Even the Warriors Say the Wars Make Us Less Safe
Even the Warriors Say the Wars Make Us Less Safe
Experts Say U.S. Executive Secret War Harming U.S. National Security
collected by Fred
Branfman
June 11, 2013
http://warisacrime.org/lesssafe
Admiral
Dennis Blair, Former Director Of National
Intelligence
“Admiral Dennis Blair, the former
director of National Intelligence (in the) New York Times [49]: While “drone
attacks did help reduce the Qaeda leadership in Pakistan,”
he wrote, “they also increased hatred of America.” He
said the drone has also damaged “our ability to work with
Pakistan [in] eliminating Taliban sanctuaries, encouraging
Indian-Pakistani dialogue, and making Pakistan’s nuclear
arsenal more secure.””
--"The Petraeus Projection, Part I: The CIA Director's Record Since The Surge [50] - Hero Worship Hides The Military Failures Of The CIA Director's 'Global Killing Machine'", by Fred Branfman, Salon, October 3, 2011
Michael Boyle, Former Obama
Counter-Terrorism Adviser
“Michael Boyle, who was
on Obama's counter-terrorism group in the run-up to his
election in 2008, said the US administration's growing
reliance on drone technology was having "adverse strategic
effects that have not been properly weighed against the
tactical gains associated with killing terrorists … The
vast increase in the number of deaths of low-ranking
operatives has deepened political resistance to the US
programme in Pakistan, Yemen and other
countries."
--"US Drone Attacks 'Counter-Productive', Former Obama Security Adviser Claims,” January 7, 2013, The Guardian
General James Cartwright,
former Vice-Chair, Joint Chiefs of Staff
“Gen.
James E. Cartwright, the former vice chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff and a favored adviser during Mr. Obama’s
first term, expressed concern in a speech here on Thursday
that America’s aggressive campaign of drone strikes could
be undermining long-term efforts to battle extremism.
‘We’re seeing that blowback. If you’re trying to kill
your way to a solution, no matter how precise you are,
you’re going to upset people even if they’re not
targeted.’”
--“As New Drone Policy Is Weighed, Few Practical Effects Are Seen”, NYT, March 22, 2013
CIA Station Chief in Islamabad
"The CIA
station chief in Islamabad thought the drone strikes in 2005
and 2006 — which, while infrequent at that time, were
often based on bad intelligence and had resulted in many
civilian casualties — had done little except fuel hatred
for the United States inside Pakistan and put Pakistani
officials in the uncomfortable position of having to lie
about the strikes."
-- The Way of the Knife, Mark Mazetti, Kindle loc. 2275
Council On Foreign
Relations
"There appears to be a strong correlation
in Yemen between increased targeted killings since December
2009 and heightened anger toward the United States and
sympathy with or allegiance to AQAP ... One former senior
military official closely involved in U.S. targeted killings
argued that `drone strikes are just a signal of arrogance
that will boomerang against America' ... A world
characterized by the proliferation of armed drones ... would
undermine core U.S. interests, such as preventing armed
conflict, promoting human rights, and strengthening
international legal regimes." Because of drones' inherent
advantages over other weapons platforms, states and nonstate
actors would be much more likely to use lethal force against
the United States and its allies."
-- "Reforming U.S. Drone Strike Policies," January 2013, Micah Zenko, Council on Foreign Relations
Sherard Cowper-Coles, Former
U.K. Special Representative To Afghanistan
“Sir
Sherard Cowper-Coles, close ally Britain's Special
Representative to Afghanistan, stated that David Petraeus
should be "ashamed of himself," explaining that "he has
increased the violence (and) trebled the number of special
forces raids." As Cowper-Coles has explained [51], "for every dead Pashtun
warrior, there will be 10 pledged to
revenge."“
--"Obama's Secret Wars: How Our Shady Counter-Terrorism Policies Are More Dangerous Than Terrorism", by Fred Branfman, AlterNet, July 11, 2011
Muhammed Daudzai, Karzai Chief Of
Staff
Muhammed Daudzai, chief of staff for Afghan
president Hamid Karzai, said [52] “when we do those night
raids the enemy will get stronger and stronger in
numbers.”
----"The Petraeus Projection, Part I: The CIA
Director's Record Since The Surge [50] - Hero Worship
Hides The Military Failures Of The CIA Director's 'Global
Killing Machine'", by Fred Branfman, Salon, October
3, 2011
Director of National Intelligence’s
National Intelligence Estimate
"The final report
concluded that Iraq had become a '"cause célèbre" for
jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of U.S. involvement in
the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global
jihadist movement.' ... The report predicted that an
increasingly decentralized global jihad movement would
splinter even further, with regional militant groups
proliferating. "
-- The Way of the Knife, Mark Mazetti, Kindle loc. 1945
Andrew Exum, ex-Army
Ranger, Fellow, Center for a New American
Security
"We were so focused on getting these high
value targets ... I think we ended up exacerbating a lot of
the drivers of conflict and exacerbating the insurgency ...
It doesn't take a genius to realize that by dragging people
out of their homes in the middle of the night ... could
inflame tensions, how this could actually exacerbate drivers
of conflict,"
-- from Dirty Wars, Jeremy Scahill, Kindle Loc. 3171
Farea al-Muslimi, Yemeni
Villager
“Now, however, when they think of America,
they think of the fear they feel at the drones over their
heads. What the violent militants had failed to achieve, one
drone strike accomplished in an
instant.”
--Testimony, Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Human Rights, quoted in “Drone Strikes Turn Allies Into Enemies, Yemeni Says”, NYT, April 23, 2013
Robert Grenier,
Former Head Of The Cia Counterrorism Center
“The
mentality behind counterrorism has been described by former
head of the CIA Counterterrorism Center in 2005-6, Robert Grenier [53] … has explained
that "it's not just a matter of numbers of militants who are
operating in that area, it also effects the motivations of
those militants ... They now see themselves as part of a
global Jihad. They are not just focused on helping oppressed
Muslims in Kashmir or trying to fight the NATO and the
Americans in Afghanistan, they see themselves as part of a
global struggle, and therefore are a much broader threat
than they were previously. So in a sense, yes, we have
helped to bring about the situation that we most fear."
(Emphasis added)
--"Obama's Secret Wars: How Our Shady Counter-Terrorism Policies Are More Dangerous Than Terrorism", by Fred Branfman Alternet, July 11, 2011
“We have gone a long way down the road of creating a situation where we are creating more enemies than we are removing from the battlefield. We are already there with regards to Pakistan and Afghanistan,"
--“Drone Attacks Create Terrorist Safe Havens, Warns Former CIA Official”, Guardian, 6-5-12
Michael
Hayden, Former Cia Director
“Former CIA Director
Michael Hayden has openly criticized the Obama’s
administration use of pilot-less drones to assassinate
suspected militants around the world. Hayden said, "Right
now, there isn’t a government on the planet that agrees
with our legal rationale for these operations, except for
Afghanistan and maybe Israel." The drone program began under
President George W. Bush but has rapidly expanded under
Obama. So far, the Obama administration has carried out
drone strikes in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen,
Ethiopia and Libya. Hayden also criticized the U.S.
assassination of the U.S. born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki in
Yemen. Hayden said, "We needed a court order to eavesdrop on
him, but we didn’t need a court order to kill him. Isn’t
that something?"
--”Former CIA Director Hayden Slams Obama Drone Program”, Democracy Now, February 7, 2012
Mathew Hoh, ex-Combat Vet, Top Civilian
Official in Afghanistan Province
"I think we're
engendering more hostility. We're wasting a lot of very good
assets going after midlevel guys who don't threaten the
United States or have no capacity to threaten the United
States,"
-- from Dirty Wars, Jeremy Scahill, Kindle Loc. 7393
David Ignatius, Washington Post
Columnist
“My quick reaction, as a journalist who
has chronicled the growing use of drones, is that this
extension to the Libyan theater is a mistake. It brings a
weapon that has become for many Muslims a symbol of the
arrogance of U.S. power into a theater next door to the
Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions, the most promising events
in a generation. It projects American power in the most
negative possible way.”
--“Drone attacks in Libya: A mistake”, Washington Post, 4-21-11
ISI -
The Pakistan Interservices Intelligence Agency
“The
Wall Street Journal reported [54]: Pakistan's main spy
agency says homegrown Islamist militants have overtaken the
Indian army as the greatest threat to national security ...
for the first time in 63 years.
Yes, that's right. Pakistani military intelligence now rates domestic insurgency a greater threat than India for the first time since Pakistan was created -- largely as a result of U.S. actions.”
-- "'Beyond Madness': Obama's War on Terror Setting Nuclear-Armed Pakistan on Fire", Fred Branfman, Alternet, November 3, 2010
Gregory Johnson,
Princeton Yemen Expert
“The most enduring policy
legacy of the past four years may well turn out to be an
approach to counterterrorism that American officials call
the “Yemen model,” a mixture of drone strikes and
Special Forces raids targeting Al Qaeda leaders …
Testimonies from Qaeda fighters and interviews I and local
journalists have conducted across Yemen attest to the
centrality of civilian casualties in explaining Al Qaeda’s
rapid growth there. The United States is killing women,
children and members of key tribes. “Each time they kill a
tribesman, they create more fighters for Al Qaeda,” one
Yemeni explained to me over tea in Sana, the capital, last
month. Another told CNN, after a failed strike, “I would
not be surprised if a hundred tribesmen joined Al Qaeda as a
result of the latest drone mistake.”
--“The Wrong Man for the C.I.A.”, by Gregory Johnson, N.Y. Times, 11-19-12
David Kilcullen, Former
Petraeus Counterinsurgency Advisor
“David
Kilcullen, Petraeus’ own counterinsurgency adviser in
Iraq, has characterized U.S. policy [55] as a
fundamental “strategic error ... our insistence on
personalizing this conflict with Al Qaeda and the Taliban,
devoting time and resources toward killing or capturing
‘high-value’ targets ... distracts us from larger
problems.” As Kilcullen had noted earlier [56], these “larger
problems” include the potential “collapse of the
Pakistani state,” which he called a calamity that in light
of the country’s size, strategic location and nuclear
stockpile would “dwarf” all other dangers in the region
… Kilcullen has warned [55] that the drone war
“has created a siege mentality among Pakistani civilians
... [is] now exciting visceral opposition across a broad
spectrum of Pakistani opinion in Punjab and Sindh, the
nation’s two most populous provinces.” Kilcullen has noted [55],“Al Qaeda and
its Taliban allies must be defeated by indigenous
forces—not from the United States, and not even from
Punjab, but from the parts of Pakistan in which they now
hide. Drone strikes make this harder, not
easier.”
--From “Replace Petraeus,” by Fred Branfman, Truthdig, June 2, 2009
Colonel David Kilcullen, a key Petraeus advisor in Iraq, who testified to the House Foreign Affairs Committee [57] on May 23, 2009, that, "Since 2006, we've killed 14 senior Al Qaeda leaders using drone strikes; in the same time period, we've killed 700 Pakistani civilians in the same area. We need to call off the drones."
--"Mass Assassinations Lie at the Heart of America's Military Strategy in the Muslim World", by Fred Branfman, Alternet, August 24, 2010
Emile
Nakhleh, Senior CIA Analyst
"We are not generating
good will in these operations," Emile Nakhleh ... We might
target radicals and potential radicals, but
unfortunately...other things and other people are being
destroyed or killed. So, in the long run ... these
operations will not necessarily help to deradicalize
potential recruits ..."
-- from Dirty Wars, Jeremy Scahill, Kindle Loc. 9824
General Stanley
McChrystal
"[General McChrystal says that] for every
innocent person you kill, you create 10 new
enemies."
-- " [58]The Runaway General [58]," Rolling Stone [58],
6/22/10
"There’s widespread resentment against drone strikes in Pakistan, says the former commander of US and Nato forces in Afghanistan, Gen Stanley McChrystal. At the launching ceremony of his book, “My Share of the Task”, on Friday evening, the retired general repeated what he had said earlier that US drone strikes were “hated on a visceral level”. He warned that too many drone strikes in Pakistan without identifying suspected militants individually can be a bad thing. Gen McChrystal said he understood why Pakistanis, even in the areas not affected by the drones, reacted negatively against the strikes. He asked the Americans how they would react if a neighbouring country like Mexico started firing drone missiles at targets in Texas. The Pakistanis, he said, saw the drones as a demonstration of America’s might against their nation and reacted accordingly. “What scares me about drone strikes is how they are perceived around the world,” Gen McChrystal said in an earlier interview. “The resentment created by American use of unmanned strikes … is much greater than the average American appreciates. They are hated on a visceral level, even by people who’ve never seen one or seen the effects of one.””
--“McChrystal opposes drone strikes [59]”, Dawn, 2-10-13
Cameron Munter,
Former U.S. Ambassador To Pakistan
“The problem is
the political fallout … Do you want to win a few battles
and lose the war? … The definition is a male between the
ages of 20 and 40 … My feeling is one man’s combatant is
another man’s—well, a chump who went to a
meeting.”
--“A Former Ambassador to Pakistan Speaks Out”, Daily Beast, Nov 20, 2012
Anne
Patterson , Ex-U.S. Ambassador to
Pakistan
“Patterson’s cables also reveal that
U.S. leaders know that present policy is destabilizing
Pakistan, thus making a nuclear disaster more likely.
Referring to U.S. “unilateral operations” in northwest
Pakistan (such as drone strikes, ground assassination and
other infringements of Pakistani sovereignty), she wrote
that “increased unilateral operations in these areas risk
destabilizing the Pakistani state, alienating both the
civilian government and military leadership, and provoking a
broader governance crisis in Pakistan without finally
achieving the goal.” She then added that “to be
effective, we must extend the writ of the Pakistani state
into the FATA [Federally Administered Tribal Areas] in such
a way that Taliban groups can no longer offer effective
protection to al-Qaeda from Pakistan’s own security and
law enforcement agencies in these areas” (9-23-09 cable) [60].
--"WikiLeaks Exposes the Danger of Pakistan’s Nukes", Fred Branfman, Truthdig, January 13, 2011
Bruce Riedel,
Obama “AfPak” Advisor
The evidence is mounting
that U.S. assassinations are so ineffective they are
actually strengthening anti-American forces in Pakistan.
Bruce Riedel, a counterinsurgency expert who coordinated the Afghan review for President Obama,
said: [61] "The pressure we've put on (jihadist forces)
in the past year has also drawn them together, meaning that
the network of alliances is growing stronger not
weaker."
--"Mass Assassinations Lie at the Heart of America's Military Strategy in the Muslim World", Fred Branfman, Alternet, August 24, 2010
Jeremy
Scahill, Author, Dirty Wars, On Somalia
"Many
seasoned Somalia analysts believed that a handful of
radicals in the country could have been contained and that
the central aim of stabilizing the country should have been
to disarm an disemplower the warlords. Instead, Washington
directly supported an expansion their power and, in the
process, caused a radical backlash in Somalia, opening the
doors wide for al Qaeda to step in... Al Shabab's meteoric
rise in Somalia, and the legacy of terror it wrought, was a
direct response to a decade of disastrous US policy, which
had strengthened the very threat it was intended to
crush."
-- from Dirty Wars, Jeremy Scahill,
Kindle Loc. 2689
Michael Scheueur, Former CIA
Counterterrorism Operative
“Former CIA
counterrorism operative Michael Scheuer has stated [51] that "Petraeus's
'decapitation' approach was also unlikely to work. 'The Red
Army tried that for 10 years, and they were far more
ruthless and cruel about it than us, and it didn't work so
well for them.'"
--"Obama's Secret Wars: How Our Shady Counter-Terrorism Policies Are More Dangerous Than Terrorism", by Fred Branfman, Alternet, July 11, 2011
ENDS