Stratfor
Hellfire, Morality and Strategy
February 19, 2013 | 1003 GMT
Airstrikes by unmanned aerial vehicles have become a
matter of serious dispute lately. The controversy focuses on the United States,
which has the biggest fleet of these weapons and which employs them more
frequently than any other country. On one side of this dispute are those who
regard them simply as another weapon of war whose virtue is the precision with
which they strike targets. On the other side are those who argue that in
general, unmanned aerial vehicles are used to kill specific individuals, frequently
civilians, thus denying the targeted individuals their basic right to some form
of legal due process.
Let's begin with the
weapons systems, the MQ-1 Predator and the MQ-9 Reaper.
The media call them drones, but they are actually remotely piloted aircraft.
Rather than being in the cockpit, the pilot is at a ground station, receiving
flight data and visual images from the aircraft and sending command signals
back to it via a satellite data link. Numerous advanced systems and
technologies work together to make this possible, but it is important to
remember that most of these technologies have been around in some form for
decades, and the U.S. government first integrated them in the 1990s. The
Predator carries two Hellfire missiles -- precision-guided munitions that, once
locked onto the target by the pilot, guide themselves to the target with a high
likelihood of striking it. The larger Reaper carries an even larger payload of
ordnance -- up to 14 Hellfire missiles or four Hellfire missiles and two
500-pound bombs. Most airstrikes from these aircraft use Hellfire missiles,
which cause less collateral damage.
Unlike a manned aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles
can remain in the air for an extended period of time -- an important capability
for engaging targets that may only present a very narrow target window. This
ability to loiter, and then strike quickly when a target presents itself, is
what has made these weapons systems
preferable to fixed wing aircraft and
cruise missiles.
The Argument Against Airstrikes
What makes unmanned aerial vehicle strikes
controversial is that they are used to deliberately
target specific individuals -- in other words, people who
are known or suspected, frequently by name, of being actively hostile to the
United States or allied governments. This distinguishes unmanned aerial
vehicles from most weapons that have been used since the age of explosives
began. The modern battlefield -- and the ancient as well -- has been marked by
anonymity. The enemy was not a distinct individual but an army, and the killing
of soldiers in an enemy army did not carry with it any sense of personal
culpability. In general, no individual soldier was selected for special
attention, and his death was not an act of punishment. He was killed because of
his membership in an army and not because of any specific action he might have
carried out.
Another facet of the controversy is that it is often
not clear whether the individuals targeted by these weapons are members of an
enemy force. U.S. military or intelligence services reach that conclusion about
a target based on intelligence that convinces them of the individual's
membership in a hostile group.
There are those who object to all war and all
killing; we are not addressing those issues here. We are addressing the
arguments of those who object to this particular sort of killing. The reasoning
is that when you are targeting a particular individual based on his
relationships, you are introducing the idea of culpability, and that that
culpability makes the decision-maker -- whoever he is -- both judge and
executioner, without due process. Those who argue this line also believe that
the use of these weapons is a process that is not only given to error but also
fundamentally violates principles of human rights and gives the state the power
of life and death without oversight. Again excluding absolute pacifists from
this discussion, the objection is that the use of unmanned aerial vehicles is
not so much an act of war as an act of judgment and, as such, violates
international law that requires due process for a soldier being judged and
executed. To put it simply, the critics regard what they call drone strikes as
summary executions, not acts of war.
The Argument for Airstrikes
The counterargument is that the United States is
engaged in a unique sort of war. Al Qaeda and the
allied groups and sympathetic individuals that
comprise the international jihadist movement are global, dispersed and sparse.
They are not a hierarchical military organization. Where conventional forces
have divisions and battalions, the global jihadist movement consists primarily
of individuals who at times group together into distinct regional franchises,
small groups and cells, and frequently even these groups are scattered. Their
mission is to survive and to carry out acts of violence designed to demoralize
the enemy and increase their political influence among the populations they
wish to control.
The primary unit is the individual, and the
individuals -- particularly the commanders -- isolate themselves and make
themselves as difficult to find as possible. Given their political intentions
and resources, sparse forces dispersed without regard to national boundaries
use their isolation as the equivalent of technological stealth to make them
survivable and able to carefully mount military operations against the enemy at
unpredictable times and in unpredictable ways.
The argument for using strikes from unmanned aerial
vehicles is that it is not an attack on an individual any more than an
artillery barrage that kills a hundred is an attack on each individual. Rather,
the jihadist movement presents a unique case in which the individual
jihadist is the military unit.
In war, the goal is to render the enemy incapable of
resisting through the use of force. In all wars and all militaries, imperfect
intelligence, carelessness and sometimes malice have caused military action to
strike at innocent people. In World War II, not only did bombing raids designed
to attack legitimate military targets kill civilians not engaged in activities supporting
the military, mission planners knew that in some cases innocents would be
killed. This is true in every military conflict and is accepted as one of the
consequences of war.
The argument in favor of using unmanned aerial
vehicle strikes is, therefore, that the act of killing the individual is a
military necessity dictated by the enemy's strategy and that it is carried out
with the understanding that both intelligence and precision might fail, no
matter how much care is taken. This means not only that civilians might be
killed in a particular strike but also that the strike might hit the wrong
target. The fact that a specific known individual is being targeted does not
change the issue from a military matter to a judicial one.
It would seem to me that these strikes do not
violate the rules of war and that they require no more legal overview than was
given in thousands of bomber raids in World War II. And we should be cautious
in invoking international law. The Hague Convention of 1907 states that:
The laws, rights, and duties of war
apply not only to armies, but also to militia and volunteer corps fulfilling
the following conditions:
To be commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates;
To have a fixed distinctive emblem recognizable at a distance;
To carry arms openly; and
To conduct their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.
To be commanded by a person responsible for his subordinates;
To have a fixed distinctive emblem recognizable at a distance;
To carry arms openly; and
To conduct their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.
The 1949 Geneva Convention states that:
Members of other militias and members of
other volunteer corps, including those of organized resistance movements,
belonging to a Party to the conflict and operating in or outside their own
territory, even if this territory is occupied, provided that such militias or
volunteer corps, including such organized resistance movements, fulfill the
following conditions:
(a) that of being commanded by a person
responsible for his subordinates;
(b) that of having a fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance;
(c) that of carrying arms openly;
(d) that of conducting their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.
(b) that of having a fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance;
(c) that of carrying arms openly;
(d) that of conducting their operations in accordance with the laws and customs of war.
Ignoring the question of whether jihadist operations
are in accordance with the rules and customs of war, their failure to carry a
"fixed distinctive sign recognizable at a distance" is a violation of
both the Hague and Geneva conventions. This means that considerations given to
soldiers under the rules of war do not apply to those waging war without
insignia.
Open insignia is fundamental to the rules of war. It
was instituted after the Franco-Prussian war, when French snipers dressed as
civilians fired on Germans. It was viewed that the snipers had endangered
civilians because it was a soldier's right to defend himself and that since
they were dressed as civilians, the French snipers -- not the Germans -- were
responsible for the civilian deaths. It follows from this that, to the extent
that jihadist militants provide no sign of who they are, they are responsible
under international law when civilians are killed because of uncertainty as to
who is a soldier and who is not. Thus the onus on ascertaining the nature of
the target rests with the United States, but if there is error, the
responsibility for that error rests with jihadists for not distinguishing
themselves from civilians.
There is of course a greater complexity to this:
attacking targets in countries that are not in a state of war with the United
States and that have not consented to these attacks. For better or worse, the
declaration of war has not been in fashion since World War II. But the
jihadist movement has complicated this problem
substantially. The jihadists' strategy is to be dispersed. Part of its strategy
is to move from areas where it is under military pressure to places that are more
secure. Thus the al Qaeda core group moved its headquarters from Afghanistan to
Pakistan. But in truth, jihadists operate wherever military and political
advantages take them, from the Maghreb to Mumbai and beyond.
In a method of war where the individual is the prime
unit and where lack of identification is a primary defensive method, the
conduct of intelligence operations wherever the enemy might be, regardless of
borders, follows. So do operations to destroy enemy units -- individuals. If a
country harbors such individuals knowingly, it is an enemy. If it is incapable
of destroying the enemy units, it forfeits its right to claim sovereignty since
part of sovereignty is a responsibility to prevent attacks on other countries.
If we simply follow the logic we laid out here, then
the critics of unmanned aerial vehicle strikes have a weak case. It is not
illegitimate to target individuals in a military force like the jihadist
movement, and international law holds them responsible for collateral damage, not
the United States. Moreover, respecting national sovereignty requires that a
country's sovereignty be used to halt attacks against countries with which they
are not at war. When a country cannot or will not take those steps, and people
within their border pose a threat to the United States, the country has no
basis for objecting to intelligence operations and airstrikes. The question, of
course, is where this ends. Yemen or Mali might
be one case, but the logic here does not preclude any country. Indeed, since al
Qaeda tried in the past to operate in the United States itself, and its
operatives might be in the United States, it logically follows that the United
States could use unmanned aerial vehicles domestically as well. Citizenship is
likewise no protection from attacks against a force hostile to the United
States.
But within the United States, or countries like the
United Kingdom, there are many other preferable means to neutralize jihadist
threats. When the police or internal security forces can arrest jihadists
plotting attacks, there quite simply is no need for airstrikes from unmanned
aerial vehicles. They are tools to be used when a government cannot or will not
take action to mitigate the threat.
The Strategic Drawback
There are two points I have been driving toward. The
first is that the outrage at targeted killing is not, in my view, justified on
moral or legal grounds. The second is that in using these techniques, the
United States is on a slippery slope because of the basis on which it has
chosen to wage war.
The United States has engaged an enemy that is
dispersed across the globe. If the strategy is to go wherever the enemy is,
then the war is limitless. It is also endless. The power of the jihadist
movement is that it is diffuse. It does not need vast armies to be successful.
Therefore, the destruction of some of its units will always result in their
replacement. Quality might decline for a while but eventually will recover.
The enemy strategy is to draw the United States into
an extended conflict that validates its narrative that the United States is
permanently at war with Islam. It wants to force the United States to engage in
as many countries as possible. From the U.S. point of view, unmanned aerial
vehicles are the perfect weapon because they can attack the jihadist command
structure without risk to ground forces. From the jihadist point of view as
well, unmanned aerial vehicles are the perfect weapon because their efficiency
allows the jihadists to lure the United States into other countries and, with
sufficient manipulation, can increase the number of innocents who are killed.
In this sort of war, the problem of killing
innocents is practical. It undermines the strategic effort. The argument that
it is illegal is dubious, and to my mind, so is the argument that it is
immoral. The argument that it is ineffective in achieving U.S. strategic goals
of eliminating the threat of terrorist actions by jihadists is my point.
Unmanned aerial vehicles provide a highly efficient
way to destroy key enemy targets with very little risk to personnel. But they
also allow the enemy to draw the United States into additional theaters of
operation because the means is so efficient and low cost. However, in the
jihadists' estimate, the political cost to the United States is substantial.
The broader the engagement, the greater the perception of U.S. hostility to
Islam, the easier the recruitment until the jihadist forces reach a size that
can't be dealt with by isolated airstrikes.
In warfare, enemies will try to get you to strike at
what they least mind losing. The case against strikes by unmanned aerial
vehicles is not that they are ineffective against specific targets but that the
targets are not as vital as the United States thinks. The United States
believes that the destruction of the leadership is the most efficient way to
destroy the threat of the jihadist movement. In fact it only mitigates the
threat while new leadership emerges. The strength of the jihadist movement is
that it is global, sparse and dispersed. It does not provide a target whose
destruction weakens the movement. However, the jihadist movement's weakness
derives from its strength: It is limited in what it can do and where.
The problem of unmanned aerial vehicles is that they
are so effective from the U.S. point of view that they have become the weapon
of first resort. Thus, the United States is being drawn into operations in new
areas with what appears to be little cost. In the long run, it is not clear
that the cost is so little. A military strategy to defeat the jihadists is
impossible. At its root, the real struggle against the jihadists is
ideological, and that struggle simply cannot be won with Hellfire missiles. A
strategy of mitigation using airstrikes is possible, but such a campaign must
not become geographically limitless. Unmanned aerial vehicles lead to
geographical limitlessness. That is their charm; that is their danger.
No comments:
Post a Comment