Why the Drone Wars Threaten Us All
Lost in debate over whether the Obama administration had the right to
carry out the extra-legal execution of Anwar al-Awlaki, the
American-born Yemini cleric and al-Qaeda member, is who pulled the
trigger?
It is not a minor question, and it lies at the heart of the
1907 Hague Convention, the 1949 Geneva Conventions, and the 1977
additions to the ‘49 agreement: civilians cannot engage in war.
In the main, laws of war focus on the protection of civilians. For instance, Article 48, the “Basic Rule”
of Part IV of the 1977 Geneva Conventions, states, “In order to ensure
respect for and protection of civilian populations and civilian objects,
the Parties to the conflict shall at all times distinguish between
civilian populations and combatants and between civilian objects and
military objectives and accordingly shall direct their operations only
against military objectives.”
What follows in
the 1977 Conventions are nine articles specifying what the general rule
means, ranging from prohibitions against attacking power plants and
water sources and spreading “terror among civilian populations” to
destroying the “natural environment.”
There are many civilian-related
sections in other parts of the Conventions, but the 10 articles that
make up Chapter I, Section I, Part IV on “Civilian Population” are the
clearest guidelines about what is allowed when civilians are caught up
in war.
The Conventions
were mainly a response to the horrors of World War II, where civilian
deaths were more than twice those on the military side. Of the
approximate 80 million people who died in WW II, 55 million of them were
civilians. In comparison, out of some 17 million who died in World War
I, seven million were civilians.
The logic behind
Article IV of the Conventions is that civilians are innocent bystanders,
with no ability to defend themselves or inflict damage on an
antagonist. However, if civilians take part in hostilities, they lose
their protected status. If the warring parties have an obligation to
protect non-combatants, civilians also have obligations, the most
important of which is that they do not act as soldiers.
In short, if
someone takes a pot shot at you, it is irrelevant if he or she is a
civilian, by their actions they are no longer innocent bystanders.
Members of a resistance movement may not wear uniforms or be part of a
military organization, but if they blow up your Humvee or ambush your
patrol, they are combatants.
Which is why the
question of who killed Anwar al-Awlaki (and over 2,000 people in
Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen killed by drones) is relevant. If the
cleric was killed as part of a military operation—as with, for instance
the assassination of Osama bin-Laden—then the arguments are around
issues like whether we have the right to execute enemies without a trial
(the Conventions say we don’t), or violate another nation’s
sovereignty.
But al-Awlaki was
not taken out by Navy Seals, he was assassinated by a member of the
Central Intelligence Agency, the organization that runs the drone wars
in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. CIA members are civilians. Indeed, the
new director, David Petraeus, formally resigned his Army commission to
make that point. Even if he had not, however, the CIA is not a military
organization and is not under the control of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Why is this
important? Because if civilians in the U.S. are killing combatants in
another country, then those civilians lose their protection under the
Conventions. Worse, it means all U.S. civilians become potential
targets. If a CIA employee based in Afghanistan, the Arabian Peninsula,
or Djibouti in Africa kills a Pakistani, Somalian, or Afghan with a
Hellfire missile fired from a Predator drone, one can hardly complain if
everyday U.S. citizens are targeted for retaliation.
One could argue
that, since al-Awlaki was an American citizen, the hit didn’t really
contravene the Conventions and the arguments should be over whether you
can order the killing of an American citizen without due process.
However, others targeted by the drone war—like members of al-Qaeda, the
Taliban, the Haqqani Group, and the Somali Shabaab—do not fall in this
category.
According to the
CIA, the drone wars have killed no civilians. “There hasn’t been a
single collateral death because of the exceptional proficiency,
precision of the capabilities we’ve been able to develop,” John
O’Brennan, the Obama administration’s counterterrorism advisor told the New York Times.
That assertion is almost beyond ridiculous. Even a supporter of the drone war like Bill Roggio, editor of The Long War Journal, says the claim is “absurd.” The United Kingdom based Bureau of Investigative Journalism
found that out of the 2,292 people killed by drones in Pakistan, 775 of
them were civilians. Pakistan journalist Noor Behram puts the total
much higher, telling the The Guardian (UK), “For every 10 to 15 people killed [by drones], maybe they get one militant.”
The U.S. claim, however false, allows the drone war to continue. There is nothing in the Conventions that bars lying.
The Obama
administration (and the previous Bush administration) argue that drone
war is part of the “war on terror” that Congress mandated after the 9/11
attacks: hence we are at “war” with at least the Taliban and its
allies, the Shabaab, and al-Qaeda. But the CIA still has no authority to
exacute a war. The last two run by the organization—the war in Laos and
the Contra war against Nicaragua—were not only unmitigated disasters,
they were illegal.
Many countries
have already stretched the Geneva Conventions to the breaking point with
regards to civilians and the treatment of prisoners. For instance, by
using the term “collateral” to describe civilian deaths, a country
sidesteps the Convention’s stricture against “deliberate targeting” of
civilians by claiming the damage was “inadvertent.” By calling
insurgents “combatants” rather than “soldiers,” the U.S. has water
boarded people, thus finessing both the Conventions and the 1984 UN
Convention Against Torture.
One could get
cynical about this—aren’t civilians always the victims of war? —but in
their own uneven way, the Geneva Conventions have protected civilians.
Indeed, it was the Conventions that led to what is now an almost world
wide ban on landmines and may end up eliminating cluster weapons in the
future. The fact that laws don’t always work, or that people of ill will
figure how to contravene them, is an argument for greater adherence to
the rules, not ignoring or contravening them.
The danger is that
the U.S. is blurring the difference between civilian and military, and
that is a dangerously slippery slope. We already have a former general
running the CIA, and former CIA Director Leon Penetta heads up the
Defense Department. If we reach a point where there is nothing to
distinguish our military institutions from our civilian ones, then all
of us are fair game.
Conn Hallinan can also be read at middleempireseries.wordpress.com