Brian Williams - Predators

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Predators: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Predators Having traveled extensively in the Pashtun tribal areas while working for the U.S. military and the CIA, Williams explores in detail the new technology of airborne assassinations. From miniature Scorpion missiles designed to kill terrorists while avoiding civilian “collateral damage” to
, the cigarette lighter–size homing beacons spies plant on their unsuspecting targets to direct drone missiles to them, the author describes the drone arsenal in full.
Evaluating the ethics of targeted killings and drone technology, Williams covers more than a hundred drone strikes, analyzing the number of slain civilians versus the number of terrorists killed to address the claims of antidrone activists. In examining the future of drone warfare, he reveals that the U.S. military is already building more unmanned than manned aerial vehicles. Predators helps us weigh the pros and cons of the drone program so that we can decide whether it is a vital strategic asset, a “frenemy,” or a little of both.

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At this time Osama bin Laden and several hundred of his Arab followers made their way eastward to a base he had built in the Spin Ghar Mountains, which run along the Afghan-Pakistani border south of the Afghan border city of Jalalabad. There, at a place called Tora Bora (Black Dust), he planned to make a heroic stand. This was America’s chance to send in U.S. special forces, including the 101st Airborne, Army Rangers, Delta Forces, and the Marines’ Special Operations Command, to kill or capture the man who was the raison d’etre for the invasion of Afghanistan. Unfortunately, U.S. Central Command head Gen. Tommy Franks decided to rely on bombs and newly deputized Pashai and Pashtun tribesmen to flush out bin Laden. The Afghan tribesmen were taking money from both sides. They were subsequently bribed by bin Laden to allow him and his weary men to flee across the mountains to the nearby border of Pakistan. 17

While America’s tribal mercenaries turned a blind eye, bin Laden and his followers fled over the mountains into the Tirah Valley in the Pakistani tribal agency of Kurram. They were said to have been guided by the torches of sympathetic pro-Taliban tribesmen. 18There they took advantage of their deep connections among the local FATA tribesmen, which went back to the anti-Soviet jihad of the 1980s, and the Pashtun tradition of melmastiia (obligation to host and protect a guest) to request sanctuary. Bin Laden and hundreds of his followers had succeeded in escaping to one of the most inaccessible places in the world among the fierce Orakzai and Afridi Pashtun tribes of Kurram Agency. Bin Laden’s escape into the FATA was America’s greatest blunder in the war on terrorism for this was sovereign Pakistani territory. President Musharraf could never allow U.S. troops to directly invade his nation in pursuit of their Muslim enemies for fear of backlash among his own people, who distrusted the Americans.

But this was not U.S. Central Command’s only mistake. The hunt for the Taliban leader Mullah Omar was not going well either. An undisclosed host country (either Uzbekistan or Pakistan) had given the CIA permission to fly armed Predator drones from its territory on October 7, 2001, and they began flying on that very day. 19The drones were actively hunting Omar and on one occasion spotted a Taliban convoy fleeing Kabul. A drone’s high-resolution camera focused on the license plate of one car and found that it belonged to Mullah Omar. But instead of firing a missile at the car, the CIA controller asked for authority to fire on such a high-value target. The request eventually made its way from the duty officer at Central Command headquarters up to General Franks. Franks took the advice of his Judge Advocate General (JAG) Corps lawyer and decided not to fire on Omar. 20

Having survived a close brush with death without even knowing about it, Mullah Omar subsequently escaped across the border into the Pashtun tribal zones of Pakistan. There he continued to rule the exiled Taliban as the “Commander of the Faithful” from Quetta, the sprawling capital of Baluchistan Province. The Americans’ mistake proved to be catastrophic, for the messianic Omar was able to reunite and inspire his forces for years to come. Nearly ten years after his escape, one Taliban foot soldier explained his total awe of Mullah Omar, saying, “His words have a very powerful effect on us. We obey his orders, every Talib does, and we believe in him.” 21

Omar was not the only one who escaped a Predator owing to a reluctance to give firing orders. On as many as ten other occasions, high-value targets (HVTs) escaped after being spotted by drones, whose pilots had to wait for permission and further verification before firing. One officer captured his frustration over this sort of reluctance to fire when he said, “It’s kind of ridiculous when you get a live feed from a Predator and the intel guys say, ‘We need independent verification.’” Another Air Force officer told the Washington Post , “We knew we had some of the big boys. The process is so slow that by the time we got the clearances, and everybody had put in their 2 cents, we called it off.” 22

Clearly during the initial stages of the drones’ utilization, the CIA was reluctant to use this latest killing tool to assassinate targets on the ground, even during a war. This infuriated Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Rumsfeld was said to have kicked in a door when he heard how Mullah Omar got away. The secretary quickly changed the rules of engagement, making it easier for drone operators to take out their targets without having to go through an extended chain of command. 23(The drones at this stage were being flown by the Air Force, which worked closely with the CIA to create targeting lists in a uniquely hybrid campaign.)

Rumsfeld may have done so just in time, for a drone subsequently spotted a large group of Arabs gathering at a three-story building south of Kabul known as the Yarmouk guest house. On this occasion not only did the drone operator receive instant permission from Langley and the Pentagon to fire on the target, but F-18 Hornets were called in to back up the Predator’s Hellfire ammunition with bombs. The building was subsequently bombed, and the Predator fired missiles on trucks filled with panicked survivors trying to escape the scene of the devastation. 24

The American drone pilots then eagerly listened in on the Arabs’ radio chatter to see who had died in the attack. The CIA and National Security Agency (NSA) monitors were surprised to hear the Arabs bewailing the loss of someone described as “al Kumandan” (the Commander). There was only one al Qaeda leader who went by that name: the commander of al Qaeda’s military wing, Abu Hafs al Masri (aka Muhammad Atef), the third highest ranking member of al Qaeda. Masri was not only head of al Qaeda’s military operations, but he was also intimately involved in the 1998 embassy bombings in Africa that had killed hundreds of people, predominantly Africans. His daughter had recently married bin Laden’s son to cement his relationship with his friend. The loss of the number three in al Qaeda was to be a tremendous blow to the organization and the first high-profile kill attributed to a Predator drone.

This victory appeared to give the CIA confidence, and as many as forty Hellfire missiles were fired by the agency’s drones by mid-November 2001. Although the CIA worked closely with the Pentagon during the campaign, on several occasions Air Force officials monitoring Afghanistan noticed explosions and belatedly came to realize that they were caused by CIA drones hitting various targets in the country without informing them. 25In this regard it should also be stated that the CIA was not the only organization deploying drones over Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom. The U.S. Air Force had its own Predators, which were initially piloted remotely from Creech and Nellis Air Bases outside of Las Vegas, Nevada. (Air Force drones would later be flown out of Fargo, Holloman, March, Hector, Davis-Monthan, Beale, Ellington, Ellsworth, Fort Drum, Whiteman, Cannon, Eglin, Cannon and Hancock Airfields as well.) For their part, the CIA drones were controlled from Langley Air Base, 150 miles south of Washington, DC, and sent their remote images to the Global Response Center, on the sixth floor of CIA Headquarters in Langley. 26The CIA drone campaign was run by the CIA Counterterrorism Center’s Pakistan-Afghanistan Department.

Although the CIA and the Pentagon had clashed before 9/11 over who would pay for and utilize the drones, they appeared to have created synergy during Operation Enduring Freedom. Never was this better demonstrated than in March 2002’s Operation Anaconda. This operation followed the capture of the southern capital of the Taliban, Kandahar, in December 2001. With the capture of Kandahar by opposition Pashtun tribal leader Hamid Karzai, the Taliban regime collapsed. Unable to control even the Pashtun tribal lands, most “village Taliban” returned to their homes while the hardcore Taliban fled across the border into the Pashtun tribal lands in Pakistan’s FATA. There they received sanctuary in Bajaur Agency and North and South Waziristan in particular.

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