drone-strike-670

drone-strike-670

The Predators emit an eerie sound, earning them the name bangana (buzzing wasp) in Pashtu. — File Photo

LONDON: ‘Living Under Drones’, a new report from Stanford and New York universities, was a difficult piece of fieldwork — I was with the law students in Peshawar as they tried to interview victims of the CIA’s drone war. But it has made an important contribution to the drone debate by identifying the innocent victims of the CIA’s reign of terror: the entire civilian population of Waziristan (roughly 800,000).

Until now, the dispute has revolved around how many drone victims in the Pakistan border region are dangerous extremists, and how many children, women or men with no connection to a terrorist group. Until the area is opened up to media inspection, or the CIA releases the tapes of each Hellfire missile strike, the controversy will rage on.

However, there can be no sensible disagreement over certain salient facts: first, the US now has more than 10,000 weaponised drones in its arsenal; second, as many as six Predator drones circle over one location at any given time, often for 24 hours a day, with high-resolution cameras snooping on the movements of everyone below; third, the Predators emit an eerie sound, earning them the name bangana (buzzing wasp) in Pashtu; fourth, everyone can see them, 5,000ft up, all day — and hear them all night; fifth, nobody knows when the missile will come, and turn each member of the family into what the CIA calls a “bugsplat”.

The Predator operator, thousands of kilometres away in Nevada, often pushes the button over a cup of coffee in the darkest hours of the Waziristan night, between midnight and 5am. So a parent putting children to bed cannot be sure they will wake up safely.

Every Waziri town has been terrorised. We may learn this from the eyewitness accounts in ‘Living Under Drones’, or surmise it from the exponential increase in anti-anxiety and anti-depression medication across the region. Sometimes it is difficult for those in the west to understand. But for me, it brings to mind my mother, Jean Stafford Smith. In 1944 she was 17. She had left the safety of her school in the countryside to do a secretarial course in London. Each evening she took the bus home from Grosvenor Place, behind Buckingham Palace, to her digs off Tottenham Court Road. Back then, darkness would truly descend on the city, as the blackout was near total.

Sixty-eight years on, my mother retains vivid memories of the gathering gloom. When the doodlebugs (as V1s — Hitler’s drones — were called) came over, she knew that she was safe so long as she could hear the engine; only when they fell silent did she have to worry where they might fall.

In 1944, two doodlebugs hit the environs of Buckingham Palace, near where my mother learned shorthand. One blew out the secretarial school’s windows. A second killed more than 100 people who had been singing hymns in the Guards Chapel on Birdcage Walk. It was a weekend, so my mother was back at her digs.

My mother, an eternal optimist, never really thought she was going to die, even when — on June 30 1944 — a drone struck Tottenham Court Road. Perhaps reminiscent of the tragedy of 7/7 (the tube and bus attacks in 2005), a witness described “a bus, still packed with people sitting in all the seats, but all the glass blown out and all the skin blown off their faces”.

Many suffered far more than my mother. Indeed, fear for those you love can be more devastating than facing danger yourself: my grandmother Vera, a formidable woman, lived 60 miles north of London near Ely, and worried constantly about her youngest daughter. The ripples of anxiety spread wide.

So little changes. Current RAF doctrine tells us, euphemistically, how “the psychological impact of air power, from the presence of a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) to the noise generated by an approaching attack helicopter, has often proved to be extremely effective in exerting influence...” Perhaps they mean “terror”, as described by David Rohde, a former New York Times journalist held by the Taliban for months in Waziristan.

Rohde describes the fear the drones inspired in ordinary civilians: “From the ground, it is impossible to determine who or what they are tracking as they circle overhead. The buzz of a distant propeller is a constant reminder of imminent death.”

I hope that this report reminds us all what the US — with British support — is doing to the people of Pakistan. Maybe then there will be less surprise at the hatred the drone war is engendering in the Islamic world — and a chance that we will reconsider what we are doing.

Clive Stafford Smith is director of Reprieve —By arrangement with The Guardian


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Comments (56)

MAHENDRA DEV
September 28, 2012 12:12 am
where is the original
Muhib
September 27, 2012 9:40 pm
you talk as if everyone else is oblivious of the fact that the Pakistan's foreign policy and security is the domain of Pak Army and not politicians....
T.M. Reddy
September 27, 2012 6:18 pm
I hope day of realization will come in West and East. East has to realize where it started and was there any other method could have been undertaken other than driving airplanes into buildings. Whether, "West" will realize the jumping into conclusions of attacking the innocent people and countries.
Madhu
September 27, 2012 5:01 pm
I agree with you. Its Pak army and the only force which is taking wrong policies. They should be blames for all this bloodshed.
Madhu
September 27, 2012 4:58 pm
Everyone is against the Drone, do you like someone intimidating in your own back yard? But who can dare and stop US? what justification would Pak give to stop Drones? Pak army never annihilate the Terrorists and that is the root cause of all problems. True, its brutality on common man, everyone agrees that. But can we anything to stop that? and who can do that?
Madhu
September 27, 2012 4:50 pm
@Sana...It inhabits humans...you are right, but Pak army / Govt should make sure that this land is not used for breeding or sheltering terrorists. Why worlds opinion is one-sided against Pakistan? why source of every terror attack in US, Europe & India originating from Pakistan? We need to clean up our own back yard first. I pity for common man in those areas, they are facing the direct impact of wrong policies of Pak Army and Govt in general. Scores of kids & women are getting killed and can any one address their grievances? what is the root cause of all these problems? I bet, you have all the answers.
Iftikhar Ahmad
September 27, 2012 4:34 pm
Agree Mona, They are only to impose Marshal Laws and sing the songs of their glories, Kill their own countrymen. No war they won against our enemies except with their own people.
Iftikhar Ahmad
September 27, 2012 4:32 pm
O well Lee Chang, Have you ever heard maintaining law and order from Sky by only killing people without investigations or judicial procedures ? Where is that happens on earth ?
usman
September 27, 2012 4:29 pm
pakistani govt show hypocrisy on drone attack
Annonymus
September 27, 2012 4:24 pm
i totally agree with u.....
GREEN
September 27, 2012 3:20 pm
No area in Pakistan is lawless UNLESS they are made or meant lawless by Pak. govt. on instructions of puppet democratic govt. By the way if Americans had done thei job properly in Afghan war in the first place they would never be doing this. But didn't worry these same ISAF forces will be back again in one or the other i.e. if they left the region in 2014. Want history lesson: British forces were in Iraq 1920 thinking its piece of cake what happened, but they came back again and then left ... with what. WAR or TERROR is a NEVER solution - 10 yrs in Afghanistan what else do you want.
Khalid Qureshi
September 27, 2012 1:37 pm
only american militery in thet region is not peacefull,they want war thets what they will get
Mab
September 27, 2012 1:11 pm
Do you think american are donig their job or making thing worse. Things are always working fine until american think that they have to "correct" things
M Khan
September 27, 2012 12:22 pm
you r so very right, Steve...
Nadeem
September 27, 2012 10:46 am
As far as my understanding is concerned,Pakistan Army is performing up to the level,it must.Whatever mandate our Army has been given,it's fulfilling.27000 soldiers embraced martyrdom in the war waged by whosoever.27000 families are still suffering.Pakistan Army is the key reason of Pakistan being intact.May Pakistan always remain so. If the Army Air Defense is given the responsibility to bring down the drones,I am sure its capable enough.It's the government to decide the mandate.Let us be very clear on the difference of authorities prevailing in our homeland. We must not spread hatred for our own guards by giving such loose statements as this will be the help we'd provide to our own enemies. No doubt , a very well written factual article.Thanks Dawn for bringing it to us.Hats off to our brethren s of FATA. All our prayers are always with them. Instead of putting blame on our own institutions,lets start correcting oneself. Let the first to be corrected be me.
Prav
September 27, 2012 9:27 am
Your army should protect you, why complain to USA?
khurram
September 27, 2012 9:23 am
Come to Pakistan and we both go to Warizistan and then I will ask you to give your opinion. It is easy to make comments as compared to taking action
Sana Fatima
September 27, 2012 8:12 am
whether it is lawless area or not ...it still inhabits humans
Syed Jawad
September 27, 2012 8:04 am
Pakistani government condemns drone attacks, even when we know they authorize it through the back door somehow... and I wish the same for your country as well.. thanks for the thought.
ip
September 27, 2012 7:53 am
I'm sure you wouldn't be so gung-ho if it was your own family's safety on the line. Imagine a mother of small children in this region, without any control of probably her own life, what can she conceivably do to change the situation, other than cower in fear every night praying that her innocent children do not get killed before the night is over. This article is an eye-opener about the other facet of this war, especially for people like us, who only get to hear about the armed militants getting killed in drone strikes. I'm an Indian too, and I want armed extremists who kill innocents without remorse to be eliminated. But I think I'm human enough to understand the plight of helpless innocents caught up in this vicious war on their side too. The world is not all black and white Karthik.
unbiased
September 27, 2012 7:51 am
Oh look! Karthik, the self-proclaimed knight claiming to stand up for humanity himself just proved the hypocrisy that is the reason for all worldly troubles. You condemn a nation for not recognizing minorities are human yet you just stereotyped an entire nation without thinking those people dying in Waziristan are human too! If you want others to act right, set the right example yourself first! And if you wanna play it dirty, don't forget Pakistan DID break out of India so technically it's brought in all the dirt from India with it. Take your trash somewhere else please. If you don't agree, don't talk and make use of the wonderful X button on the top corner of your browser. Nobody cares to know about how many people you like to see dying in your neighbor country.
Omair
September 27, 2012 7:21 am
Come on Karthik! How can you be so callous my friend.
Omair
September 27, 2012 7:17 am
I second thee El Cid. Hats off to Clive Smith for this article. It is understandable that US like any other country has every right to protect its citizens and defend its interests but for heaven's sake it should not come at the cost of innocent civilians especially children. I wonder what John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Lincoln and other great founders of US would say if they were to behold this atrocity falsely committed in the name of very principles they founded their nation upon.
Jawad
September 27, 2012 6:18 am
Inshallah day will come when all the authorities responsible for killing innocent blood of all the relegion and race will have to be answerable for what they will do..... At that day they all will be helpless.....
Lee Chang
September 27, 2012 4:31 am
Pakistani govt saying that they have no control over that area. They are calling that area lawless area. Let the americans to do that job.
Mona
September 27, 2012 3:46 am
Where is Pak Army? How can they let people of this poor country live in constant fear? We are paying them to protect us not to build housing societies!
Dr.Fazlur Rahman
September 27, 2012 3:20 am
I am very much convinced that Drone attacks in FATA are committed deliberately by the US. In the same way, "Do More" policy of US is also part of their strategy. Their strategy is to tear the existing Geography of Pakistan and divide it into greater Pakhtunistan and Balochistan. By making these two areas seperate, they have no sypathy with the people of the area. They are convinced that Pakhtuns and Baloch (whether in KP, FATA or across the border of Afghanistan) cannot becone a single entity and they would constantly be in war with each others. This anarchic situation would help US to do its business in the area and that is to watchdog the developments in China, Central Asia, Russia and India. US is convinced that in presence of existing Pakistan and integrated FATA is creating issues for their presence in Afghanistan, so they want to trrorise and frustrate it as much as they themselves rise against Pakistan and demand for Independent Pakhtunistan and Balochistan. In greater Balochistan, they would be hurting both Pakistan and Iran. This was their policy in Iraq and Lybia. The anarchic situation in both the States and the puppit regimes ultimately are at the mercy of US and they have to follow, what US dictates to them. Interestingly, it is the resiliance of the people of Pakistan, that they faced earthquake 2005, devastating flood of 2010 and 2011, suicide attacks, bomb blasts, uncertain economy, media trial posing PAkistan as failed/fragile State.............and still it is intact. Please see, US think tanks conclusion, they dont see PAkistan on the map of the Globe after 2015. It is their dream............while we dream somewhat else...................Optimism, hope, courage and tomorrow's prosperous Pakistan
Tamilselvan
September 27, 2012 1:25 am
Drones started flying only after it was determined that terrorists are using norther Pakistan as a staging ground for attacks into Afganistan. Either Pakistan Makes sure that it's territory is not used as a staging ground for attacks into Afganistan or it should seek the help of US to do its work. Yes, some innocent lives are lost but it all started because Pak either is not able to take care of it or they are part of the problems
Imtiaz
September 27, 2012 1:19 am
Can anyone please tell me if President Zardari, Army and the Foreign Office are so much against drone attacks in Pakistan, then what stops Pakistan to raise this issue in the UNO and take it to the general assembly (if not Security Council) to condemn this act of USA. What makes us silent to this brutality on our people?
zafar
September 26, 2012 11:30 pm
Another troll found his way to a Pakistani news article. As if everywhere is party in India. Shame on you to say that it serves Pakistan right. What extremists are doing in the name of Islam is nowhere near acceptable. But, what you just said isn't far behind their messed up logic either. If you don't value human life, then what else is there to value?
DrTK
September 26, 2012 10:10 pm
I am a Canadian/Pakistani. I also belong to KPK in Pakistan. The province and its people have gone down the tubes. The main cause: Governent of Pakistan forsaking its duty of educating the people for decades! In recent years, pushing hardened criminals and cut-throats into FATA; wrong propoganda of Religion and militancy; bad policies by poorly educated people in Governent. Its not the US' fault. Any other Super Power (lets say Soviet Russia) would have blown us to smithereens! Thank God for Drones and "Surgical Strikes"! Let us move on from here!
MAHENDRA DEV
September 26, 2012 9:55 pm
read consent
charless
September 26, 2012 7:23 pm
Stop begging USA. USA will stop drones. What is this less argument.
Aziz Ullah Khan
September 26, 2012 6:50 pm
Please get out of this euphoria; nothing will happen to the people of Waziristan in particular and Pakistan in general. We have a long history of resilience. These sour days are indeed close to end.
bmurray
September 26, 2012 6:48 pm
I agree with Karthik. I also think it is a much better option than using ground troops. I bet your average Pak army soldier would agree.
Aziz Ullah Khan
September 26, 2012 6:34 pm
I am a resident of South Waziristan Agency; on behalf of all the people living there, I sincerely thank all of you for the sympathies shown. This at least gives us an idea that we are not alone- that we have many around us who truly understand our pain and sufferings, and try their best to let our voices be heard at the international level.
Saroosh Aly
September 26, 2012 4:56 pm
This article is one of the few articles which we read in the dawn newspaper. Western countries and Governments should realize now that these silly and uncalculated steps to fight against so called "terrorist" will harm them and not lightly but very severely. The thing which i cant understand is this, that western countries are so much advance, technologically they are extraordinary superior, in education they are best, they have hundreds of "Think Tanks" who research, think, debate and make a collective decision on any problem or mistake, then why cant they realize that this American cowboy attitude will destroy the whole world. Why cant they realize that there is a hidden third power which is making us 'Christians and Muslims' fight for its own benefit. Obviously this hidden power is the "power of Jews".
KH Texan
September 26, 2012 4:21 pm
My question is.. How do you prove Pakistan is still a sovereign country? Anyone from any point of view or political persuation please care to explain?
Observer
September 26, 2012 4:19 pm
So many comments......empathy, sympathy fear of drones etc. but no body has this million dollars question in mind. Why Pakistan military does not clear this area of militants, extremists and their sympathisers using its own forces so that US stops drones flying or tell US there are not terrorists or extremists living there and it is as peaceful as any other place in Pakistan.
Tanvir
September 26, 2012 3:13 pm
Yes. If a country cannot protect its citizens, it is not a sovereign state. Shame on Pakitstani militatry and the ruling party - PPP
Asif Bhatti
September 26, 2012 2:11 pm
for God Sake stop blaming your own Army.. its the USA you should complain to
Steve
September 26, 2012 1:54 pm
It is your own Government. We lease the base from you in Jacobabad, we use your ports, we transit through your airspace fully armed all the time. Your government cries foul and condems US actions yet they enable the US drone attack because they desire our money. Before you seek to arrest the foriegners, you should arrest your elected officials who betray your country out of greed.
Humanity first
September 26, 2012 1:23 pm
It is sad how everything boils down to country and religion for you, when the thing that should be first and foremost is humanity! Human life is pricessless, and it doesn't matter who or where they are... don't forget, it is innocent lives we are talking about here, not culprits...
Atif
September 26, 2012 1:12 pm
If this piece had been written by a Pakistani, s/he would have been condemned as a fundamentalist and would be the base of all the jokes by the supposedly "liberal" bloggers on here and their band of self loathers.
Muhammad Riaz
September 26, 2012 12:23 pm
Its a shame on the Armed forces of Pakistan....as it is their sole duty to protect the lives of their countrymen.........
kashif
September 26, 2012 11:56 am
I hope you are heard worldwide and monstrous act be stopped.
tired, but hopeful
September 26, 2012 10:34 am
Well said, Nomz. When it comes down to it, we need to find out how to make the suffering stop - for everyone.
m.y.saleem
September 26, 2012 9:00 am
the question is that why our govt. is unable to arrest those foreigners ? who is protecting those people and how usa gets infirmation which we can't find out. everything is so conflicting .
nomz
September 26, 2012 8:50 am
two wrongs do not make a right my Indian friend. minorities have been killed in your country too but for the sake of humanity. let's not argue
El Cid
September 26, 2012 8:43 am
@Clive Stafford Smith: Thank you for your courage, empathy, sympathy, and humanity. I wish our Civil, Military, and Air-Force authorities and Foreign Service decision makers had a little bit of those attributes you have so much of. Cowardice, Shame and suffering has become our fate and constant companion. Inaction and hopelessness has entered our soul. We live in shameful disgrace.