You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
India-Pakistan
Drone Strikes In Pakistan Have Fallen Sharply: NYT
2013-05-23
[Dawn] Ahead of President B.O.'s long-awaited address on drones at Washington's National Defence University on Thursday, the New York Times
...which still proudly displays Walter Duranty's Pulitzer prize...
said that drone strikes in Pakistain have fallen sharply since their peak in 2010, perhaps in response to increasing scrutiny of the programme by Congress and the American public.

President B.O. embraced drone strikes in his first term, and the assassination of suspected snuffies has come to define his presidency.

However,
the difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits...
writing about the declining drone strikes, Bruce Riedel, a former CIA analyst and Brookings Institution scholar, said in Foreign Policy magazine there were many reasons for the declining number of strikes in Pakistain.

"But a growing awareness of the cost of drone strikes in US-Pakistain relations is probably at the top of the list," Mr. Riedel said. "They are deadly to any hope of reversing the downward slide in ties with the fastest growing nuclear weapons state in the world."

But the Times pointed out lost in the contentious debate over the legality, morality and effectiveness of a novel weapon is the fact that the number of strikes has actually been in decline.

An administration official told NYT Mr Obama would also "review our detention policy and efforts to close the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay; and he will frame the future of our efforts against Al Qaeda, its affiliates and adherents." Some supporters of Obama have urged him to use the occasion to announce that part of a 6,000-page Senate study of the CIA's former interrogation programme will be declassified and made public.

Mr Obama, who insisted early in his presidency on a personal role in many strike decisions, may also shed light on the declining use of drone strikes. Current and former officials say the reasons include a shrinking list of important Al Qaeda targets, a result of the success of past strikes and transient factors ranging from bad weather to diplomatic strains. But more broadly, the decline may reflect a changing calculation of the long-term costs and benefits of assassinations.

B.O. regime officials have sometimes contrasted the drone programme's relative precision, economy and safety for Americans with the huge costs in lives and money of the two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Over time, however, the costs of the drone strikes themselves have become more evident.

Reports of innocent civilians killed by drones -- whether real or, as American officials often assert, exaggerated -- have shaken the claims of precise targeting. The strikes have become a staple of Al Qaeda propaganda, cited to support the notion that the United States is at war with Islam.

They have been described by convicted snuffies as a motivation for their crimes, including the failed attack on a bankrupt, increasingly impoverished, reliably Democrat, Detroit
... ruled by Democrats since 1962...
-bound airliner in 2009 and the attempted boom-mobileing of Times Square in 2010.
Posted by:trailing wife

#2  Survival of the most adaptable.
Posted by: Bobbys Kindle Fire   2013-05-23 17:56  

#1  Don't believe it was mentioned, but over time, Taliban drone countermeasures begin to impact successful targeting.
Posted by: Besoeker   2013-05-23 03:10  

00:00