At least 1 in 5 drone strike victims a confirmed civilian – leaked Pakistani records
by alethoRT | July 22, 2013
Leaked
internal data produced by Pakistani officials documenting drone strikes
on the ground reveal a high civilian death toll, countering US claims
that the targeted assassination campaign results in “exceedingly rare”
fatalities.
A 12-page report,
titled ‘Details of Attacks by NATO Forces/Predators in FATA (Federally
Administered Tribal Areas)’ describes 75 CIA drone attacks between 2006
and 2009, with death tolls compiled by officials in the turbulent border
regions for internal use by the government. The Bureau of Investigative
Journalism – a UK news website – says it obtained three identical
copies of the classified document from various sources in Pakistan.
The
numbers show a death toll of 746 people, 147 of whom were confirmed as
civilians. Of those civilian deaths, 94 are children. Statistically, it
means at least one in five victims of US precision strikes was a
civilian, and more than 12 per cent were minors.
“There
was no benefit in officials ‘cooking the books’ here, since this
document was clearly never intended to be seen outside the civilian
administration,” said Rauf Khan Khattak, who recently served as Pakistan’s interim finance minister.
The
US President and the CIA do not have to disclose details of what is
officially considered a classified program to Senate or to the public,
so official American estimates have never been released. CIA Director
John Brennan, considered to be the architect of the drone program, has
said that “we only authorize a strike if we have a high degree of
confidence that innocent civilians will not be injured or killed, except
in the rarest of circumstances,” and that collateral deaths
themselves are “exceedingly rare.” And an internal incomplete official
report leaked earlier this year – covering a later period – showed that
the CIA thought that only one out of every 482 people it killed was a
civilian.
But
the Pakistani numbers tally much closer with those provided by outside
sources. The bipartisan New American Foundation estimates that at least
12 per cent of drone strike victims are definitely civilians, and the
Bureau of Investigative Journalism itself claims the number could be as
high as 25 per cent.
Rauf
Khan Khattak, a long-time opponent of foreign drone strikes, believes
the newest figures could be the most reliable obtained so far.
“What
you end up with in these reports is reasonably accurate, because it
comes from on-the-ground sources cultivated over many years. And the
political agent is only interested in properly understanding what
actually happened,” he told the Bureau of Investigative Journalism.
But
others have urged for these documents to be taken into consideration
only when measured against other sources. For example, following Barack
Obama’s inauguration in 2009, only three civilian death incidents are
recorded through the year up until late October, when the data ends –
even though media reports from the same time indicate that civilians and
children had died in attacks included in the FATA document.
“Tribal
documents might present a broad picture. But any accuracy is dependent
on what data the military chooses to release to or withhold from the
political agents. In the last eight years, for example, no precise
casualty figures have ever been submitted to Pakistan’s parliament,” said former FATA official and minister Rustan Shah Mohmand.
Independent
sources estimate that around 2,500 and perhaps more than 3,500 people
have been killed in UAV strikes on Pakistan since 2004. Obama has ramped
up the program significantly since coming into office.
The
difficulty in establishing the precise number of civilians among those
is also compounded by the identity of the supposed militants and the
CIA’s own targeting protocols , known as 'signature strikes'.
Militants
may simply be a villager engaged in an insurgency, and will have little
to separate himself from a civilian, and vice versa. There is also
little incentive for relatives to inform the authorities that any UAV
strike victim is a militant, and much of the data is compiled on hearsay
and local knowledge.
In
turn, the US has tacitly admitted that it picks the majority of its
targets based on a pattern of behavior – suspicious movements, contact
with established targets, attendance of training centers, and other
indirect indicators. Drones sometimes target follow-up events that occur
as a result of its previous strikes, such as funerals of past drone
targets. The earlier leaked documents showed that out of the 482 people
killed, only six were known al-Qaeda commanders.
But
even when taking all these variables into consideration and
interpreting them in the most favorable light possible to the US, it is
hard to agree with Obama’s recent assertion that the CIA has a "near-certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured" before each drone attack.
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