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28 September 2010 By Rick Rozoff On September 25 three missiles fired from a U.S.
Predator drone killed four people near the capital of
North Waziristan in Pakistan’s Federally Administered
Tribal Areas, marking at least the 16th such attack in
the country so far this month. This September has seen the largest amount of
American unmanned aerial vehicle – drone – attacks in
Pakistan and the most deaths resulting from them of
any month in the nine-year war waged by the United
States and its North Atlantic Treaty Organization
allies in Afghanistan and, though insufficiently
acknowledged, increasingly in Pakistan. By way of comparison, in the deadliest month
preceding this one, January of 2010, there were 11
missile strikes directed by the Central Intelligence
Agency’s Special Activities unit inside Pakistan. Last
September there were six. In 2009 there were 53 drone attacks. This year so
far there have been nearly 75. The estimated death
toll from strikes for last year was 709. In less than
nine months this year there have been close to 650. If
the annual, and surely if September’s monthly, rate
continues, 2010 will be the deadliest year to date
just as this month is already the deadliest month. The amount of fatalities this year may well have
been substantially higher except for the catastrophic
flooding that beset Pakistan starting in late July and
caused the confirmed deaths of at least 1,500 people,
the destruction of one million homes and the
displacement of millions of Pakistanis. Although the
inundation and the damage it wreaked did not directly
affect the main targets of U.S. drone strikes, North
Waziristan and South Waziristan, there were only five
unmanned aerial vehicle attacks in July and four in
August. There have been at least four times more
strikes and almost the same ratio of deaths this month
than in the preceding one. Reliable figures for fatalities are harder to
determine than the number of Hellfire missiles fired
by U.S. Predator drones. Calculations for both are
provided on a daily basis by the website of the New
America Foundation and by a Wikipedia page on the
subject. [1] The first is transparently supportive of the drone
assassination campaign; the tone of the second is
closer to being neutral. As of September 25 both sites
show identical figures for the amount of attacks and
deaths so far this year – 72 and 639, respectively –
and list information on every individual incident from
2004 to the present. However, the casualty figures are
within a range of minimum to maximum estimated deaths
in each instance and are occasionally lower than
reports in Pakistani news accounts. For example, the New America Foundation reports the
deaths of 4-6 people identified as militants on
September 20 in North Waziristan and Wikipedia reports
a total of 19 killed in two attacks in the agency on
the same day, but Pakistan’s Daily Times revealed that
“At least 28 people were killed in three US led drone
strikes in the remote areas of South and North
Waziristan” [2] on that day. The additional numbers in
the Pakistani version alone push this month’s death
toll – 122 by adding the Wikipedia numbers – to only
one short of the previous monthly high of 132 from
this January. And there are five more days left in
September. Wikipedia calculations from 2004 to now document
167 drone attacks and 1,753 deaths. 72 or more strikes
this year, then, account for over 43 percent of the
total in a six-year period, notwithstanding the lull
following this summer’s flooding. The 2010 death count
to date constitutes 37 percent of all fatalities since
2004. The approximately 1,800 people killed in Pakistan
by drone attacks are invariably referred to in the
Western press as armed militants belonging to outfits
affiliated with al-Qaeda, members of Pakistani Taliban
and allied formations like the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan of Baitullah Mehsud (killed with his wife and
in-laws in a drone strike in August of 2009), Lashkar
al-Zil and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and veteran Afghan
Mujahedin organizations such as the Haqqani network
and Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin, a handful of Arab and
Chechen fighters, and members of the Islamic Movement
of Uzbekistan and the Turkistan Islamic Party (al-Hizb
al-Islami al-Turkistani), the last claiming to be
fighting for the liberation of what it calls East
Turkistan – that is, China’s Xinjiang Uyghur
Autonomous Region. It is worth recalling that last year then-commander
of all U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, General
Stanley McChrystal, issued his COMISAF (Commander of
International Security Assistance Force) Initial
Assessment which, while calling for the surge in U.S.
and NATO forces that has occurred in the interim,
stated “The major insurgent groups in order of their
threat to the mission are: the Quetta Shura Taliban
(05T), the Haqqani Network (HQN), and the Hezb-e
Islami Gulbuddin (HiG).” [3] The Haqqani network is led by Jalaluddin Haqqani
and his son Sirajuddin and Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin by
its founder Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. The elder Haqqani and
Hekmatyar were among America’s – the CIA’s – main
clients and proxies during the Pakistani-based war
against the successive Afghanistan governments of Nur
Muhammad Taraki, Hafizullah Amin, Babrak Karmal and
Mohammad Najibullah and their Soviet backers from
1978-1992. Several thousand Afghans and Pakistanis
have been killed in the past nine years in a war waged
by Washington in large part against its former assets. Citing Pakistani government sources, the nation’s
Dawn News reported this January that in 2009 the U.S.
launched 44 Predator drone attacks in Pakistan which
killed 708 people. Contrary to how the victims were
routinely characterized in the American and most of
the world press, of the nearly four dozen attacks
“only five were able to hit their actual targets,
killing five key Al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders, but at
the cost of over 700 innocent civilians.” As a result, “For each Al-Qaeda and Taliban
terrorist killed by US drones, 140 innocent Pakistanis
also had to die. Over 90 per cent of those killed in
the deadly missile strikes were civilians, claim
authorities.” [4] The persistent threat of attacks has instilled
intense and abiding fear in the people of South
Waziristan in particular and the cumulative effect of
over two years of steady drone strikes – never knowing
at what hour of the day or night they will occur,
whether the first will be followed by others – will
unavoidably create collective post-traumatic stress
disorder among all sectors of the population,
especially children, who face a lifetime of panic and
other anxiety and mood problems, flashbacks, night
terrors and hypervigilance. With this month’s numbers added, U.S. drone attacks
have killed more people in Pakistan than those
confirmed dead from the recent disastrous flooding.
Starting last year strikes have expanded beyond the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas to Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa (until this April the North-West Frontier
Province). In 2009 the New York Times reported that
leading American government officials were “proposing
to broaden the missile strikes to Baluchistan,” on
Iran’s southeast border. Several milestones have been marked in South Asia
this year. There are now more foreign troops in
Afghanistan than in any other period in the nation’s
history: 150,000 under U.S. and NATO command,
currently 80 percent of them under NATO’s. On
September 25 the 535th Western soldier was killed,
surpassing last year’s previous high of 521. And U.S. drones attacks in Pakistan have claimed
more victims than in any previous year amid
indications that their number and lethal effect will
continue to escalate. 1) New America Foundation http://counterterrorism.newamerica.net/drones Wikipedia: Drone attacks in Pakistan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drone_attacks_in_Pakistan 2) Daily Times, September 22, 2010 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/
2009/../AR2009092100110.html 4) Dawn News, January 2, 2010 http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/
connect/dawn-content-library/ dawn/news/pakistan/18-over-700-killed-in-44-drone-strikes-in-2009-am-01 |