definition of Muslim is quite broad spectrum here. An average muslim does not consider US a hostile country but "brotherhood" and "Jamatis" type do.

Less is More, the US really ought to consider how it can it leverage this notion - In Pakistan, with these AID programs, the US policy makers think they are making a dent in the negative perception of the populace, however, the reality is that these programs do not reach most people, and really it's unrealistic to imagine that they ever will -- what is required is the creation of the perception that the US is a friend - not a friend of the army or politicians but just simply, a friend, for this it must not be seen as too present in the affairs of Pakistan, in particular as a force in the creation of Policy - rest assured terrorism as an idea does not have the support in Pakistan, of any other than psychotics (though they mask their psychosis in religious rhetoric and imagery)

The Pakistani perception of friend is based on opposition of India - something not really possible with US. The fault lies in our black & white foreign policy. Aid programs do not help but make a few corrupt people more rich. In true essence they are waste of time and US tax payer money.


Drone are a great tool, effective even, however, they have become a political liability - think of Gen. Giap's comments on Tet.

Much of the politicization of drone is deliberately done by Pakistan government as an army controlled FP tool - in hopes to eventually get its hand on drone tech which US consistently refuses to provide. Had we been thinking with a focus on national security and stability, the drone issue would be much different.
 
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It would be easier to establish the claimed illegality of the drone attacks on Pakistan if Pakistan were to make a formal complaint to the ICJ and raise the matter at the United Nations. Silence is acquiescence, and does not help the case.

Although I do agree with you that a hue and cry be raised on legal lines by Pak (if we have ground to do so), but I think you would agree with me that UN and ICJ are absolute failures on the world scene. What US wants, it gets. Or to put it more nicely, what a superpower wants, it gets. UN can't do anything about it. At best, it is just a tool to legalize your wars (Iraq), and get some backing. If you don't get it from there, it doesn't matter anyways. Doing something in some African countries once in a while doesn't make the UN successful. So even if we do make a strong legal case in the ICJ or anything, it won't make a difference until US itself doesn't want to stop drones (for whatever reason).

A opinion in today's local paper. The UN is defunct
 
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