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US drone strikes could be classed as war crimes | Amnesty International

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US drone strikes could be classed as war crimes, says Amnesty International


Joint report with Human Rights Watch judges US attacks in Yemen and Pakistan to have broken international human rights law

Download the full Amnesty International report on Drone strikes.

Jon Boone in Islamabad
The Guardian, Tuesday 22 October 2013

Pakistan-house-destroyed--009.jpg


A house in Pakistan near the border with Afghanistan destroyed by a drone missile in 2008. Eighteen people including Islamist militants were killed. Photograph: Reuters

US officials responsible for the secret CIA drone campaign against suspected terrorists in Pakistan may have committed war crimes and should stand trial, a report by a leading human rights group warns. Amnesty International has highlighted the case of a grandmother who was killed while she was picking vegetables and other incidents which could have broken international laws designed to protect civilians.

The report is issued in conjunction with an investigation by Human Rights Watch detailing missile attacks in Yemen which the group believes could contravene the laws of armed conflict, international human rights law and Barack Obama's own guidelines on drones.

The reports are being published while Nawaz Sharif, Pakistan's prime minister, is in Washington. Sharif has promised to tell Obama that the drone strikes – which have caused outrage in Pakistan – must end.

Getting to the bottom of individual strikes is exceptionally difficult in the restive areas bordering Afghanistan, where thousands of militants have settled. People are often terrified of speaking out, fearing retribution from both militants and the state, which is widely suspected of colluding with the CIA-led campaign.

There is also a risk of militants attempting to skew outside research by forcing interviewees into "providing false or inaccurate information", the report said.

But Amnesty mounted a major effort to investigate nine of the many attacks to have struck the region over the last 18 months, including one that killed 18 labourers in North Waziristan as they waited to eat dinner in an area of heavy Taliban influence in July 2012. All those interviewed by Amnesty strongly denied any of the men had been involved in militancy. Even if they were members of a banned group, that would not be enough to justify killing them, the report said.

"Amnesty International has serious concerns that this attack violated the prohibition of the arbitrary deprivation of life and may constitute war crimes or extrajudicial executions," the report said. It called for those responsible to stand trial.

The US has repeatedly claimed very few civilians have been killed by drones. It argues its campaign is conducted "consistent with all applicable domestic and international law".

The Amnesty report supports media accounts from October last year that a 68-year-old woman called Mamana Bibi was killed by a missile fired from a drone while she was picking okra outside her home in North Waziristan with her grandchildren nearby. A second strike minutes later injured family members tending her.

If true, the case is striking failure of a technology much vaunted for its accuracy. It is claimed the remote-controlled planes are able to observe their targets for hours or even days to verify them, and that the explosive force of the missiles is designed to limit collateral damage. As with other controversial drone strikes, the US has refused to acknowledge or explain what happened.

Amnesty said it accepts some US drone strikes may not violate the law, "but it is impossible to reach any firm assessment without a full disclosure of the facts surrounding individual attacks and their legal basis. The USA appears to be exploiting the lawless and remote nature of the region to evade accountability for its violations," it said.

In Yemen, another country where US drones are active, Human Rights Watch highlighted six incidents, two of which were a "clear violation of international humanitarian law". The remaining four may have broken the laws of armed conflict because the targets were illegitimate or because not enough was done to minimise civilian harm, the report said.

It also argued that some of the Yemen attacks breach the guidelines announced by Obama earlier this year in his first major speech on a programme that is officially top secret. For example, the pledge to kill suspects only when it is impossible to capture them appears to have been ignored on 17 April this year when an al-Qaida leader was blown up in a township in Dhamar province in central Yemen, Human Rights Watch said.

An attack on a truck driving 12 miles south of the capital Sana'a reportedly killed two al-Qaida suspects but also two civilians who had been hired by the other men. That means the attack could have been illegal because it "may have caused disproportionate harm to civilians".

The legal arguments over drones are extremely complex, with much controversy focusing on whether or not the places where they are used amount to war zones.

Amnesty said some of the strikes in Pakistan might be covered by that claim, but rejected a "global war doctrine" that allows the US to attack al-Qaida anywhere in the world.

"To accept such a policy would be to endorse state practices that fundamentally undermine crucial human rights protections that have been painstakingly developed over more than a century of international law-making," the report said.

US drone strikes could be classed as war crimes, says Amnesty International | World news | The Guardian
 
American bombardment, killing innocent Pakistani brothers pay the price,
American world number one terrorist
 
In world there is only Egoism amongst all. no sence of peace. its only religions virtues give those virtues in human.

Well for the US there is one proverb in india "Who will tell the lion, he is stinking"
 
In world there is only Egoism amongst all. no sence of peace. its only religions virtues give those virtues in human.

Well for the US there is one proverb in india "Who will tell the lion, he is stinking"
yes in India you can easily accept slavery but we here don't.
 
The solution is simple: Extend the rule of law to deny safe havens to terrorists in our own territory.

(Or others will do it for us in their own way.)
 
yes in India you can easily accept slavery but we here don't.

Who is attacked by drone? If India had face it had already give better reply of it.

Don't mistook in interpretation; I am telling for every action of the US not related to only pak and drone.

India never be the part US and Rus in cold war, India always choose the third front.
 
Sorry I missed this earlier. I'm reprinting a pastiche of some comments I posted at ET on this matter:

One has to read the Amnesty International report carefully. It claims the U.S. may have broken international law because the U.S. hasn’t defended itself from such charges in detail. One can suppose that’s to avoid unnecessary embarrassment to Pakistan’s leaders: under post-9/11 Security Council Resolution 1373 – as a Chapter 7 resolution, binding in international law – they are supposed to eliminate terror financing, terror-training camps, and terror refuges from Pakistani territory and their failure to act to do so consequently costs according to 1373 its claims to sovereignty in these areas. What can the U.S. gain by advertising Pakistan’s generals as weaklings and incompetents? Nor does Amnesty International acknowledge the change UNSCR 1373 had made to international law.

In the report itself – rather than the sensationalized news release – A.I.’s accusation of U.S. and its allies acting illegally is qualified: they base it on the fact that the U.S. refuses to officially cite which international laws and norms it has in mind when it claims the drone strikes are legal. In other words, Amnesty believes the drone strikes may be perfectly legal. I can guess that Amnesty is aware of UNSCR 1373 but as long as the U.S. won’t officially cite it, Amnesty won’t, either.

Rather more damning, while the report attempts to finger the U.S. and its Western Allies, saying their drone strikes may constitute crimes or human rights violations, the report reiterates its previous proofs demonstrating that Pakistan’s military really is guilty of such misconduct: see pages 43-45.
Under post-9/11 UN Security Council Resolution 1373, Pakistan has the binding sovereign obligation in international law to enforce its sovereignty and work to eliminate terrorists, terror-training camps, and terror financing in its territory. Failure to do so – as in North Wazirstan – nulls Pakistani sovereignty with regards to other nations attacking terrorists there; in this regard, N. Wazirstan is an open battlefields – a war zone.

As it is a war zone under international law it doesn’t seem possible to classify drone attacks there as “extrajudicial executions”. As far as these being “war crimes” one would have to consider case-by-case whether attacks that resulted in civilian deaths were happened because the attacking nation meant to kill civilians deliberately or disproportionately to the target attacked.

Scrutiny of lists of civilian casualties from drone attacks reveal several anomalies. In general, drones attacks result in one to five casualties or so, as the one or two missiles a drone carries have warheads of less than ten kilograms of explosive. A group of drones might kill more.

However, when one sees listed eighty civilians killed in a single drone attack one has good cause to suspect that the drones are being blamed for attacks carried out by some other means. This is not a topic discussed by groups like Amnesty International. Such an attack might be a war crime but drones would not be to blame – nor would the United States.

Conclusion: The drone issue may be sensational but eliminating them from the conflict will make matters even worse; without the drones either the terrorists will prosper and kill many innocent Pakistanis, or else the Pakistani military will intervene and kill many more innocent Pakistanis than would have happen had the drones been allowed to remain in use.

I know Pakistanis are angry. They want to focus their anger on a target. Blaming foreigners is emotionally satisfactory. But it isn’t going to solve the problem, is it? Indeed, if the U.S. stopped drone strikes tomorrow, the immediate victims of such a policy change would be Pakistanis themselves. They will either fall victim to terrorists or if they become terror sympathizers their souls will be stained:

Those Who Are Kind To The Cruel, In The End Will Be Cruel To The Kind. (Talmud: Qohelet Raba, 7:16.)
 

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