
© David Bathgate/Corbis
A US air force pilot controls a Predator drone from the command centre in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
It was a typical little
news story on Washington's drone wars -- six paragraphs from Yemen, the sort of minimalist report that, in these years, has also regularly come out of
Pakistan or even, from time to time, Somalia. "A U.S. drone attack in Yemen killed four suspected al-Qaeda militants on Saturday in the southern province of Shabwa, local Yemeni security officials told Reuters."
Who those "militants" really were we seldom know; there's rarely follow-up in the mainstream media. It's just another barely noticed mini-triumph in Washington's ongoing "covert" drone wars in the Greater Middle East.
Those wars have been secret and yet strangely public for years now. The White House has seemingly been filled with pride over its ever-updated "
kill list" and the regular CIA strikes on terror targets it green-lights for a small fleet of Predator and Reaper drones armed with Hellfire missiles. As a result, it eagerly
leaks information about its drone wars that it considers flattering. Meanwhile, its top officials don't hesitate to
discussor even
brag about the program. In this, it follows in a tradition established in the 1980s by President Ronald Reagan in which "covert wars" -- in his case, in Central America -- were fought in remarkably open and publicity-conscious ways. Meanwhile, their supposedly secret nature kept them from serious oversight. In this way, covert and overt were wedded in a process intended to free the White House and the CIA to do as they wished.
As a result,
in the post-9/11 years, at least in the mainstream media, drone assassination campaigns have generally gotten a remarkably free ride. While those "militants" always seem to go down for the count, it's rarely mentioned in the same reports that, in places like Yemen, the local terror outfits that Washington means to crush from the air, militant by militant, terrorist leader by terrorist leader, only seem to grow.
More than a decade of intense experience with drones teaches us at least one salient lesson: our robot warriors make war in the usual sense of the term, but in another way as well.
In places that are not officially American war zones, their operations also regularly generate war. They are, that is, not a military solution to a problem, but a significant part of that problem. And let's add a second lesson from these droning years into the mix. The U.S. has
pioneered the drone as a weapon for a new kind of war. In the process, it has opened drone flyways down which many countries and undoubtedly terror organizations, too, will one day travel. The recent decision of the Obama administration to spread drone technology by
selling armed drones to its allies will only hasten the process. The
crash of an over-the-counter commercial drone on the White House grounds and mysterious drones of a similar nature
flying by night over tourist sites (and the U.S. Embassy) in Paris, a city already on edge, only emphasize the way in which such technology has now been let loose everywhere. (Even the Secret Service is about to
start experimenting with drone flights in Washington.)
However, as
TomDispatch regular Pratap Chatterjee, author of
Halliburton's Army: How A Well-Connected Texas Oil Company Revolutionized the Way America Makes War, suggests today, a new and important critique of Washington's drone wars is emerging from a thoroughly unexpected place: the drone pilots themselves. Explain it as you will, they are taking their hands off the joysticks and voting against drone war with their feet -- and possibly, though the subject couldn't be murkier, their consciences.
Tom
Comment: Given the number of probable and dramatic life-changing events that are in the offing, the 'zombie apocalypse,' for lack of a better description, may soon be upon us. As the article states, most individuals are woefully under-prepared for eventualities that will leave them suffering and desperate. You can 'arm' yourself with the knowledge of these facts and the high likelihood of profound change in the not-too-distant future - by preparing now.
Consider going on a ketogenic diet to ameliorate the effects of air-borne viruses that are likely to occur with the huge uptick of near earth objects entering our atmosphere. And prepare food for such a diet by canning and storing it when supply lines are down. Learning how the meditative practice of Éiriú Eolas works to mitigate the effects of stress, and help with clearer thinking can help enormously as well. And learn why and how you can offset some of the effects of a major economic depression that many indicators suggest is just around the corner.