Predator drone
© Flickr/ KAZ Vorpal
Of thousands killed in US drone attacks in Pakistan since 2004, less than one third of the victims have been identified, including a record low number of ten last year, according to an international investigation.

A UK-based not-for-profit organization revealed the figures in the framework of their "Naming the Dead" project. Initially created for tracking US drone strikes in countries like Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen and Somalia, the project seeks to identify casualties, calling for accountability for the attacks.

According to project data, of 2,494 people confirmed killed by American drone strikes in Pakistan, only 729 have been identified. In 2015 the names of those killed was extremely small - only ten of 60 allegedly killed by drones.

Five of ten victims were pronounced members of Al Qaeda, another three were named Pakistani Taliban fighters and the last two were aid workers from Western states.

The US carried out 13 drone attacks in 2015, killing about 60 people. While unnamed sources revealed to Naming the Dead that the vast majority of victims in the six attacks were Uzbeks, the data on the rest of those killed remains scarce.

In 2015, Pakistan authorities declined to assist in the identification process of victims, for the first time since the US launched its drone campaign.

According to Common Dreams, ISPR, the Pakistani military propaganda division, could have banned the release of data pertaining to the issue. Islamabad has started a military campaign against terrorists and other non-state groups in Waziristan in 2014, preventing data from being leaked.

ISI, Pakistan's spy agency, is reportedly keeping secret the names of those murdered in drone attacks across the state's tribal areas. Before 2015, the agency used to provide reporters and officials with the lion's share of information on casualties, including those caused by American unmanned aerial vehicles.


Comment: Pakistan's intelligence is probably keeping the name's secret at the request of the US government, in order to deflect criticism from what is obviously a campaign of bombing not against terrorists, but against civilians. The US would no doubt love to bellow about how many terrorists they've killed, so their silence, and the silence of their stooges in the Pakistani ISI, is no doubt telling.


ISI is still providing journalists with the names of Taliban and al Qaeda members murdered by US drones in Afghanistan.

But, as the Bureau announced, both Afghan and Pakistan officials tend to underestimate the number of casualties in bordering regions. They reported on 700 killed in drone attacks in 2015. In reality, Naming the Dead says at least 100 more people were killed.

According to Washington, a total of 411 air and drone strikes were conducted in Afghanistan last year. But that's all the authorities announced, leaving no specific information of number of killed people there.