On Tuesday
morning, almost 10 years after the U.S. government began using drones to target
suspected militants in Pakistan—one of the tools of the War on Terror that the
Obama administration has embraced and expanded since taking office in
2009—Congress heard from some of the policy’s innocent victims for the first
time.
In the
Rayburn House Office Building, Pakistani school teacher Rafiq ur Rehman and his
two children, 13-year-old Zubair and 9-year-old Nabila, recounted before five
members of Congress how an October 2012 drone strike in their native tribal
region of North Waziristan killed Rehman’s 67-year-old mother and left the
family physically and mentally scarred.
Momina Bibi
was gardening on the eve of the Muslim holy day of Eid al-Adha, Rehman said,
when she was hit and immediately killed by the strike. Nabila and Zubair were
also both injured. Neither the CIA nor the White House has commented on the specific
attack.
“As a
teacher, my job is to educate,” Rehman said during his testimony, which was
translated from Urdu. “But how do I teach something like this? How do I explain
what I myself do not understand? How can I in good faith reassure the children
that the drone will not come back and kill them, too, if I do not understand
why it killed my mother and injured my children?”
“I no
longer prefer blue skies,” said 13-year-old Zubair, whose leg was injured with
shrapnel from the attack. “In fact, I now prefer gray skies. The drones do not
fly when the skies are gray. When the sky brightens, drones return and we live
in fear.”
Organized
by Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) in conjunction with the progressive media
non-profit Brave New
Foundation, the briefing was not a formal hearing. In fact, there were some
concerns that it would not take place at all, given that the family’s lawyer,
Shahzad Akbar, who has investigated drone strikes in Pakistan for the last three years and
directs the Foundation for Fundamental Rights, was
denied a visa by the U.S. government. Linsey Pecikonis, a spokesperson for
Brave New Foundation, says she wasn’t sure the meeting was actually going to
happen until the Rehman family physically made it out of the airport in Washington last week.
Nonetheless,
five members of the House were in attendance, including Grayson, Reps. Jan
Schakowsky (D-Ill.), who’s a member of the Intelligence Committee, Rush Holt
(D-N.J.), John Conyers (D-Mich.) and Rick Nolan (D-Minn.). In addition to
comments from the Rehman family and members of Congress, the briefing featured
remarks from Brave New Foundation President Robert Greenwald and Jennifer
Gibson, a lawyer with the United Kingdom-based non-profit Reprieve.
According
to Gibson, whose
group has investigated and publicized the United States’ use of drones, the
responsibility to prove that drone strikes are harming innocent civilians must
not remain on the civilians themselves. “The onus is no longer on these victims
to provide evidence of their case. They have done that,” Gibson said during the
presentation. “The onus is now on President Obama and this administration to
bring this war out of the shadows.”
Though
Tuesday’s briefing was a milestone because it was the first face-to-face
contact members of Congress have had with victims of the drone wars, it was
ultimately short on specific demands or requests. All of the representatives on
hand expressed general concerns about the lack of transparency, and the
civilian costs. Conyers and Holt did call for a congressional investigation
into the targeted killing policy, but considering their generally little
influence over the Armed Service and Intelligence Committees, a formal inquiry
is highly unlikely in the near term.
“The
appropriate committees generally are staffed by people, if I may say this, who
are friends of the military-industrial complex,” Grayson said.
Instead,
the briefing’s objective seemed to be about putting generalized pressure on the
White House to open up more about the legal justification and oversight
mechanisms associated with its targeted killing program. To date, the
administration has not released any legal memos justifying the policy.
Meanwhile,
during the last ten years, the CIA and Defense Department’s drone strikes have killed
almost 3,000 people in Pakistan , Yemen and Somalia , according
to the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism. In Pakistan specifically, the Obama
administration has overseen 325 of the 376 total strikes.
The
briefing also came amid increased recent scrutiny of the United States ’ targeted killing program—both
domestically and internationally. Last week, Amnesty International published
a report concluding that CIA officials in charge of the policy
in Pakistan may have committed war crimes,
given that the group estimates drone strikes have killed up to 900 civilians in
the country.
And on
Thursday, Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), a supporter of the Obama administration’s
use of drones and the ranking member on the Armed Services Committee,
criticized the program’s lack of transparency—no small gesture given his
position and party affiliation.
“The
administration, every administration, seems to think it should share nothing,”
Smith said
during an event at the Center for Strategic International Studies, a prominent
foreign policy think tank in Washington. “I think the administration
believes … [they] gave a speech,
[they] explained it … and now leave [them] alone, [they’re] going to go back to
work.”
CODEPINK’s
Medea Benjamin, a longtime peace activist and perhaps the most well-known
critic of drone usage as a result of her
exchange with the President during a speech in May, says she was pleased
with the briefing.
“This is
momentous, given how undercover the program has been until now,” says Benjamin,
who was also present at the briefing. “Just to bring them and host the family
is a big step… Just the fact that the U.S. public is finally going to get to
hear the story … of drone victim families, that’s momentous. It shouldn’t be.
It’s disgusting that it is.”
The
representatives on hand also stopped short of endorsing Amnesty’s suggestion that
strikes like the one that killed Mamana Bibi amount to war crimes. When In
These Times asked the three members of Congress who were in the room about
it in the briefing's open-ended question-and-answer session, Holt did not
answer and Nolan deflected the query. Grayson later said during the briefing
that he didn’t think drone strikes amounted to war crimes, because they aren’t
deliberately designed to kill civilians.
Benjamin
isn’t convinced. “I think I would be a little stronger in the condemnation, of
course, but I’m not a Congressman. So I can call a war crime a war crime,” she
says.
But for the
Rehman family, it doesn’t matter that the strikes’ civilian casualties are
unintentional. They, like many others in Pakistan and elsewhere, are still suffering
from them. At one point during the briefing, a reporter asked Rafiq ur Rehman what he himself would tell
President Obama if given the chance.
“What I
would say to Obama is … that what happened to me and my family was wrong,”
Rehman said through a translator. “And I would ask him to find a peaceful end to
this war in my country, to find an end to these drones.”
> The article above was written by Cole Stangler and is reprinted from In These Times.
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