This tells us that we already
have an arms race on in these weapons.
The problem is that the quality of the craft is secondary to be software
and everyone can get that figured out.
It clearly allows you to fill the
skies with cheap drones that can loiter and select high quality targets. For the first time in history, command and control is squarely on the front lines.
That is how Al Qada has been hugely suppressed.
What we have is still pretty
basic. Hunter killer supersonic jets are
coming next. Worse, we are able to fill
the skies. Technology will maintain an
edge, but we are headed for a real arms race.
The unintended consequence for
Obama’s enthusiasm for drones is that he sold everyone out there.
The dangerous part is to prevent those
making aircraft carriers obsolete.
Soon enough, we will be hot
enough to duck up into space and orbit there in large wolf packs pretty well
out of harms way.
What we now need is a global
alliance for the regions that include NATO, Russia ,
China and India and Brazil . The drones are a good place to start. The USA is going to have to swallow its
pride here along with the rest and realize been number one is no longer good
enough.
As U.S.
drone monopoly frays, Obama seeks global rules
By Tabassum Zakaria
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama, who vastly expanded U.S.
drone strikes against terrorism suspects overseas under the cloak of secrecy,
is now openly seeking to influence global guidelines for their use as China and
other countries pursue their own drone programs.
The United States
was the first to use unmanned aircraft fitted with missiles to kill militant
suspects in the years after the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington .
But other countries are catching up. China 's interest in unmanned aerial vehicles was displayed in November at an air show . According to state-run newspaper Global Times, China had considered conducting its first drone strike to kill a suspect in the 2011 murder of 13 Chinese sailors, but authorities decided they wanted the man alive so they could put him on trial.
"People say what's going to happen when the Chinese and the
Russians get this technology? The president is well aware of those concerns and
wants to set the standard for the international community on these tools,"
said Tommy Vietor, until earlier this month a White House spokesman.
As U.S. ground wars
end - over in Iraq , drawing
to a close in Afghanistan
- surgical counterterrorism targeting has become "the new normal,"
Vietor said.
Amid a debate within the U.S.
government, it is not yet clear what new standards governing targeted killings
and drone strikes the White House will develop for U.S. operations or propose for
global rules of the road.
Obama's new position is not without irony. The White House kept details
of drone operations - which remain largely classified - out of public view for
years when the U.S.
monopoly was airtight.
That stance is just now beginning to change, in part under pressure from growing public and Congressional discomfort with the drone program. U.S. lawmakers have demanded to see White House
legal justifications for targeting U.S.
citizens abroad, and to know whether Obama thinks he has the authority to use
drones to kill Americans on U.S.
soil.
On Friday, a three-judge federal appeals court panel unanimously ruled
that the CIA gave an inadequate response to a lawsuit brought by the American
Civil Liberties Union seeking records about
drone strikes. The CIA had said it could neither confirm nor deny whether it
had drone records because of security concerns.
The judge who wrote the ruling noted that the president had publicly
acknowledged that the United
States uses drone strikes against al Qaeda.
LETHAL ACTION
Strikes by missile-armed Predator and Reaper drones against terrorism
suspects overseas began under former President George W. Bush and were expanded
by Obama.
The ramp-up started in 2008, the last year of Bush's term, when there
were 35 air strikes in Pakistan, and escalated under Obama to a peak of 117 in
2010, according to The Long War Journal (
http://www.longwarjournal.org/pakistan-strikes.php ).
That jump in use of armed drones resulted from the authorization to use
"signature" strikes, which allowed targeting terrorism suspects based
on behavior and other characteristics without knowing their actual identity, a U.S.
official said on condition of anonymity.
Caitlin Hayden, a spokeswoman for the White House National Security
Council, said the administration is committed to explaining to Congress and the
public as much as possible about its drone policies, including how decisions to
strike are made.
"We are constantly working to refine, clarify, and strengthen the
process for considering terrorist targets for lethal action," Hayden said.
The administration recognizes "we are establishing standards other
nations may follow," she said.
James Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies think tank, said other countries, including Russia, have
unarmed reconnaissance drones. China
says it has an armed drone, but "we don't know if it works," he said.
"Getting agreement on the applicability of existing humanitarian
law to the new technologies is crucial," he said, because China and Russia do not endorse applying laws
of armed conflict to new military technologies.
One of the Obama administration's goals is to "regularize"
the drone program, making it more a part of accepted U.S. practice in the future, Lewis
said. "This is going to be part of warfare."
While the Obama administration moves toward refinement and transparency
of standards, drone strikes continue to spark outrage in countries where they
are conducted. Washington
has sought to portray civilian casualties from drone strikes as minimal, but
groups collecting data on these attacks say they have killed hundreds of
civilians.
A U.N. human rights investigator who is looking into drone strikes
worldwide said on Friday the U.S.
campaign had violated Pakistan 's
sovereignty.
INTERNAL DEBATES
One focus of U.S. officials' internal debate is whether to shift drone operations to the Pentagon from the CIA.
That would allow the CIA to return to more traditional operations of
espionage and intelligence analysis, and put the killing of terrorism targets
in the hands of the military.
It would probably be a "phased approach" that would account
for differences in the threat and political sensitivities, said a second U.S.
official. "There would have to be some tailoring."
In Pakistan , where
the U.S.
military is not in ground combat, the Obama administration would probably not
want drone strikes to appear as being conducted by the military.
In Yemen ,
there may not be the same sensitivities. U.S. military personnel are on the
ground working with Yemenis in counterterrorism operations.
The United States
has also carried out drone strikes in Afghanistan ,
Iraq , Libya and Somalia .
"I think if they moved it, not as a covert action program, but one
of the tools of the warfighter, then the result of it is probably going to be more
public exposure about what they are doing," Stephen Hadley, national
security adviser under Bush, said.
The "center of gravity" in internal administration debates is
the goal of greater consistency on how drone strikes are managed, decided upon,
and executed, the second official said.
(Editing by Warren Strobel and Mohammad Zargham)
No comments:
Post a Comment