Guarding the Empire from Four Miles Up
They are unpopular all over the world, with one exception. According to a new Pew Research Center poll, the only country where a majority of citizens support drone strikes is the country that uses the new technology most regularly: the United States.
Only 28 percent of U.S. citizens oppose drone strikes, compared to 62 percent who approve of their use. Once again, they prove the exception to the rule.
As Nick Turse and Tom Engelhardt write in alternating chapters in their terrifying new book “Terminator Planet”, drones have been part of U.S. exceptionalism from their very beginning. They were introduced in the late 1990s to conduct surveillance during the Kosovo conflict, and they soon became a major element of the U.S. dominance of airspace.
As the two authors point out, even before the introduction of drones, U.S. pilots had such overwhelming air superiority that Pentagon chief Robert Gates, in a 2011 speech, could declare that the United States hadn’t lost a plane during air combat or a soldier from enemy aircraft attack in 40 years.
With a persistent economic crisis putting cost-cutting pressure on the Pentagon budget, drones have become a low-cost method of preserving U.S. military dominance and thus the status of the United States as the single global superpower. As Engelhardt points out, drones are an integral part of “guarding the empire on the cheap as well as on the sly, via the CIA.”
But drones have played another key role in extending the tradition of U.S. exceptionalism. The Barack Obama administration, inheriting the counter-terrorism program from its predecessor, expanded the use of drones to kill top Al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders.
“No more poison-dart-tipped umbrellas, as in past KGB operations, or toxic cigars as in CIA ones – not now that assassination has taken to the skies as an everyday, all-year-round activity,” writes Engelhardt.
The United States has asserted its right to conduct these assassinations outside of war zones in the face of global public opinion, U.N. reports, and international law.
In this collection of essays that originally appeared on the Tom Dispatch website, Nick Turse provides a comprehensive mapping of the new drone world the Pentagon and the CIA have created. The Reapers and Predators and Global Hawks take off from the al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, the bases at Incirlik in Turkey and Sigonella in Italy, from new sites in Djibouti and Ethiopia and the Seychelles, across Afghanistan, and now even in Asia.
The military has come to rely more and more on the new technology. One in three military aircraft are robots. In 2004, Reapers flew 71 hours. In 2006, this number had gone up to 3,123 hours. By 2009, the flying time had increased to 25,391 hours.
With manpower tied up in operations in Afghanistan, anti-base movements challenging large concentrations of U.S. soldiers abroad, and bureaucrats in Washington desperately looking for places to cut the U.S. budget, drones appear as an attractive alternative.
“We are moving toward an ever greater outsourcing of war to things that cannot protest, cannot vote with their feet (or wings), and for whom there is no ‘home front’ or even a home at all,” Engelhardt observes.
The global unpopularity of drones stems in large part from their fallibility. The pilots and screeners viewing the footage from the safety of bases in the United States make a lot of mistakes and end up killing a lot of civilians, several hundred in Pakistan alone, including nearly 200 children.
So far, U.S. citizens are immune to these effects of drones. They have been reassured by the Obama administration that drones surgically remove the cancer and leave the surrounding healthy tissue intact.
Moreover, the United States continues to maintain a major technological edge in the research and development of drones. The risk of a drone attack on the United States remains low, though the George W. Bush administration justified its attack on Iraq in part on the belief that Saddam Hussein could launch weapons of mass destruction against the United States via drones.
But drone attacks have also generated enormous anti-U.S. sentiment, as the Pew poll suggests. The Times Square bomber, whose car bomb failed to detonate in Times Square in New York in 2010, was motivated to act in part because of U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan.
Also, other countries – Israel, Russia, China, even Iran – have entered the drone business. It may only be a matter of time before the United States loses its dominant market share.
Turse and Engelhardt are divided on the question of whether drones represent a fundamental revolution in military affairs or simply an extension of an earlier trend toward air superiority.
“Such machines are not, of course, advanced cyborgs,” Engelhardt writes. “They are in some ways not even all that advanced.”
Moreover, modern air defense systems can rather easily bring down these drones. They have been effective only in places where they are largely unchallenged.
On the other hand, in the same way that the exponential growth of the web not only revolutionized communication but transformed the way humans think, drones may well be precipitating a change in how the United States, and increasingly the rest of the world, is thinking about war and national boundaries. The two authors describe various futuristic scenarios that pit autonomous drones, preprogrammed to target and fight, against each other.
In one of these scenarios, drawn from a Pentagon document titled the “Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap, FY 2011-2036,” U.S. drones detect and neutralize other drones tampering with an undersea oil pipeline off the coast of West Africa. This projection into the future of drones anticipates that the United States maintains its lead in drone technology.
The other scenario that the authors return to again and again is from Hollywood: the “Terminator” movies starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as a cyborg sent from the future to the present to kill the woman who would eventually give birth to a rebel leader. That leader, John Connor, is in charge of the human resistance to the robots that rule the planet.
The Pentagon is betting on the first scenario. Turse and Engelhardt are concerned that a naïve faith in technology, a consistent belief in U.S. exceptionalism, and the exponential spread of drones around the world may well bring about a world much closer to Hollywood’s nightmare vision.
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6 comments on "Guarding the Empire from Four Miles Up"
June 18, 2012 7:52am
The biggest problem with your comment is that they are aircraft not rockets. Also they fly well below the speed of sound, so they are not zipping around. The next problem is that they are flying over the US right now.
June 20, 2012 2:47pm
An inexpensive supersonic drone would take flight by 2013 if everything goes right for its developers at the University of Colorado Boulder. The team of engineers is developing a nearly 6-foot-long (1.76 meters) unmanned aircraft that would fly at Mach 1.4, just above the speed of sound.
I believe your are a bit uninformed.
June 17, 2012 12:24pm
The question is not to use drones or live in peace. The US was compelled by 9/11 to vigorously engage the Global War on Terror and to that end will project power globally. Air power is its preferred tool. So the question is to use manned aircraft or drones? Clearly drones have lower capital and operational costs. They also have significant advantages in “time on station” as well as lower airspeed and less visibility. Without statistics, I suspect those advantages also translate into increased command and control, greater patience in target acquisition and reduced collateral damage.
June 20, 2012 3:03pm
Spoken like a military robot. The societal price of war has been and always will be hidden from the public (note see Bush's policy of not photographing coffins of DEAD Americans). Keeping secret the horrors of war perpetual the fallacy of victimless attacks. There is no such thing a victimless attack. The fact is that more innocent victims are killed, maimed and displaced during a war then the soldiers fighting the war is evidence that war is criminal. Obama does not like it when news reports reveal that women and children are killed during drone attacks so he uses language to redefine his enemies saying”. All those in the attack are must be connected to the enemy and as such can be killed" without remorse on my part. That’s right america justify murder with semantics!
June 17, 2012 12:15pm
The little known author was God who sent this message to all the Prophets. That is why this Golden Rule is found in practically every religion world wide. As for Arab and many other races hatred of the US it stemmed from US support of the puppet dictators set up over them. Saddan Hussein was one such US supported dictator.
The so called Arab Spring proves that the Middle East people do want a home grown version of democracy and will reject anything imposed upon them quite rightly. The US should stop being the World Bully and let everyone everywhere develop their own versions of democracy. Every drone strike is a blow against democracy and a blow for extremism.
June 17, 2012 10:40am
It figures the morally bankrupct US is the only nation which supports drone warfare.My moral philosophy is based on a little known author who says "do unto others as you would have them do unto you"How many of you would enjoy rockets constantly flying over your head,wondering if you will be accidently targeted.We call the Arahs cowards for their terrorist attacks,what does it make us when we murder from thousands of miles away with no chance of harm to ourselves.Eventually the other countries will catch up to us and i wonder how people of the US will feel when they watch rockets zipping over head,wondering if they have been targeted or will be accidently killed.Conservative dregs say the Arabs hate us for our Democracy,I say they hate us for being terrorist and thiefs.