Showing posts with label drones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drones. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 November 2012

The Morality of Drone Attacks – Moral Maze Radio 4


Last night’s Moral Maze on the morality of drones is worth listening to but it should come with a health warning.  The cut and thrust nature of the debate that makes the programme so entertaining can cause key arguments to be neglected or too easily dismissed.  Three of the ‘witnesses’ on the programme are people that I have worked with closely.  Chris Cole, Dr Peter Lee and Paul Schulte span a spectrum of the debate.  (Peter Lee and Paul Schulte were contributors to the Baptist, Methodist and URC report Drones: Ethical dilemmas in the application of lethal force.)  The fourth witness Richard Kemp, a former Commander of British Forces in Afghanistan, provided a very worthwhile, albeit somewhat disconcerting, contribution.
Dr Peter Lee, KCL
Last night’s debate did have some elements of surprise – even for the well-established panel members  Giles Fraser, Melanie Philips, Matthew Taylor and Michael Portillo.  One came when Peter Lee was asked, at the start of his witness section, what problems he had with drones.  “I don’t” was the two word reply.  One area in which the flow of argument seemed less coherent was on the question as to whether or how drones are different from any other form of air power. 

However it was implicitly acknowledged, although not actually stated, that drones offer a capability to track and kill which is of an order of magnitude more advanced than other forms of military hardware.  Drone technology has been critical to the transformation of the CIA into a paramilitary organisation.  The witnesses (with the exception of Chris Cole) all seemed to defend the necessity of this development in the context of counter-terrorism.  Paul Schulte argued from a perspective of pragmatic realism.  His robust tone might have been more subdued had he been asked more open questions on his view of the morality.  As it was, this section strengthened the overall perception arising from the programme that combating terrorists with missiles in a global “war on terror” was an inevitable direction of travel.

The impact of armed drones on communities who are subjected to persistent surveillance was poorly addressed in this 45 minute programme.  A view from Pakistan was not present.  Are we to accept that the impact is exaggerated by the Taliban?  The impact of living under drones was covered briefly in the section with Richard Kemp for whom the impact on communities was an inevitable and excusable consequence of war.   But what about countries with whom we are not at war? 

We have issues in the UK with video surveillance in our communities.  We generally now welcome cameras in our city centres to help combat crime.  We are less keen to have them scattered throughout our neighbourhoods and outside our houses.  We tolerate or welcome them because ultimately there is accountability for their use (and indeed now we can elect our Police Commissioners).  We would not however tolerate a proposal to attach guns to the cameras and enable them to roam our neighbourhoods freely with no accountability.  Imagine then, that this proposal is not only implemented, but that the cameras with guns are used to kill 3000 people and are controlled by an un-trusted even hostile foreign power.  We would have a major uprising on our hands.

What then is the strategy in north-western Pakistan?  Not only is the CIA’s use of armed drones an abuse of human rights, it does not make sense in the battle for heart and minds.  It is causing the family members of those who have been unjustly and unaccountably killed to join the ranks of violent Islamic militants. 
Giles Fraser, who lectures on ethics and leadership at the Defence Academy, Shrivenham, and who is the keynote speaker for our conference, Think, Speak, Act, provided an impressive performance against difficult odds.  He was given 5 seconds for a last word:  “it is difficult but we have to hold ourselves accountable to a higher moral standard and we still have to believe in the rule of war”.

Thursday, 12 July 2012

UK Drones and Targeted Killing

The targeting of suspected members of terrorist groups with missiles by the United States has been rightly condemned. In the past week the point was made at Methodist Conference and at URC General Assembly that, although terrorists operate outside of the law, it is vital that Governments do not do likewise. (Both forums debated the Baptist, Methodist and URC report on drones).

©2012 iStockphoto LP - alxpin

Drones provide new capabilities enabling track and kill operations such as those carried out by the CIA in northern Pakistan and Yemen. But is this US precedent providing a rationale for track and kill elsewhere? In Afghanistan, for example, should the UK military track and kill insurgents who have been positively identified by military intelligence, eliminating them with missiles even when they are far from the field of battle at the time? What would be the ethical and legal basis for such a policy?

I provide here an RAF report of 3 April describing a track and kill operation carried out using an RAF Reaper Unmanned Aerial System (drone) that extended over 5 hours. In all likelihood this type of operation could not be carried out by any means other than an armed drone.


On one mission this week, the Reaper was tasked with tracking a known insurgent travelling on a motorbike in the region of Lashkar Gah. Over the course of 5 hours the Reaper tracked the insurgent and it was only once there was no risk to civilians that the aircraft was authorised to carry out a successful strike.
This account does not reveal whether this known insurgent was armed or whether he was engaged in hostilities at the time that he was killed. The answers to these questions are a matter of legitimate public interest. If he was not then this effectively amounts to a state sponsored assassination. Whether assassination should become a key part of NATO foreign policy and military strategy is a matter of topical debate. These and other questions are being discussed at two separate meetings in London today. Pax Christi has arranged a seminar on the use of drones involving experts in law and military ethics. In addition a two-day workshop involving an array of international speakers has been organised by University of Surrey titled “Hitting the Target? How new capabilities are shaping contemporary international intervention”.

Methodist Conference and URC General Assembly have passed resolutions calling for greater transparency around the UK’s use of Unmanned Aerial Systems. On behalf of our churches we will be engaging with the Ministry of Defence seeking clarification on UK policy and practice and will keep you posted on progress. Your suggestions as to how our churches should be responding to these ethical questions are welcome. Leave a comment here or email me at hucklesbys@methodistchurch.org.uk  

Saturday, 26 May 2012

Drones and targeted killings - churches' report released


The front page of the Times runs the story on the case brought by Reprieve on behalf of Noor Khan whose father was one of 40 people killed by a strike believed to have been carried out by a US unmanned drone. Noor Khan and Reprieve seek a judicial review that will require the Foreign Secretary to disclose whether the UK is passing intelligence to the United States in support of the CIA’s drone strikes in Northern Pakistan. Michael Clarke, director of the Royal United Services Institute, said he would be "astonished" if this were not the case.

At Methodist Conference in 2011 Rt Rev. Humphrey Peters, Bishop of Peshawar, spoke in support of a request by conference for an ethical study on the use of drones. The output from this study has been made available online today.  (The Baptist Union of Great Britain and the United Reformed Church have joined Methodists in this study).  The piece in the Times on Friday is illustrative of two conclusions of our report. Firstly, we assert that the killing of named individuals in northern Pakistan is illegitimate under international law (although the US Government appeals to the contrary). Drones are ideally suited for targeted killings.

Secondly, that much greater accountability is required over the use of drones. This also extends to the role of the UK’s own drones in counter-insurgency strategy in Afghanistan where it appears that they are used to track and kill named insurgents.

The report will be debated at Methodist Conference and United Reformed Church General Assembly at the beginning of July. Watch this space ...

Tuesday, 3 May 2011

Osama Bin Laden killed

The Methodist Church has today issued a statement to the Methodist Recorder on the killing of Osama Bin Laden. I may blog later on the implications of Osama’s elimination for future US policy in Afghanistan and would be keen to hear your views.

It seems that in September of last year US intelligence were reasonably sure that they had identified the likely whereabouts of Osama Bin Laden. The United States had the choice of continuing to monitor him or attempting to capture/kill him. President Obama ultimately made decision to attempt a Special Forces raid.

Other military options were considered but declined.  They included the use of B-52 bombers to deliver GPS-guided precision missiles and the use of unmanned aerial drones to deliver slightly more precise missiles. Unmanned drones have become the method of choice of the US military in operations in Northern Pakistan. Several Al-Qaida and Taliban leaders have been assassinated by US drones, each aircraft controlled by three operators from a control centre in Nevada. In the operation against Osama Bin Laden the US administration decided against a drone strike for obvious reasons: - 1) it was important to ensure that Osama Bin Laden could be identified and solid evidence obtained of his demise, 2) drone strikes in Pakistan come with some political cost as they are legally highly questionable and frequently involve civilian deaths, 3) to defend the action as ‘just’ it was necessary to carry out an operation that could have resulted in Bin Laden’s arrest and trial.

The use of special forces to execute a commando raid involved huge risks. The unsuccessful attempt to rescue US hostages from Iran in 1980 was arguably the nail in the coffin for Jimmy Carter’s presidency. Given the difficulties that Obama has in the US at the moment this weekend’s raid entailed huge risks for his own presidency. He will now reap the benefit of more domestic “street cred” resulting from the perceived success of the operation.

Meanwhile the continuing US forces’ illegal use of drones is highly unpopular in Pakistan. These strikes are thought to have killed 2,300 people since 2004. Some would put the civilian death toll at 90%. See this article for example,   Is there not a glaring inconsistency between the military action that is authorised in Libya to protect civilians, and the civilian death toll resulting from the ‘easy’ option favoured by the US military in their battle against Al-Qaida and Taliban operatives in Pakistan?

I raise this question now as this might be an appropriate time to reflect on tactics and use of force in action to counter the threat of terrorism.

For more on the illegal use of drones see Fellowship of Reconciliation’s campaign.