Courage to Resist. September 25, 2014
For years, drone usage has been sold to the American public as a safer option, potentially eliminating the threat of danger to US forces and protecting innocent civilians. An unnamed former Air Force imagery analyst and drone war insider powerfully dispels these claims in a Salon op-ed, detailing not only the program’s kill-based success platform but revealing the often life-threatening psychological trauma endured by those participating in the drone program:
Confessions of a drone veteran: Why using them is more dangerous than the government is telling you
AFSIR Predator. September 14, 2014
The White House sells drones strikes as legal, ethical and targeted to protect our military and innocent civilians from harm. These are questionable claims, made more dubious by the administration’s selectively leaking details of the drone program to assuage the public when reports arise of flawed legal reasoning, mistaken strikes or vastly underestimated civilian deaths.
CIA director John O. Brennan also told the American public that drones “can be a wise choice because they dramatically reduce the danger to U.S. personnel, even eliminating the danger altogether.” Director Brennan is wrong…
I know because I am a veteran of the drone program. I served as an Air Force imagery analyst. What I know of drone warfare is that it has dangerous, sometimes devastating, consequences for too many service members participating in the program.
As the Obama administration increased its reliance on the drone program, the pressure came from the top to increase missions and strikes. We were encouraged to fly missions – at great taxpayer expense – even when there was nothing of consequence to see, no targets to strike and no American ground forces to protect. Performance evaluations highlighted an airman’s number of “enemy kills.” I asked, “Why does it matter how many people we killed?” Is that truly the definition of success – death? I joined the Air Force to save lives, not take them.
As an imagery analyst, I was the only line of defense between keeping someone alive and providing the intelligence for a strike using technology not accurate enough to determine life and death. The psychological pressure of not knowing if strikes were accurate was debilitating at times.
The author is a former Air Force Imagery Analyst, who has requested anonymity as an act of self-preservation and out of respect for friends and family who do not choose to live under the microscope of the media.
it is very important the stories are made public in light of all the push to escalate attacks into more foreign lands. There is a tremdous blow-back potential on this country in trying to wage endless war and even provoke a world war!
This article is one of the most imporat to surface, and it should be shared by all who see it. It will not be shown on the mainstream media so alternative and social media must be utilized now…
Thank you for this well-written and well-reasoned analysis of the drone program and the damage that it does. After growing up in the Air Force with an Air Force military father, it’s heartbreaking to read about the same kinds of horrendous and terrible PTSD and domestic violence still occuring after war or military service, whether it’s “boots on the ground” or not.
And our country seems to be perpetually at war, don’t we?
When are things going to change? Dear God in heaven, this has to happen soon. Now.
Thank you for sending this as a member of the US army. This lends credibility to some lay people who are overpowered by governmental systems.