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Transparency On US Drone Warfare

Wildfire

Alfrescian
Loyal
06-21-2012 10:43 BJT CCTV

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The UN's human rights council in Geneva has asked the US for more transparency
and accountability regarding drone warfare.

During the Bush presidency, there were 429 drone related deaths between 2004 and 2008.
But President Obama expanded the practice. During his tenure, 2,025 people have died in
drone attacks–his administration targeting specific terror leaders like al Qaeda propagandist,
Anwar al Awlaki—operating in Yemen.

Power to use lethal force
outside war zones is concentrated at the White House. President
Obama pictured here in his weekly briefing with his counter terrorism chief John Brennan and
national security advisor Tom Donilon, reportedly pours over photos and biographies of the
targets, known as the “kill list.”

Secretary of state Hillary Clinton and her Pentagon counterpart Leon Panetta are consulted,
but the missions targeting individual terror suspects are carried out by the CIA.

International law expert Gary Solis says this is part of the legal dilemma.

Solis said, “We have in the US Two drone programs—the military and the CIA. The military is
clearly under the laws of armed conflict. They may employ drones as another weapon of war.
The question arises over the legitimacy of civilians using weapons of war, however, and the
CIA and the contractors.”

Also questions about attacks on individuals in other sovereign nations. The US uses drones
against al Qaeda in Pakistan and Yemen and against the al Shabab terror network in Somalia.

Solis said, “Where is the battlefield? Can the US lawfully deploy drones in Yemen, Somalia
and so forth? And that is the question which is unresolved in international law.”
 
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