The government is relatively silent
about the number of people — especially civilians — who have been killed
in U.S. led drone strikes. But for the first time a public lawmaker has
given a number: 4,700.
Sen. Lindsey Graham speaking with the Easley Rotary Club in South Carolina said “we’ve killed 4,700.”
“Sometimes you hit innocent people, and
I hate that, but we’re at war, and we’ve taken out some very senior
members of Al-Qaeda,” the local Patch reported Graham saying Tuesday afternoon.
Although a government official might
not have publicly stated a number in the same manner as Graham before,
there have been estimates by other groups. ProPublica tracking “everything we know so far about drone strikes” wrote that while “the precise number isn’t known, but some estimates peg the total around 3,000.” CNN reported its terrorism expert Peter Bergen putting the number between 1,900 and 3,300. It also noted the Bureau of Investigative Journalism estimating about 4,756 deaths from drone strikes have occurred worldwide.
Graham clarified to CNN though that his estimate was based on media reports, like those mentioned above, not U.S. intelligence.
Here’s more from Graham’s speech from the Patch:
It’s a weapon that needs to
be used,” Graham said. “It’s a tactical weapon. A drone is an unmanned
aerial vehicle that is now armed.”
The Pakistan/Afghanistan border is “very hard to get to,” he said.
“We don’t have any troops in that
area,” he said. “So that’s where Al-Qaeda and terrorists groups like the
Akani Network and Al-Shabaab are residing, very remote regions. These
drones can stay in the air for up to 24 hours and we can monitor
people’s movement on the grounds.”
He said the idea of judicial oversight of drone strikes and targets is “crazy to me.”
“I can’t imagine in World War for
Roosevelt to have gone to a bunch of judges and said, ‘I need your
permission before we can attack the enemy,’” Graham said.
He said the drone program “has been very effective.”
Wired’s Danger Room reported that it considered the figure given by Graham “very high” and “low”
depending on context. It noted that the CIA declined to comment on
whether the information given was classified. Here’s more of an
explanation from Wired:
But that’s a very high figure — at least as it pertains to the CIA’s drone strikes, outside the declared battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan, which is what the context of Graham’s remarks make it seem like he’s referring to. As Micah Zenko of the Council on Foreign Relations blogs, that’s on the highest end of the drone-death estimate compiled by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism from publicly available news reports. Zenko’s compilation of the averages of non-governmental organizations’ guesstimates for drone casualties is about 1,700 people lower.[...]Yet Graham’s count is simultaneously low. Judging from the context of his remarks, he’s evidently not counting the U.S. military’s drone strikes in Iraq and Afghanistan. So the real number of deaths from the strikes between the covert CIA drone program and the U.S. military’s still rarely acknowledged efforts is likely even higher.
Even if this drone death toll was
based on estimates reported about by the media, if nothing else Wired
noted that Graham’s comments “underscores the extraordinary secrecy
around the centerpiece of U.S. counterterrorism efforts.”
“Whatever Graham’s intentions in
stating a death toll — regardless of its accuracy — that secrecy is the
most prominent, visible fact about the drones,” Wired stated.”
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/21/4700-thats-how-many-people-one-senator-says-weve-killed-via-drones/
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