Drone attacks adding to insurgency: PM

After more than 270 drone attacks during the past 4 years suddenly the prime minister has realised what many were saying from day1…

http://www.geo.tv/GeoDetail.aspx?ID=32961’Drone attacks’ adding to insurgency: Gilani](Geo News: Latest News Breaking, Live Videos, World, Entertainment, Royal)DAVOS: **Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani Saturday said that US drone strikes were only fueling insurgency in Pakistan.

In an interaction with the media here on the fringes of the ongoing annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, Gilani said Pakistan was against the “illegal and counter productive” drone strikes along the areas bordering Afghanistan. He said Pakistan has conveyed its concerns to the United States of American in this regard and wishes to settle all issues, as a responsible country, and discuss everything diplomatically.

The Prime Minister said the strikes create sympathy for the victims amongst the population that we are trying to lure away from extremism, while at the same time it lessens space for the government to continue operations against terrorist elements.**He said there was no chance of any military coup in Pakistan, as the army desired democracy and stability in the country.

Gilani said “I don’t think there will be a coup in Pakistan ever. There is no threat to democracy.”Gilani said no State institution, military or the people of Pakistan want a coup and all are in favour of democracy.

The international media was particularly interested in the change in the Pakistan-United States ties following the NATO led attack on a Pakistani military post along the Pak-Afghan border in November last year that killed 24 soldiers.

Prime Minister Gilani said the incident was a “turning point” and said it created a bad taste. He said prior to the attack there had been a number of other incidents that had already strained ties between the two countries to a large extent.

He said the Defence Committee of the Cabinet decided to define new terms of engagements and it was decided to cut off the NATO supply lines, get the Shamsi base vacated and boycotted the Bonn Conference. He said the Pakistan’s parliament would be defining new terms of engagement and hoped the new terms would be more productive and lasting.

To a question, Gilani said under the earlier policy, the former President, Musharraf took all decisions without taking the people of Pakistan into confidence.“If there is no support of the public, no one can win a war,” the Prime Minister said.

He said Pakistan has already paid huge sacrifices as it has lost over 30,000 civilians and 5,000 military personnel, besides incurring heavily at the economic front.

Gilani said Pakistan was paying the heavy price for peace, progress and prosperity of the entire world.When asked about the presence of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, the Prime Minister said “it was the failure of the intelligence agencies of the whole world.

”To a question about the Swiss hostages in Pakistan, Gilani assured the government was doing all for their safe recovery and said the Swiss ambassador in Pakistan was constantly in touch with the intelligence agencies of the country.

To a question by an Indian journalist, that if there is another Mumbai style attack, Gilani said “ifs and when do not make a story”.“We have resumed comprehensive dialogue with India,” he said and mentioned his visit to Mohali to see Cricket World Cup semi-final at the invitation of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

“We are in the process of normalizing trade relations with India which will benefit the people of both the countries.”Gilani said Pakistan attaches importance to its relations with Afghanistan and a peaceful and stable Afghanistan was in the strategic interest of Pakistan.

“We see Pakistan as a factor of peace, stability and development in the region,” Gilani said. He said Pakistan desires good relations with all its neighbours and if India has any information it can share it with Pakistan.He termed Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh a “genuine person” and said he too was desirous of resolving all issues with Pakistan, including the core issue of Kashmir.

He said Pakistan was actively engaged with its partners in SAARC and ECO for promoting economic cooperation and sharing prosperity among the regional countries. Prime Minister Gilani pointed to the challenges the country faced.

“We have to eradicate terrorism from its roots, we have to create more jobs for our young people, we have to invest in energy and physical infrastructure and to pay more attention to health and education,” the Prime Minister said and added “We are facing all these challenges upfront and squarely.”He said Pakistan today was a functioning democracy with a fully empowered parliament. “We have a vibrant civil society, free media and an independent judiciary,” he said.

Prime Minister Gilani said his government has been pursuing a policy of reconciliation with other political forces in the country. He said reconciliation, in fact was the legacy of Shaheed Mohtarma

Benazir Bhutto, who sacrificed her life for democracy and rights of downtrodden in the society. “Our policy of reconciliation has resulted in the adoption of land mark 18th Amendment by consensus in both Houses of the Parliament,” the Prime Minister said.Prime Minister Gilani said Pakistan has immense potential and was endowed with an array of assets, the most important of which was its young population.

Gilani said Pakistan was at the confluence of South, Central and West Asia and provides a natural land bridge and energy corridor between energy rich and fastest growing economies of the world.

He said the under the 18th Constitutional Amendment, the President has voluntarily surrendered his powers to the parliament and the Federation has agreed to transfer resources and responsibilities to the provinces.He said it could rightly be described as a quiet revolution towards building a strong and prosperous Pakistan.

The Prime Minister said despite weak international economic outlook, Pakistan’s economy has been doing reasonably well.

He mentioned unprecedented floods of 2010 and said these were followed by devastating flood in Southern parts of the country in 2011. “We are confident that with unmatched resilience of our people we shall emerge stronger from these challenges,” Gilani said.He said Pakistan has friendly relationship with the EU countries, which was its largest trading partner and pointed that Pakistan was in the process of concluding five-year engagement plan with the EU.

Pakistan and U.S. have longstanding friendly relations and both countries understand the importance of this relationship. “In the light of recent events, we are reviewing our relations to build a long term relationship on the basis of mutual respect, trust and interest,” Gilani said. (APP)

Re: Drone attacks adding to insurgency

Anyhow dair aayad darust aayad, if they can have the drone attacks stopped.

Re: Drone attacks adding to insurgency: PM

Is Gilani a taliban sympathizer?

Re: Drone attacks adding to insurgency: PM

When people used to say that four years ago some experts used to make fun of that!

Re: Drone attacks adding to insurgency: PM


No he even have no sympathy with his family when it comes to self-interest... thing is, PM is facing some troubles and he is trying to keep all the options open... if tomorrow by any chance he have to give up his PMship then the call will be, because he was against the drone attacks, he was fired/resigned from the post... and for that principal stand (same as SMQ took!!!) he'll be open to any other party...

but keeping the track record of the PM in mind, wait till this statement is taken back or something comes out saying, it was taken out of context...

Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

US President Barack Obama has confirmed that unmanned drones regularly strike suspected militants in Pakistan’s tribal areas.

State department waly jhot bol rahay thay ka drone pakistan ka coperation say hotay hein

Re: Obama confirsm drone strikes in pakistan

Uski meherbaani hay Kay ma'an gayay Hum tou samajh rahay thay kawway hamlay kar rahay hain

Re: Obama confirsm drone strikes in pakistan

It was run as a breaking news on Geo last night. I did not understand the logic behind making it a breaking news, even if it was first time acknowledged by a US official. I am sure it wasn't even a news for anyone, let alone a breaking news.

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

America can do anything they please in pakistan it is their country now, the government have sold the land and sovereignty for few dollars to fill their fat bellies.

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

i dont understand what was the need for him to acknowledge now, they were already doing it and every one knew…

Amnesty seeks legal basis of US drone strikes in Pakistan

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

Thank you so much Obama Jee :hat: Else we were thinking that they were Talibaan :cobra:

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

I am confirming that at times, I have to go to restroom to answer the call of nature.

:chai:

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

It seems many people asked him about drone attacks, I did ask a few questions regarding them (no multis promise) :)

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

[RIGHT]

يہ کوئ خفيہ بات نہيں ہے، ہم اس علاقے ميں دہشت گردوں کے خلاف جنگ لڑ رہے ہیں جو نہ صرف پاکستان اور افغانستان کے معصوم لوگوں کے اندر دہشت پھيلا رہے ہيں بلکہ امريکہ کے ليے بھی خطرہ ہیں۔
یہ ايک قابل غور بات ہے کہ امريکی صدر نے جس نقطے پر بات کی ہے اس کے مطابق انہوں نے جو فيصلہ کيا ہے اور جو ہدايات جاری کی ہیں ان کا مقصد انسداد دہشت گردی کی کوششوں کے عمل میں کی جانے والی محدود کاروائ کے ذريعے دہشتگردوں کو نشانہ بنانا اور ان کوششوں میں غیر ارادی جانی نقصان کے امکانات کو کم کرنا ہے۔
يہ بھی ايک خقیقت ہے کہ اس علاقے ميں دہشت گردوں کو شکست دينے اور ان کو تباہ کرنے کے ليےامریکہ اور پاکستان کے درمیان قریبی رابطے اور افہام و تفہیم ہے۔ دہشت گردہمارے مشترکہ دشمن ہيں اور ہم پاکستان کی

سیکیورٹی فورسز کی صلاحیتوں کو بہتر بنانے ميں ان کی باقاعدگی سے مدد کر رہے ہيں۔

ذوالفقار – ڈيجيٹل آؤٹ ريچ ٹيم – يو ايس اسٹيٹ ڈيپارٹمينٹ

[EMAIL=“[email protected]”]

[email protected]
www.state.gov
http://www.facebook.com/pages/USUrduDigitalOutreach/122365134490320?v=wall[/RIGHT]

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

Challo gee inki kammi thi

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

Mr zulfiqar can you please provide the details of the following:

1) how many people have been killed so far in drone attacks and how many of them were innocents

2) and please let me know under which clause of international law is America attacking a sovereign country?

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

[RIGHT]
میں آپ کو اس علاقے میں ہونے والے آپریشن کے بارے میں تفصیلات فراہم نہیں کر سکتا۔ البتہ يہ ضرور کہوں گا کہ امريکی حکومت بےگناہ لوگوں کو نشانہ نہيں بنا رہی ہے ايسے اقدامات ہمارے اصولوں کے منافی ہيں۔

يہ بات بھی واضح کرنا چاہوں گا کہ امريکہ کسی بین الاقوامی قانون یا پاکستان کی خود مختاری کی خلاف ورزی نہیں کر رہا ہے۔ اصل میں ہم پاکستان کی فوجی اور سویلین حکومت کے ساتھ مل کر باہم تعاون سے کام کر رہے ہیں اور ہمارا مقصد یہ ہے کہ ان بے رحم قاتلوں کو کا خاتمہ کيا جاۓ جو معصوم شہریوں کو نشانہ بنا رہے ہیں اور جو پاکستان کی سیکورٹی فورسز کو بے دردی سے قتل کر رہے ہیں.

آپ نے شايد ديکھا ہوگا کہ حال ہی میں دہشت گردوں نے 15 پاکستانی فوجیوں کو بے دردی سے قتل کرنے کے بعد ويڈيو جاری کی ہے يہ وہ فوجی تھے جن کو گزشتہ مہینے شمال مغربی پاکستان سے اغوا کيا گيا تھا آپ اس لنک پر يہ ويڈيو ديکھ سکتے ہیں۔

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=e10_1327978572

کيا آپ اس بات سے اتفاق نہيں کرتے کہ ان کو روکنا ضروری ہے

ذوالفقار – ڈيجيٹل آؤٹ ريچ ٹيم – يو ايس اسٹيٹ ڈيپارٹمينٹ

[EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]

www.state.gov

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

^ You can not provide details about the drone operations because you don't know who is being killed and you are not interested (as long as the dead are non Americans).

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

http://www.realclearworld.com/news/reuters/international/2012/Jan/26/reuters_magazine__the_drone_war.html

Reuters Magazine: The drone warDavid Rohde(Reuters) - They kill without warning, are comparatively cheap, risk no American lives, and produce triumphant headlines. Over the last three years, drone strikes have quietly become the Obama administration’s weapon of choice against terrorists.

**Since taking office, President Barack Obama has unleashed five times as many drone strikes as George W. Bush authorized in his second term in the White House. He has transformed drone attacks from a rarely used tactic that killed dozens each year to a twice-weekly onslaught that killed more than 1,000 people in Pakistan in 2010. Last year, American drone strikes spread to Somalia and Libya as well.

**
In the wake of the troubled, trillion-dollar American invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, drone strikes are a talisman in Washington. To cash-strapped officials, drones eliminate the United States’ enemies at little human, political, or financial cost.

**The sweeping use of drone strikes in Pakistan, though, has created unprecedented anti-American sentiment in that country. While U.S. intelligence officials claim that only a handful of civilians have died in drone attacks, the vast majority of Pakistanis believe thousands have perished. Last year, the Pakistani government apparently blocked American drone strikes after tensions escalated between the two governments.

**
After a CIA contractor killed two Pakistanis in January and American commandos killed Osama bin Laden in March, there were no drone strikes there for weeks at a time. In November, drone strikes stopped again after an American airstrike killed 26 Pakistani soldiers near the border with Afghanistan. As of late December, there had been no strikes in Pakistan for six weeks, the longest pause since 2008, and a glaring example of the limitations of drone warfare.

My perspective on drones is an unusual one. In November 2008, the Afghan Taliban kidnapped two Afghan colleagues and me outside Kabul and ferried us to the tribal areas of Pakistan. For the next seven months, we were held captive in North and South Waziristan, the focus of the vast majority of American drone strikes during that period. In June 2009, we escaped. Several months later, I wrote about the experience in a series of articles for the New York Times, my employer at the time.

Throughout our captivity, American drones were a frequent presence in the skies above North and South Waziristan. Unmanned, propeller-driven aircraft, they sounded like a small plane - a Piper Cub or Cessna-circling overhead. Dark specks in a blue sky, they could be spotted and tracked with the naked eye. Our guards studied their flight patterns for indications of when they might strike. When two drones appeared overhead they thought an attack was imminent. Sometimes it was, sometimes it was not.

The drones were terrifying. 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. Drones fire missiles that travel faster than the speed of sound. A drone’s victim never hears the missile that kills him.

Our Afghan and Pakistani Taliban guards despised the drones and disparaged them as a cowardly way for America to wage war. The 2009 surge in drone attacks in Pakistan prompted our guards to hate Obama even more than they hated Bush.

The most difficult day of our captivity was March 25, 2009. Late that afternoon, a drone attack occurred just outside our house in Makeen, South Waziristan. Missiles fired by an American drone had struck dozens of yards away. After chunks of mud and bits of shrapnel landed in our courtyard. Our guards hustled me down a hillside and ordered me to get inside a station wagon. They told me to lie down, place a scarf over my face, and say nothing. We all knew that if local militants enraged by the attack learned an American prisoner was in the area, I would be killed. As I lay in the car, I heard militants shout with fury as they collected their dead. A woman wailed somewhere in the distance. I silently recited the Lord’s Prayer.

After 15 minutes, the guards took me back to our house and explained what had happened. Missiles from American drones had struck two cars, they said, killing seven Arab militants and local Taliban fighters. Later, I learned that one of our guards suggested I be taken to the site of the attack and ritually beheaded. The chief guard overruled him.

The strikes fueled a vicious paranoia among the Taliban. For months, our guards told us of civilians being rounded up, accused of working as American spies and hung in local markets. Immediately after that attack in South Waziristan, a feverish hunt began for a local spy who the Taliban were convinced had somehow secretly guided the Americans to the two cars.

Several days after the strike, our guards told us foreign militants had arrested a local man and accused him of guiding the drones. After the jihadists disemboweled the villager and chopped off his leg, he “confessed” to being an American spy, they said. Then the militants decapitated the man and hung his corpse in the local bazaar as a warning.

**My time in captivity filled me with enormous sympathy for the Pakistani civilians trapped between the deranged Taliban and ruthless American technology. They inhabit a hell on earth in the tribal areas. Both sides abuse them. I am convinced Taliban claims that only civilians die in drone strikes are false, as are American claims that only militants do. Drone strikes are not a silver bullet against militancy, nor are they a wanton practice that fells only civilians. They weaken militant groups without eliminating them.

**
During my time in the tribal areas, it was clear that drone strikes disrupted militant operations. Taliban commanders frequently changed vehicles and moved with few bodyguards to mask their identities. Afghan, Pakistani, and foreign Taliban avoided gathering in large numbers. The training of suicide bombers and roadside bomb makers was carried out in small groups to avoid detection.

**Altogether, 22 drone strikes killed at least 76 militants and 41 civilians in North and South Waziristan during our seven months in captivity, according to news reports. Some strikes clearly succeeded. Our guards reacted with fury, for example, when Uzbek bomb makers they knew were killed in a drone strike. They also showed my Afghan colleagues the graves of children they said died in strikes.

**
**It is impossible for journalists, human rights groups, or outside investigators to definitively determine the ratio of civilians to militants killed by American drones. The United States refuses to release details or publicly acknowledge the attacks, which they insist are classified. Militants, meanwhile, refuse to allow unfettered access to the area.

**
The strikes kill senior leaders and weaken Al Qaeda, the Pakistani Taliban, and the Afghan Taliban, but militants use exaggerated reports of civilian deaths to recruit volunteers and stoke anti-Americanism. I believe the drones create a stalemate between militant groups and U.S. intelligence agencies.

**While drones are seen as a triumph of American technology in the United States, they provoke intense public anger in Pakistan. Exaggerated Taliban claims of civilian deaths are widely believed by the Pakistanis, who see the strikes as a flagrant violation of the United States’ purported support for human rights. Analysts believe that killing a senior militant in a drone strike is a tactical victory but a loss over the long term because it weakens public support for an American-backed crackdown on militancy in Pakistan, which many analysts think is essential.

**
**“In the short term, it puts (the militants) on the back foot,” a former United Nations official in the region who spoke on condition of anonymity told me. “In the overall community, it’s devastating.”

**
**Worsening the problem, the U.S. has allowed the Pakistani military to falsely claim that it has no control over the drone strikes. American drones operate out of Pakistani air force bases with the permission of Pakistani forces, yet the Pakistani public is told that a foreign power is carrying out unilateral attacks inside their country and violating their sovereignty.

**
Pakistan is not the only country experiencing drone attacks. Since 2001,** the United States has carried out drone strikes in five other countries - Afghanistan, Yemen, Iraq, Libya and Somalia. **In Libya, the American military carried out 146 drone strikes during NATO’s seven-month bombing campaign against the Gaddafi regime. In Afghanistan and Iraq, the CIA and the American military do not disclose the number of attacks, but a senior American military official put the number at “dozens” since 2001.

The most alarming pattern has emerged in Yemen and Somalia. The exact number of strikes in both countries is unknown. Local media in Yemen report strikes as often as once a week, but American officials decline to confirm that.

On September 30, 2011, a drone flying over Yemen set a new precedent. Without a trial or any public court proceeding, the United States government killed two American citizens,Anwar Al Awlaki and Samir Khan. The target of the attack was Awlaki, a New Mexico-born Yemeni-American whose charismatic preaching inspired terrorist attacks around the world, including the 2009 killing of 13 soldiers in Fort Hood, Texas. Civil liberties groups argued that a dangerous new threshold had been crossed. For the first time in American history, the United States had executed two of its citizens without trial.

The Obama Administration cited a secret Justice Department memorandum as justification for the attack. Its authors contended that Awlaki’s killing was legal due to his role in attacks on the United States and his presence in an area where American forces could not easily capture him. The administration declined to publicly release the full document.

Many experts insist a new approach to drones is desperately needed. Strikes should continue, they say, but in a vastly different manner. Among the changes they suggest: The U.S. must end its absurd practice of refusing to publicly acknowledge attacks. Many analysts also believe Washington should accede to longstanding demands from the Pakistani, Afghan, and other local governments for more control over the use of drones. Their reasoning is simple: Along with the United States, local officials will then bear the burden of building local public support for drone strikes.

"They have asked for sharing the responsibility, but also means sharing the technology,"Vali Nasr, a Tufts University professor and former senior Obama Administration adviser on Pakistan, told me. “We have resisted that, but the benefit is that you give the local government ownership.”

For all their shortcomings, drones do present a tempting though far from perfect martial option. Drones can reach jihadists in remote mountains and deserts inaccessible to American and local troops. They have taken out top militants, such as the Pakistani Taliban commander Baitullah Mehsud, who was responsible for the killing of thousands of Pakistani civilians in suicide bombings. And they have slowed the training of suicide bombers and roadside bomb makers, most of whose victims are innocent Afghan and Pakistani bystanders, not American troops.
**But drones alone are not the answer. Over the long term, it will be moderate Muslims who defeat militancy, not technology.
**

(David Rohde is a Reuters columnist. Any opinions expressed are his own.)

Re: Obama confirms drone strikes in pakistan

some more information on the terrorists killed by the Americans over the years using drones in Pakistanhttp://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/2012/02/04/obama-terror-drones-cia-tactics-in-pakistan-include-targeting-rescuers-and-funerals/

The CIA’s drone campaign in Pakistan has killed dozens of civilians who had gone to help rescue victims or were attending funerals, an investigation by the Bureau for the Sunday Times has revealed.

Obama terror drones: CIA tactics in Pakistan include targeting rescuers and funerals

**The findings are published just days after President Obama claimed that the drone campaign in Pakistan was a ‘targeted, focused effort’ that ‘has not caused a huge number of civilian casualties.’
**
**Speaking publicly for the first time on the controversial CIA drone strikes, Obama claimed last week they are used strictly to target terrorists, rejecting what he called ‘this perception we’re just sending in a whole bunch of strikes willy-nilly’.
**
**‘Drones have not caused a huge number of civilian casualties’, he told a questioner at an on-line forum. ‘This is a targeted, focused effort at people who are on a list of active terrorists trying to go in and harm Americans’.
**
**But research by the Bureau has found that since Obama took office three years ago, between 282 and 535 civilians have been credibly reported as killed including more than 60 children. A three month investigation including eye witness reports has found evidence that at least 50 civilians were killed in follow-up strikes when they had gone to help victims. More than 20 civilians have also been attacked in deliberate strikes on funerals and mourners. **The tactics have been condemned by leading legal experts.

Although the drone attacks were started under the Bush administration in 2004, they have been stepped up enormously under Obama.
There have been 260 attacks by unmanned Predators or Reapers in Pakistan by Obama’s administration – averaging one every four days. Because the attacks are carried out by the CIA, no information is given on the numbers killed.

Administration officials insist that these covert attacks are legal.** John Brennan, the president’s top counterterrorism adviser, argues that the US has the right to unilaterally strike terrorists anywhere in the world, not just what he called ‘hot battlefields’.
**
‘Because we are engaged in an armed conflict with al- Qaeda, the United States takes the legal position that, in accordance with international law, we have the authority to take action against al-Qaeda and its associated forces,’ he told a conference at Harvard Law School last year. ‘The United States does not view our authority to use military force against al-Qaeda as being restricted solely to”hot” battlefields like Afghanistan.’

**State-sanctioned extra-judicial executions
**
**But some international law specialists fiercely disagree, arguing that the strikes amount to little more than state-sanctioned extra-judicial executions and questioning how the US government would react if another state such as China or Russia started taking such action against those they declare as enemies.
**
The first confirmed attack on rescuers took place in North Waziristan on May 16 2009. According to Mushtaq Yusufzai, a local journalist, Taliban militants had gathered in the village of Khaisor. After praying at the local mosque, they were preparing to cross the nearby border into Afghanistan to launch an attack on US forces. But the US struck first.

**A CIA drone fired its missiles into the Taliban group, killing at least a dozen people. Villagers joined surviving Taliban as they tried to retrieve the dead and injured.
**
**But as rescuers clambered through the demolished house the drones struck again. Two missiles slammed into the rubble, killing many more. At least 29 people died in total.
**
We lost very trained and sincere friends‘, a local Taliban commander told The News, a Pakistani newspaper. ‘Some of them were very senior Taliban commanders and had taken part in successful actions in Afghanistan. Bodies of most of them were beyond recognition.’

For the Americans the attack was a success. A surprise tactic had resulted in the deaths of many Taliban. But locals say that six ordinary villagers also died that day, identified by Bureau field researchers as Sabir, Ikram, Mohib, Zahid, Mashal and Syed Noor (most people in the area use only one name).

Yusufzai, who reported on the attack, says those killed in the follow-up strike ‘were trying to pull out the bodies, to help clear the rubble, and take people to hospital.’ The impact of drone attacks on rescuers has been to scare people off, he says: ‘They’ve learnt that something will happen. No one wants to go close to these damaged building anymore.’

**The legal view
**
Naz Modirzadeh, Associate Director of the Program on Humanitarian Policy and Conflict Research (HPCR) at Harvard University, said killing people at a rescue site may have no legal justification.

‘Not to mince words here, if it is not in a situation of armed conflict, unless it falls into the very narrow area of imminent threat then it is an extra-judicial execution’, she said. ‘We don’t even need to get to the nuance of who’s who, and are people there for rescue or not. Because each death is illegal. Each death is a murder in that case.’

**The Khaisoor incident was not a one-off. Between May 2009 and June 2011, at least fifteen attacks on rescuers were reported by credible news media, including the New York Times, CNN,Associated Press, ABC News and Al Jazeera.
**
It is notoriously difficult for the media to operate safely in Pakistan’s tribal areas. Both militants and the military routinely threaten journalists. Yet for three months a team of local researchers has been seeking independent confirmation of these strikes.
**Eyewitness accounts
**
The researchers have found credible, independently sourced evidence of civilians killed in ten of the reported attacks on rescuers. In five other reported attacks, the researchers found no evidence of any rescuers – civilians or otherwise – killed.

The researchers were told by villagers that strikes on rescuers began as early as March 2008, although no media carried reports at the time. The Bureau is seeking testimony relating to nine additional incidents.

**Often when the US attacks militants in Pakistan, the Taliban seals off the site and retrieves the dead. But an examination of thousands of credible reports relating to CIA drone strikes also shows frequent references to civilian rescuers. Mosques often exhort villagers to come forward and help, for example – particularly following attacks that mistakenly kill civilians.
**
Other tactics are also raising concerns. On June 23 2009 the CIA killed Khwaz Wali Mehsud, a mid-ranking Pakistan Taliban commander. They planned to use his body as bait to hook a larger fish – Baitullah Mehsud, then the notorious leader of the Pakistan Taliban.

‘A plan was quickly hatched to strike Baitullah Mehsud when he attended the man’s funeral,’ according to Washington Post national security correspondent Joby Warrick, in his recent bookThe Triple Agent. ‘True, the commander… happened to be very much alive as the plan took shape. But he would not be for long.’

The CIA duly killed Khwaz Wali Mehsud in a drone strike that killed at least five others. Speaking with the Bureau, Pulitzer Prize-winner Warrick confirmed what his US intelligence sources had told him: ‘The initial target was no doubt a target anyway, as it was described to me, as someone that they were interested in. And as they were planning this attack, a possible windfall from that is that it would shake Mehsud himself out of his hiding place.’

Up to 5,000 people attended Khwaz Wali Mehsud’s funeral that afternoon, including not only Taliban fighters but many civilians. US drones struck again, killing up to 83 people. As many as 45 were civilians, among them reportedly ten children and four tribal leaders. Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud escaped unharmed, dying six weeks later along with his wife in a fresh CIA attack.

**Clive Stafford-Smith, the lawyer who heads the Anglo-US legal charity Reprieve, believes that such strikes ‘are like attacking the Red Cross on the battlefield. It’s not legitimate to attack anyone who is not a combatant.’
**
**Christof Heyns, a South African law professor who is United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extra- judicial Executions, agrees. ‘Allegations of repeat strikes coming back after half an hour when medical personnel are on the ground are very worrying’, he said. ‘To target civilians would be crimes of war.’ Heyns is calling for an investigation into the Bureau’s findings.
**
**One of the most devastating attacks took place on March 17 last year, the day after Pakistan had released American CIA contractor Raymond Davis, jailed for shooting dead two men in Lahore. Davis had been held for two months and was released after the payment of blood money said to be around $2.3m.
**
****A case of retaliation?
**
The Agency was said to be furious at the affair. The following day when a massive drone strike killed up to 42 people gathered at a meeting in North Waziristan, Pakistani officials believed it to be retaliation.
**
**The commander of Pakistan forces in the area at the time was Brigadier Abdullah Dogar. He admits that in drone attacks in general ‘people invariably get reported as innocent bystanders’. But in that case he has no doubt. ‘I was sitting there where our friends say they were targeting terrorists and I know they were innocent people’, he said.
**
The mountains in the area contain chromite mines and the ownership was disputed between two tribes, so a Jirga or tribal meeting had been called to resolve the issue.

‘We in the Pakistan military knew about the meeting’, he said, ‘we’d got the request ten days earlier.’

‘It was held in broad daylight, people were sitting out in Nomada bus depot when the missile strikes came. Maybe there were one or two Taliban at that Jirga – they have their people attending – but does that justify a drone strike which kills 42 mostly innocent people?’

‘Drones may make tactical gains but I don’t see how there’s any strategic advantage’, he added. ‘When innocent people die, then you’re creating a whole lot more people with an issue.’
**
****Grow
ing tensions

Drone attacks have long been a source of tension between the US and Pakistan despite the fact that the Pakistan government gave tacit agreement, even allowing them to fly from Shamsi airbase in the western province of Baluchistan, while publicly denouncing the attacks.**
**In return the US made sure that some of the terrorists killed were those targeting Pakistan.
**
However the relationship has been stretched to breaking point, first with the raid to kill Osama bin Laden in May and subsequent US accusations of Pakistani complicity, then the NATO bombing of a Pakistani post in November, killing 24 soldiers. In December Pakistan ordered the CIA to vacate the Shamsi base. For a while drone attacks stopped but they resumed two weeks ago.

**The US claims the drones are a vital tool that have helped them almost wipe out the leadership of al Qaeda in Pakistan. But others point out they have stoked enormous anti-American sentiment in a country with an arsenal of 200 nuclear weapons.
**
Peter Singer, director of the 21[SUP]st[/SUP] Century Initiative at the Brookings Institution, points out the operation has never been debated in Congress which has to approve sending US forces to war.

So dramatic is the switch to unmanned war that he says the US now has 7,000 drones operating and 12,000 more on the ground, while not a single new manned combat aircraft is under research or development at any western aerospace company.

After a remarkable lack of debate, there is starting to be unease in the US at the lack of transparency and accountability in the use of drones particularly as the campaign has expanded to hit targets in Libya, Yemen and Somalia and until recently to patrol the skies in Iraq.

Three US citizens were killed by missiles fired from drones in Yemen last September. Anwar al Awlaqi, an alleged al Qaeda operative, was deliberately targeted in what some have described as the US government’s first ever execution of one of its own citizens without trial. His colleague and fellow citizen Samir Khan also died in the attack. Two weeks later Awlaqi’s 16 year old son Abdulrahman died in a strike on alleged al Qaeda militants.

Such unmanned war is a politician’s dream, avoiding the inconvenience of sending someone’s son or daughter, mother or father, into harm’s way.

The fact that the operations are carried out by the CIA rather than the US military enables the administration to evade questions. The Agency press office responds to media inquiries on the subject with no comment and refusal to give names of those killed or who are on the target list.

Until Obama’s comments last week, the White House would not even confirm the programme existed.

‘We don’t discuss classified programs or comment on alleged strikes’, said a senior administration official in response to the findings presented by the Sunday Times.

**Lawsuit
**
The ACLU filed a lawsuit last week demanding the Obama administration release legal and intelligence records on the killing of the three US citizens in in Yemen.

Privately some senior US military officers say they are extremely uncomfortable at the way the administration is carrying out these operations using the CIA which is not covered by laws of war or the Geneva Convention.

The use of drones outside a declared war zone is seen by many legal experts as setting a dangerous precedent. Aside from allies such as Israel, Britain and France, other countries have drone technology including China, Russia and Pakistan. Iran recently captured a downed US drone.
**Heyns, the UN rapporteur, said an international legal framework is urgently needed to govern their use.
**
**‘Our concern is how far does it go – will the whole world be a theatre of war?’ he asked. ‘Drones in principle allow collateral damage to be minimised but because they can be used without danger to a country’s own troops they tend to be used more widely. One doesn’t want to use the term ticking bomb but it’s extremely seductive.’
**
Additional reporting by Rahimullah Yusufzai in Peshawar, Pakistan
Christina Lamb is the Washington Bureau Chief of the Sunday Times