Published on The National Interest (http://nationalinterest.org)
[1]
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Doing
nothing is better than doing the only thing available.
A
recent study [3] by
Emily Manna about drone strikes and terrorism in Pakistan warrants attention as
a useful contribution to discussion of the effectiveness of such strikes as a
counterterrorism tool.
The issue
of just how useful the firings of missiles from unmanned aerial vehicles,
commonly called drones, are in killing suspected terrorists on the ground, has
multiple dimensions. Larger legal and moral questions arise with this form of
remote-control violence being inflicted in disparate places ranging across many
international boundaries—especially in the absence of any well-defined and
up-to-date congressional authorization for the overseas use of force.
A narrower
question of effectiveness concerns how much the killing of individual members,
including even leading members, leads to the weakening or demise of any
existing terrorist group. The tactic is only one of several approaches toward
trying to eliminate a terrorist group [4], and not
necessarily one of the more effective ones. Groups with a well-developed
internal structure, which also tend to be the more formidable and sophisticated
groups, are adept at filling vacancies. Sometimes the replacement turns out to
be more able than the leader who was bumped off. This was true when Israel’s
killing of Hezbollah secretary general Abbas Musawi led to the succession of
the more capable Hassan Nasrallah. It also was true when the death of Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, cleared the way for the more adept Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi to take over and to expand the group into what we now know as
ISIS.
Another set
of issues that are just important concerns hostile reactions to this use of
force by the United States, leading to anger and resentment that pushes some
people across the line into extremist violence and thus breeding more
terrorists than there were before. There is some reason to believe that most
such counterproductive effects occur at some remove from the location of drone
strikes; word of the destructive application of U.S. power can spread quickly
and widely, but any favorable effects of removing a bad guy from the
neighborhood would tend to be more local. If net positive effects are to be
observed, they would more likely be relatively close to the scene of a drone
strike.
Manna’s
research suggests that, at least in Pakistan, the effects are negative even in
the neighborhood of a drone strike. Her methodology involved looking at
individual provinces and correlating terrorist activity in the same month as,
and the month following, drone strikes. The principal finding was a
statistically significant rise in terrorist attacks in a province after it
became the target of U.S. drone strikes.
The U.S.
program of drone strikes never was the result of a calculated process of
analyzing the effects of different counterterrorist tools and choosing this tool
as more effective than some others. Rather, the tool was seized on because it
was the only way to reach some suspected terrorists in remote areas, at least
short of staging a major military ground expedition into those areas. But if
the result of a tactic—in counterterrorism or any other endeavor—is a net minus
rather than a net plus, then it ought not to be used even if it is the only
tactic available. As more analyzable data from the drone program become
available, they ought to be used to take fresh looks at the rationale for the
entire program. And political leaders need to resist the temptation to seize
upon certain tactics as a way of responding to popular demand to “do something”
about terrorism.
Paul R.
Pillar is a contributing editor at the National Interest and
the author most recently of Why America Misunderstands the World [5].
Source URL (retrieved on July 24, 2016): http://nationalinterest.org/blog/paul-pillar/more-proof-americas-drone-war-doesnt-work-17068
Links:
[1] http://nationalinterest.org/blog/paul-pillar/more-proof-americas-drone-war-doesnt-work-17068
[2] http://nationalinterest.org/profile/paul-r-pillar
[3] http://gppreview.com/2016/07/08/exploring-link-drone-strikes-retaliation/
[4] https://www.amazon.com/How-Terrorism-Ends-Understanding-Terrorist/dp/069115239X
[5] http://amzn.to/29cUXYG
[6] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MQ-1C_Warrior.jpg
[7] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/foreign-policy
[8] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/defense
[9] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/drones
[10] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/unmanned-aerial-vehicles
[11] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/terrorism
[12] http://nationalinterest.org/topic/security
[13] http://nationalinterest.org/region/americas
[2] http://nationalinterest.org/profile/paul-r-pillar
[3] http://gppreview.com/2016/07/08/exploring-link-drone-strikes-retaliation/
[4] https://www.amazon.com/How-Terrorism-Ends-Understanding-Terrorist/dp/069115239X
[5] http://amzn.to/29cUXYG
[6] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MQ-1C_Warrior.jpg
[7] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/foreign-policy
[8] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/defense
[9] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/drones
[10] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/unmanned-aerial-vehicles
[11] http://nationalinterest.org/tag/terrorism
[12] http://nationalinterest.org/topic/security
[13] http://nationalinterest.org/region/americas
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has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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