Drones and the "bugsplats" they cause

Drone attacks are anything but impersonal for the Pakistani civilians on the ground.

Pakistani protesters at a rally against US drone attacks
Pakistani protesters shout anti-US slogans at a rally against US drone attacks. Photograph: Getty Images

What do you think about when you hear the word “drone”? President Obama in the White House, authorising the “kill list”. American soldiers pressing buttons. Bearded Taliban militants in faraway, dusty villages, being swiftly, sharply zapped out of existence.

The impersonal language used to describe drones – “targeted”, “accurate”, “enemy combatant” – compounds these impressions. Yet, as ever, the reality of this computer game warfare is significantly messier.

Pakistan’s tribal area has been home to the most sustained drone campaign of anywhere in the world. The attacks started in 2004 and have been stepped up under President Obama. The main defence of drone war is that it results in less “collateral damage” than airstrikes – another impersonal euphemism, this time for civilian deaths. But investigations and anecdotal evidence show that this is not the case. Collating exact figures is difficult, but local activists say that of around 3,000 casualties in Waziristan, just 185 were named al-Qaeda operatives. The Brookings Institution estimates that ten civilians die for every militant killed.

“The problem we have with Obama is this notion that if they have a beard and they are the right age then they are presumed to be terrorists,” says Clive Stafford Smith, head of the legal aid charity Reprieve. “I would estimate that the majority of people being killed are not the people who should be killed under anyone's definition.”

Shahzad Akbar is a Pakistani lawyer, representing 80 cases from Waziristan, the majority of whom have lost relatives to drone attacks. In a landmark case, he is attempting to prove firstly that these people can press charges for murder, and secondly, that their cases can come under the jurisdiction of the Islamabad courts. This is important because the Pakistan’s ungovernable tribal areas are federally administered and operate outside the normal bounds of law and order.

When we speak on the phone, he lists the cases: houses that were targeted while people were sleeping. People who died while attending funerals. Others killed while at jirgas, or meetings of tribal elders. Children asleep in targeted houses. Children playing and killed by shrapnel. Pharmacists. Local policemen. Schoolteachers. “These are Pakistanis employed by the state,” he says. “That is about as civilian as you can get.” And, as with any war, death is not the only outcome. Hundreds of people maimed, blinded, and disabled by the attacks, left with few prospects in an area beset by poverty.

The 800,000 people in Waziristan live under constant threat of death. Strikes frequently take place in the middle of the night, so they are not even safe sleeping in their homes. As standard, four or five drones circle the air, giving a sense of imminent danger and paranoia. The buzzing sound is a relentless presence; people refer to drones as “bees”.  In a chilling echo of this colloquialism, US operators refer to victims as “bugsplats”.
Local doctors report an “exponential” increase in the number of people requiring prescriptions for anti-anxiety drugs or anti-depressants. “Living under constant threat of death – that’s about as stressful as it gets,” says Stafford Smith.

Akbar says that at a meeting in Peshawar last month with people from the tribal areas, nearly everyone carried tranquilisers. “Everyone is constantly thinking about drones. They would take calls from home and their children tell them how many drones they have spotted. Women are possibly most worried. They aren’t allowed to go outside because of local traditions. They don’t know where their husbands, brothers, or sons go, and live in fear that they might not see those people again.”

A few years ago, public opinion in Pakistan was divided, with many liberals supporting drone strikes as a legitimate attack against the terrorists who threaten their way of life. But that was before the extent of civilian casualties was revealed, and now feeling is such that parliament has passed three resolutions condemning drones since 2011. A recent Pew poll found that 97 per cent of people viewed the attacks negatively, and it is set to be a key election issue. Seen as yet another assault on Pakistan’s sovereignty, it has cemented intense anti-US feeling in the country.

The population of Pakistan’s tribal areas operate under their own rules of rough justice and revenge. They are largely uneducated and live by traditions which Akbar describes as “centuries behind”. This compounds their disempowerment: they feel that they are outsiders, not part of the system, and that no-one cares what happens to them.  As the 80 families in Waziristan await the verdict on whether they will be able to press charges for the deaths of their relatives, Akbar explains that an important part of the process is trying to empower the local population, caught up in a remote-controlled war in which they are entirely defenceless. “If you protest, if you come out, if you contact the courts, you can actually do a lot. This is what we are trying to make them understand.”

51 comments

JJJ's picture

Completely agree with Des Demona and Peterr here. The canard that it is 'Western foreign policy' that is driving the murderous scummy Islamists is only believed by fools. They want to resurrect the Caliphate and make the area West of the Jordan river, Judenrein.
And the racism of Islamists is too well documented to be ignored. Kuffar, anyone?

jankaas's picture

i think you're confused JJJ. Des and Peter most certainly do not appear to think that foreign policy is a negligable factor. who knows they may even bother to correct you.

then there are of course experts on the Middle East and terrorism who also accept that foreign policy motivates acts of terrorism. even the terrorists themselves admit as much. religion is a most effective conduit, but it is not the primary reason.

and then of course on queue you do your odious Holocaust schtick; "Judenrein"
why do you do this? why do you cheapen every single thread with your abuse of the memory of those annihilated? simple, because you are scum and vermin of the lowest order, unable to exchange on an adult level. for shame.

JJJ's picture

My my, another day and another fatuous comment from our resident troll, Jankaas. He is here on this thread and on that thread, inuslting, cursing other posters and generally making a fool of himself.

You called me scum and vermin before and hey, didn't you come running after me to apologise and to BEG me to debate you. Well, guess what? You are the biggest scum on this site.

Now, you are a liar too: I didn't say that Western foreign policy was a 'negligble' factor as you claim I said. Read my post again, numbnuts. Interesting that no one did correct me although you must have been climbing up the wall in hope that Peter (to whom you behaved so contemtibly too) or Des would indeed correct me.

So read my lips: Wester foreign policy is a factor in the hatred that many Islamists have for us. But it is not the only FACTOR driving the terrorist scum.

Do you get that, vermin?

You bring in aid of your argumentation (if we can call your rant that) 'experts' whose views you agree with. Well, is there a definition of an 'expert' moron? And tell me, have you ever stopped to consider that some other scholar or policy adviser with whose views you don't agree might be an expert too? Or is it that you only call 'experts' those whom you agree with?

You would sit back and pray that people who wish to destroy you some how change and come to you with flowers. In your case, since you responded to Frederick on another thread in Dutch, tulips. You and your ilk are a menace to our attempts to fight evil.

And I will use any historical analogy I like, you vermin. You can ignore what Hamas and Hizbullah and Iran want for Israel until your Dutch calves come home. You or anyone else will not sweep it in under the carpet.

Just like the Dutch Blue Helmets who sat back while massacres occured, your views are a menace.

Ta ta, scum.

jankaas's picture

my oh my, just look how desperately upset you are JJJ. so much frothing and flailing about. pathetic, yet strangely amusing all at the same time.

but just on case you forgot, this is what makes you scum and vermin;
"Judenrein"
why do you do this? why do you cheapen every single thread with your abuse of the memory of those annihilated in the Holocaust? simple, because you are scum and vermin of the lowest order, unable to exchange on an adult level. for shame.

Des Demona's picture

Jankaas I certainly believe that foreign policy is a factor in terrorism - but it is a chicken and egg situation - Al Queda used a rag-tag of reasons for justifying the 9/11 attack ranging from the US support for Israel to their prescence in Saudi Arabia. All foreign policy decisions.
And in our discussions on 7/7 you cited that the lead bomber said it was in response to the invasion of Iraq - a foreign policy decision - though as discussed they had no connection with Iraq other than ........ religion.
So yes of course terrorism can be a response to foreign policy but equally foreign policy can be a response to terrorism.The driving force to the terrorism in the article under discussion is religion. As was the driving force for our own home grown bombers.
However much I disagree with invasion of soverign states I have to also think that Afghanistan under the Taliban was not only a breeding ground for Al queda style world exported terror - but also a hateful, brutal and medieval place for the people who lived there under that regime.It is not the west who are trying to bomb the people of Afghanistan into submission - it is the Taliban.

It is unfortunate to say the least that some people seem to be heavily influenced by a particulary violent, backward and bigoted idea of a religion to the extent that they are quite willing to kill themselves and others..

jankaas's picture

great, and just as you accept foreign policy is a factor in terrorism so i have stated several times that religion is involved. i think we just don't agree on what relevance religion has. you see it as causal, i see it as a vehicle for hate and/or a glue to encourage group think. in essence i suggest that it could have been any existing religion that you would blame for the terrorism threat we are discussing. it just happens to be that the region where all this violence is taking place is by definition Islamic.

but if indeed Islam is the cause then why are so very very few Muslims involved in terrorism? really, the numbers are staggering small by proportion. to quote; "Never have so many been intimidated by so very few."

again this does not mean we just roll over, or ignore the danger. far from it. but we must regain a sense of perspective and proportion. currently we have neither, we just blindly escalate and carry on our failed tactic of military intervention.

the thing is Des that only a few years ago i argued exactly as you do. i blamed Islam, and thought we had no option but to hunt down and eradicate the extremists. then i was persuaded by other posters on a Radio4 blog to review the work of Scott Atran. he is a scientist, has lived with and studied real terrorists, authored several academic studies and books, and rather than being some bleeding heart lefty irrelevant chancer was a policy advisor for GW Bush.

here are 2 clips, one that talks you through the analysis of the Madrid bombings. hopefully you will see that Islam was not the driving force, it was far more mundane and human than that.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJl2-AdLt48&feature=related

the other clip is an analysis of Al Qaeda, and again the notion that it's all because of Islam is again put in its rightful place.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQGg-zNwTA4

i do appreciate that there's a lot to look at, but then it is almost unique to hear from a scientific expert in the field of the Middle East and terrorism who has actually bothered to collect and collate data. hopefully you see more use for science than rhetoric and propaganda.

pls note that i am not giving Islam a clean bill of health. far from it. i despise fundamentalism, and personally have zero time for religion, i do not need it. but we must stop conflating how awful Islam is for Muslims where they live, with how dangerous it is for us where we live. currently we keep throwing both in the same single pot which is a catastrophic error.

Des Demona's picture

Jankaas

I don't see religion as causual - like you I see it as a rallying point for terrorism.

here is what Scott Atran said in an interview about the Madrid bombings
'' "The overwhelming majority of [terrorist cells] in Europe have nothing to do with al-Qaida other than a vague relationship of ideology. And even that ideology is fairly superficial - it's basically a reaction to what they see as a war on Islam around the world," he said.''

Isn't that pretty much exactly what I've been saying? It is their religion that drives them to act with extreme violence against foreign policy having nothing to do whatsoever with activities in their own countries. The majority of the Madrid bombers were from Morocco. The London bombers British born. None had any connection to Iraq or Afghanistan other than ..... Their religion.

jankaas's picture

thanks for having a look at those Atran clips. i think your excerpt is a great one that highlights where you and i don't see the same thing, and crucially where we do.

religion is involved, we agree it is not causal but it is the perfect rallying point.
but then you see the fact that Muslims become terrorists because Islam is under attack as the primary motive. but who do these Muslims think is attacking Islam and where is this happening? surely the answer is the foreign policy of the West? our acts of aggression in Muslim countries are not, as far as i'm aware, inspired by the West hating Islam. yet it is surely a no-brainer that it could be interpreted as such? both the positions taken by terrorists and you (clearly not just you) resort to the exact same reasoning; "Islam is being attacked by The West" and "The West is being attacked by Islam"
i don't see how you would think one is valid but not the other. i think both claims are wrong.

and then we must also ask ourselves if only followers of Islam, allegedly inspired by their evil Holy Book, carry our acts of terrorism. surely you agree that there are other terrorists who were of a different faith, or no faith at all?

one last thing which highlights a serious concern about the drone attacks. you say; " The majority of the Madrid bombers were from Morocco. The London bombers British born. None had any connection to Iraq or Afghanistan other than ..... Their religion."

so why are you condoning drone attacks in Afghanistan? and, how do these drone attacks deal with the problems you see with Islam?

Des Demona's picture

Jankass
To be clear on this, I don't have a problem with Islam. It is like any religion, prone to manipulation, misrepresentation and cherry picking to suit whatever agenda. You will also probably note that the only time s I have mentioned Islam or Muslim in this discussion is by use of a noun and in no way perjorative. I have never claimed that Islam is to blame nor would I do so anymore than Christianity is to blame for the the Lord's Resistance Army. I think you are perhaps defending something when there was no attack.

I do not for one second believe the west is being attacked by Islam. I believe the west is being attacked by some people who have an extreamely warped view of Islam, who feel it is being attacked by the west and believe it is their religious duty to kill people in response.That is why I say the main connection between the terrorists who have attacked the west is their religion. Or if you want me to make it even more clear - their view of their religion..

Des Demona's picture

Sorry Jankaas I forgot to respond to your last point - leaving aside your assumption that I have a problem with Islam - which I don't.

I justify the drone strikes for the reasons I have already stated. Afghanistan was a rogue state under the Taliban and as we have previously discussed a safe haven for Al Quida to export terrorism around the world. A stable democratic Afghanistan would be much less likely to have a recurrance, however the Taliban are determined that democracy is incompatible with thei'wild parties'r brand of islam and wish to bomb and terrorise the population and Nato forces ( who wish to leave and hand over security control to the elected government). As seen by the recent Taliban attack on a country hotel with heavy weaponery because they believed that the guests might be having 'wild parties' this is the kind of mad dog mentality that we must strive to never allow back into power for the sake of the west and the Afghani people.

As I've stated before I would prefer due process but this is not possible.

Latest tweets