John Brennan vs. a Sixteen-Year-Old

In October 2011, 16-year-old Tariq Aziz attended a gathering in Islamabad where he was taught how to use a video camera so he could document the drones that were constantly circling over his Pakistani village, terrorizing and killing his family and neighbors. Two days later, when Aziz was driving with his 12-year-old cousin to a village near his home in Waziristan to pick up his aunt, his car was struck by a Hellfire missile. With the push of a button by a pilot at a US base thousands of miles away, both boys were instantly vaporized – only a few chunks of flesh remained.
Afterwards, the US government refused to acknowledge the boys’ deaths or explain why they were targeted. Why should they? This is a covert program where no one is held accountable for their actions.
The main architect of this drone policy that has killed hundreds, if not thousands, of innocents, including 176 children in Pakistan alone, is President Obama’s counterterrorism chief and his pick for the next director of the CIA: John Brennan.
On my recent trip to Pakistan, I met with people whose loved ones had been blown to bits by drone attacks, people who have been maimed for life, young victims with no hope for the future and aching for revenge. For all of them, there has been no apology, no compensation, not even an acknowledgement of their losses. Nothing.
That’s why when John Brennan spoke at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington DC last April and described our policies as ethical, wise and in compliance with international law, I felt compelled to stand up and speak out on behalf of Tariq Aziz and so many others. As they dragged me out of the room, my parting words were: "I love the rule of law and I love my country. You are making us less safe by killing so many innocent people. Shame on you, John Brennan."
Rather than expressing remorse for any civilian deaths, John Brennan made the extraordinary statement in 2011 that during the preceding year, there hadn’t been a single collateral death "because of the exceptional proficiency, precision of the capabilities we’ve been able to develop." Brennan later adjusted his statement somewhat, saying, "Fortunately, for more than a year, due to our discretion and precision, the U.S. government has not found credible evidence of collateral deaths resulting from U.S. counterterrorism operations outside of Afghanistan or Iraq." We later learned why Brennan’s count was so low: the administration had come up with a semantic solution of simply counting all military-age males in a strike zone as combatants.
The UK-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism has documented over 350 drones strikes in Pakistan that have killed 2,600-3,400 people since 2004. Drone strikes in Yemen have been on the rise, with at least 42 strikes carried out in 2012, including one just hours after President Obama’s reelection. The first strike in 2013 took place just four days into the new year.
A May 29, 2011 New York Times exposé showed John Brennan as President Obama’s top advisor in formulating a "kill list" for drone strikes. The people Brennan recommends for the hit list are given no chance to surrender, and certainly no chance to be tried in a court of law. The kind of intelligence Brennan uses to put people on drone hit lists is the same kind of intelligence that put people in Guantanamo. Remember how the American public was assured that the prisoners locked up in Guantanamo were the "worst of the worst," only to find out that hundreds were innocent people who had been sold to the US military by bounty hunters?
In addition to kill lists, Brennan pushed for the CIA to have the authority to kill with even greater ease using “signature strikes,” also known as “crowd killing,” which are strikes based solely on suspicious behavior.
When President Obama announced his nomination of John Brennan, he talked about Brennan’s integrity and commitment to the values that define us as Americans. He said Brennan has worked to "embed our efforts in a strong legal framework" and that he “understands we are a nation of laws.”
A nation of laws? Really? Going around the world killing anyone we want, whenever we want, based on secret information? Just think of the precedent John Brennan is setting for a world of lawlessness and chaos, now that 76 countries have drones – mostly surveillance drones but many in the process of weaponizing them. Why shouldn’t China declare an ethnic Uighur activist living in New York City as an "enemy combatant" and send a missile into Manhattan, or Russia launch a drone attack against a Chechen living in London? Or why shouldn’t a relative of a drone victim retaliate against us here at home? It’s not so far-fetched. In 2011, 26-year-old Rezwan Ferdaus, a Massachusetts-based graduate with a degree in physics, was recently sentenced to 17 years in prison for plotting to attack the Pentagon and US Capitol with small drones filled with explosives.
In his search for a new CIA chief, Obama said he looked at who is going to do the best job in securing America. Yet the blowback from Brennan’s drone attacks is creating enemies far faster than we can kill them. Three out of four Pakistanis now see the US as their enemy – that’s about 133 million people, which certainly can’t be good for US security. When Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar was asked the source of US enmity, she had a one word answer: drones.
In Yemen, escalating U.S. drones strikes are radicalizing the local population and stirring increasing sympathy for al-Qaeda-linked militants. Since the January 4, 2013 attack in Yemen, militants in the tribal areas have gained more recruits and supporters in their war against the Yemeni government and its key backer, the United States. According to Abduh Rahman Berman, executive director of a Yemeni National Organization for Defending Rights and Freedoms, the drone war is failing. "If the Americans kill 10, al-Qaeda will recruit 100," he said.
Around the world, the drone program constructed by John Brennan has become a provocative symbol of American hubris, showing contempt for national sovereignty and innocent lives.
If Obama thinks John Brennan is a good choice to head the CIA and secure America, he should contemplate the tragic deaths of victims like 16-year-old Tariq Aziz, and think again.
Medea Benjamin, cofounder of www.codepink.org and www.globalexchange.org, is author of the book Drone Warfare: Killing by Remote Control.
Read more by Medea Benjamin
- Finally, the Backlash Against Drones Takes Flight – March 25th, 2013
- Rand Paul’s Message to Obama: Don’t Drone Me Bro – March 7th, 2013
- Pushing Obama’s Arc Toward Peace – November 12th, 2012
- Americans Take Anti-Drone Stance Directly to Pakistan – September 27th, 2012
- At Drone Convention, Zero Tolerance for Peace – August 9th, 2012





MvGuy
January 9th, 2013 at 10:55 pm
Thanks to Medea and the wonderful code pink ladies for standing up to America's child killing and drone murders… So few Americans seem to notice our loss of moral standing as we find ourselves living in the night of lawlessness in a country that only talks the rule of law but does not enforce it…
No loss is greater than losing our condign rights and constitutional protections against our corrupt and now murderous government…… It was the star chamber of King George which drove the pilgrims to our shores…
Habeas corpus has been abandoned for the outcasts of the [NEW] [WORLD???] order in both the US and the UK, secret courts have been created to hear secret evidence, guilt has been inferred by association, torture and rendition nakedly justified (in the UK our government's lawyers continue to argue positively for the right to use the product of both) and vital international conventions consolidated in the aftermath of the Second World War – the Geneva Convention, the Refugee Convention, the Torture Convention – have been deliberately avoided or ignored.
It is the bitterest of ironies that John Lilburne, the most important organizer of the rights we in this country and the United States claim and on which our respective constitutions, written and unwritten, were built, achieved this in large part as a consequence of his having been himself subjected to torture, to accusations based on secret evidence and heard by a secret court, to being shackled and held in extremes of isolation which exposed him nevertheless to public humiliation and condemnation.
The worst excesses of the last ten years, which destroyed the certainties of those hard-won rights, should have sounded loud alarms, not least because of that precise historical parallel; one key in attempting to hang on to legal and moral concepts under attack is to remember their origin.
Lilburne, an intractable young Puritan, with a strong sense of his rights as a freeborn Englishman and a smattering of law, in 1637 was summoned before the Court of Star Chamber – a court comprising nothing more than a small committee of the Privy Council, without a jury, empowered to investigate. Lilburne had recently been in Holland and was charged, o n the basis of information from an informant, with sending loosely defined "fatuous and scandalous" religious books to England. His defence was straightforward: “I am clear I have sent none.” Thereafter he refused to answer questions based on allegations kept secret from him as to his association with others suspected of involvement in the sending of the books: “I think by the law of the land that I may stand upon my just defence, and that my accusers ought to be brought face to face to justify what they accuse me of.” For his refusal, he was fined 500 pounds, a fortune for an apprentice, and was lashed to a cart and whipped thought the streets of London from Fleet to Westminster.
Lilburne was locked in a pillory in an unbearable posture (in today’s terminology a “stress position”), but yet exhorted all who would listen to resist the tyranny of the bishops, repeating biblical texts to the crowd applicable to the wrongs done to him and their rights. On being required to incriminate himself: “No man should be compelled to be his own executioner.” He survived two and a half years in Fleet prison, gagged and kept in solitary confinement, shackled and starving. The first act of the Long Parliament in November 1642 was to set him free, to abolish the Court of Star Chamber and to adopt a resolution that its sentence was “illegal and against the liberty of the subject, and also bloody, cruel, wicked, barbarous and tyrannical.”
Above entirely lifted from: http://www.adbusters.org/magazine/105/why-we-tort…. One parenthetical insert in caps by me….. EVERYONE HERE SHOULD BE CONVERSANT ON THE ABOVE..!!
lowlyWHisper
January 9th, 2013 at 11:22 pm
:This is a covert program …"
How covert can it be, if the kid is taught how to record the drones "constantly" flying over his village?
Claus Eric Hamle
January 10th, 2013 at 1:54 am
Bush/Obama has turned the USA into a banana republic. Fallujah is worse than Hiroshima. In December 1989 the US killed about 6,000 unarmed civilians in Panama City. Nobody has been charged. In Iraq the US Army kidnapped boys and their mothers and raped the boys and forced their mothers to watch while it was filmed by a female soldier. Another experiment ? The SS and Gestapo couldn´t have done it.
the lion
January 10th, 2013 at 4:13 am
It is time to realise that it was 4 (piloted) drones that flew in the 9/11 attacks and we know how those antagonised America, It is now time for Americans that Pakistanis and others consider the United States drones in the same vane.
The Drone Arranger to Head the CIA | Aisle C
January 10th, 2013 at 6:24 am
[...] The main architect of this drone policy that has killed hundreds, if not thousands, of innocents, including 176 children in Pakistan alone, is President Obama’s counterterrorism chief and his pick for the next director of the CIA: John Brennan. [...]
Yonatan
January 10th, 2013 at 10:17 am
It is covert from the US people – if they know nothing, they won't object.
Obligatory:
First the drones came for the terrorists, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a terrorist.
Then the came for the Afghan males, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't an Afghan male.
Then they came for the Afghan women and children, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't an Afghan women or child.
Then they came for the US citizens, and there was no one left to speak for the US citizens.
Mark
January 10th, 2013 at 10:26 am
"When President Obama announced his nomination of John Brennan, he talked about Brennan’s integrity and commitment to the values that define us as Americans. "
Regretably, Medea, Obama speaks the truth.
And to Claus, we are NOT a "banana republic". We've long since devolved from a republic into an authoritarian faux democracy and, yes, we have no bananas…
ksat
January 10th, 2013 at 12:32 pm
Fallujah worse than Hiroshima??? Your over-the-top remarks destroy your argument.
ksat
January 10th, 2013 at 12:40 pm
I'm still not understanding Obama's thinking. I'm with Justin Raimondo in applauding Obama's selection of Hagel for Sec of War. But at the same time he then selects Brennan for CIA. What is Obama trying to do here? Does he have an objective or not?
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January 10th, 2013 at 10:00 pm
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