Are drones a technological tipping point in warfare?

By Walter Pincus, Sunday, April 24, 6:06 PM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/are-predator-drones-a-technological-tipping-point-in-warfare/2011/04/19/AFmC6PdE_print.html

Debates are growing at home and abroad over the increasing use of remotely 
piloted, armed drones, with a new study by the British Defense Ministry 
questioning whether advances in their capabilities will lead future 
decision-makers to “resort to war as a policy option far sooner than 
previously.”

Active and retired U.S. Air Force officers involved in developing drones stress 
that the aircraft brings in more decision-makers, better targeting data and 
more accurate delivery systems than fighter jets.

But use of the unmanned aerial vehicles has drawn growing public scrutiny based 
on their lethal attacks in Pakistan against al-Qaeda, in Afghanistan against 
the Taliban, in Yemen against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, and most 
recently in Libya, as announced Thursday by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates.

The British study noted that drones are becoming increasingly automated. With 
minor technical advances, it said, a drone could soon be able to “fire a weapon 
based solely on its own sensors, or shared information, and without recourse to 
higher, human authority.” It cautioned that the Defense Ministry “currently has 
no intention to develop” such systems.

Nonetheless, the aircraft, piloted by people far from the battlefield, 
represents an approaching technological tipping point “that may well deliver a 
genuine revolution in military affairs,” according to the Joint Doctrine Note, 
which was conducted under the direction of the British Chiefs of Staff. Titled 
“The United Kingdom Approach to Unmanned Aircraft Systems,” it was first 
disclosed last week by the Guardian newspaper.

The British study said it was essential that military officials not “risk 
losing our controlling humanity and make war more likely” by using armed 
drones. It also asserted, however, that the laws of war call on commanders on 
both sides of the fight to limit loss of life and that “use of unmanned 
aircraft prevents the potential loss of aircrew lives and is thus in itself 
morally justified.”

At a Washington conference of the International Institute for Strategic Studies 
(IISS) last week, the  issue of drones was also widely discussed.

Lt. Col. Bruce Black, program manager for the Air Force Predator and Reaper 
aircraft, noted that some 180 people are involved in each drone mission. The 
result, he said, is that “there is more ethical oversight involved with 
unmanned air vehicles than with manned aircraft.”

At the same conference, former CIA director Michael V. Hayden described how, 
with a Predator circling overhead, those involved in ordering use of its 
missiles from thousands of miles away can call up computer maps that show the 
potential effects of each weapon.

Before any of the Hellfire missiles are launched, he said, the backup team asks 
for the “the bug splat” of the attack — a readout of the impact the missile 
would have on its ground target. Nothing comparable can be done with 
ground-supporting manned aircraft, he said.

But the drones have become part of the propaganda war where they are used. 
Without referencing the Taliban or al Qaeda, the British paper noted that 
insurgents have cast themselves as the underdog against a “cowardly bully . . . 
that is unwilling to risk his own troops, but is happy to kill remotely.”

Retired Lt. Gen. David Deptula, former Air Force deputy chief of staff for 
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, acknowledged that the use of 
drones comes with potential problems with public perceptions. “Our adversaries 
have interjected this as a question in [people’s] minds, as an attempt to limit 
the use of what is very, very effective,” he said.

At the IISS conference, participants were asked whether drone operators had 
been desensitized to killing, because they were so far away from the 
battlefield.

Col. Dean Bushey, deputy director of the Air Force Joint Unmanned Aircraft 
Systems Center, pointed out that the crews that run Predators in Nevada go 
through the exact routines that airplane pilots do prior to a mission. They go 
through a restricted area, wear brown flight suits, receive a mission brief and 
are put into a “warrior ethos” before ever stepping into a ground control 
station. “You are executing a mission to save lives,” he said.

Black said that when a Predator operator is connected to a fighter on the 
ground in Afghanistan, “you can hear his voice and you can hear the bullets 
whistling over his head. You feel that pressure.” He vividly described an 
operator in Nevada, sitting at a computer console and listening and looking at 
his colleague thousands of miles away through a micro-picture view.

“My situational awareness of what he is going through at that time is probably 
better than a guy that showed up at 10 minutes on station and dropped a weapon 
and left,” Black said. “I see my effects, I watched, I listened, I was with him 
the five hours prior to that. . . . I’d say we are very much in the fight.”


© 2011 The Washington Post Company
_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
[email protected]
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to