January 21, 2012
Do Drones Undermine Democracy?

By PETER W. SINGER

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/opinion/sunday/do-drones-undermine-democracy.html

IN democracies like ours, there have always been deep bonds between the public 
and its wars. Citizens have historically participated in decisions to take 
military action, through their elected representatives, helping to ensure broad 
support for wars and a willingness to share the costs, both human and economic, 
of enduring them.

In America, our Constitution explicitly divided the president’s role as 
commander in chief in war from Congress’s role in declaring war. Yet these 
links and this division of labor are now under siege as a result of a 
technology that our founding fathers never could have imagined.

Just 10 years ago, the idea of using armed robots in war was the stuff of 
Hollywood fantasy. Today, the United States military has more than 7,000 
unmanned aerial systems, popularly called drones.  There are 12,000 more on the 
ground. Last year, they carried out hundreds of strikes — both covert and overt 
— in six countries, transforming the way our democracy deliberates and engages 
in what we used to think of as war.

We don’t have a draft anymore; less than 0.5 percent of Americans over 18 serve 
in the active-duty military. We do not declare war anymore; the last time 
Congress actually did so was in 1942 — against Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania. 
We don’t buy war bonds or pay war taxes anymore. During World War II, 85 
million Americans purchased war bonds that brought the government $185 billion; 
in the last decade, we bought none and instead gave the richest 5 percent of 
Americans a tax break.

And now we possess a technology that removes the last political barriers to 
war. The strongest appeal of unmanned systems is that we don’t have to send 
someone’s son or daughter into harm’s way. But when politicians can avoid the 
political consequences of the condolence letter — and the  impact that military 
casualties have on voters and on the news media — they no longer treat the 
previously weighty matters of war and peace the same way.

For the first 200 years of American democracy, engaging in combat and bearing 
risk — both personal and political — went hand in hand. In the age of drones, 
that is no longer the case.

Today’s unmanned systems are only the beginning. The original Predator, which 
went into service in 1995, lacked even GPS and was initially unarmed; newer 
models can take off and land on their own, and carry smart sensors that can 
detect a disruption in the dirt a mile below the plane and trace footprints 
back to an enemy hide-out.

There is not a single new manned combat aircraft under research and development 
at any major Western aerospace company, and the Air Force is training more 
operators of unmanned aerial systems than fighter and bomber pilots combined. 
In 2011, unmanned systems carried out strikes from Afghanistan to Yemen. The 
most notable of these continuing operations is the not-so-covert war in 
Pakistan, where the United States has carried out more than 300 drone strikes 
since 2004.

Yet this operation has never been debated in Congress; more than seven years 
after it began, there has not even been a single vote for or against it. This 
campaign is not carried out by the Air Force; it is being conducted by the 
C.I.A. This shift affects everything from the strategy that guides it to the 
individuals who oversee it (civilian political appointees) and the lawyers who 
advise them (civilians rather than military officers).

It also affects how we and our politicians view such operations. President 
Obama’s decision to send a small, brave Navy Seal team into Pakistan for 40 
minutes was described by one of his advisers as “the gutsiest call of any 
president in recent history.” Yet few even talk about the decision to carry out 
more than 300 drone strikes in the very same country.

I do not condemn these strikes; I support most of them. What troubles me, 
though, is how a new technology is short-circuiting the decision-making process 
for what used to be the most important choice a democracy could make. Something 
that would have previously been viewed as a war is simply not being treated 
like a war.

THE change is not limited to covert action. Last spring, America launched 
airstrikes on Libya as part of a NATO operation to prevent Col. Muammar 
el-Qaddafi’s government from massacring civilians. In late March, the White 
House announced that the American military was handing over combat operations 
to its European partners and would thereafter play only a supporting role.

The distinction was crucial. The operation’s goals quickly evolved from a 
limited humanitarian intervention into an air war supporting local insurgents’ 
efforts at regime change. But it had limited public support and no 
Congressional approval.

When the administration was asked to explain why continuing military action 
would not be a violation of the War Powers Resolution — a Vietnam-era law that 
requires notifying Congress of military operations within 48 hours and getting 
its authorization after 60 days — the White House argued that American 
operations did not “involve the presence of U.S. ground troops, U.S. casualties 
or a serious threat thereof.” But they did involve something we used to think 
of as war: blowing up stuff, lots of it.

Starting on April 23, American unmanned systems were deployed over Libya. For 
the next six months, they carried out at least 146 strikes on their own. They 
also identified and pinpointed the targets for most of NATO’s manned strike 
jets. This unmanned operation lasted well past the 60-day deadline of the War 
Powers Resolution, extending to the very last airstrike that hit Colonel 
Qaddafi’s convoy on Oct. 20 and led to his death.

Choosing to make the operation unmanned proved critical to initiating it 
without Congressional authorization and continuing it with minimal public 
support. On June 21, when NATO’s air war was lagging, an American Navy 
helicopter was shot down by pro-Qaddafi forces. This previously would have been 
a disaster, with the risk of an American aircrew being captured or even killed. 
But the downed helicopter was an unmanned Fire Scout, and the story didn’t even 
make the newspapers the next day.

Congress has not disappeared from all decisions about war, just the ones that 
matter. The same week that American drones were carrying out their 145th 
unauthorized airstrike in Libya, the president notified Congress that he had 
deployed 100 Special Operations troops to a different part  of Africa.

This small unit was sent to train and advise Ugandan forces battling the 
cultish Lord’s Resistance Army and was explicitly ordered not to engage in 
combat. Congress applauded the president for notifying it about this small 
noncombat mission but did nothing about having its laws ignored in the much 
larger combat operation in Libya.

We must now accept that technologies that remove humans from the battlefield, 
from unmanned systems like the Predator to cyberweapons like the Stuxnet 
computer worm, are becoming the new normal in war.

And like it or not, the new standard we’ve established for them is that 
presidents need to seek approval only for operations that send people into 
harm’s way — not for those that involve waging war by other means.

WITHOUT any actual political debate, we have set an enormous precedent, 
blurring the civilian and military roles in war and circumventing the 
Constitution’s mandate for authorizing it. Freeing the executive branch to act 
as it chooses may be appealing to some now, but many future scenarios will be 
less clear-cut. And each political party will very likely have a different 
view, depending on who is in the White House.

Unmanned operations are not “costless,” as they are too often described in the 
news media and government deliberations. Even worthy actions can sometimes have 
unintended consequences. Faisal Shahzad, the would-be Times Square bomber, was 
drawn into terrorism by the very Predator strikes in Pakistan meant to stop 
terrorism.

Similarly, C.I.A. drone strikes outside of declared war zones are setting a 
troubling precedent that we might not want to see followed by the close to 50 
other nations that now possess the same unmanned technology — including China, 
Russia, Pakistan and Iran.

A deep deliberation on war was something the framers of the Constitution sought 
to build into our system. Yet on Tuesday, when President Obama talks about his 
wartime accomplishments during the State of the Union address, Congress will 
have to admit that its role has been reduced to the same part it plays during 
the president’s big speech. These days, when it comes to authorizing war, 
Congress generally sits there silently, except for the occasional clapping. And 
we do the same at home.

Last year, I met with senior Pentagon officials to discuss the many tough 
issues emerging from our growing use of robots in war. One of them asked, “So, 
who then is thinking about all this stuff?”

America’s founding fathers may not have been able to imagine robotic drones, 
but they did provide an answer. The Constitution did not leave war, no matter 
how it is waged, to the executive branch alone.

In a democracy, it is an issue for all of us.

Peter W. Singer is the director of the 21st Century Defense Initiative at the 
Brookings Institution and  author of “Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution 
and Conflict in the 21st Century.”




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Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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