Since 2009, U.S. drone strikes have killed between 64 and 116 civilians in areas outside of active hostilities, the Obama administration claimed in a report released on Friday afternoon, just hours before the start of the Fourth of July holiday weekend.
That number of civilian casualties is much lower than the assessments of independent groups, including the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which puts the number at between 380 and 801.
Indeed, said Jennifer Gibson of the international human rights group Reprieve: “The only thing those numbers tell us is that this Administration simply doesn’t know who it has killed.”
The report (pdf) was the subject of advance criticism, with human rights advocates doubting that the government would offer accurate accounting or “provide the kind of specificity that would actually be useful to journalists, human rights researchers, and the general public,” as the ACLU’s Jameel Jaffer wrote this week.
Such predictions appear to have been prescient, as the New York Times reported:
The names and stories of drone victims are also omitted from the report.
Bottom line, said Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU’s National Security Project in a press statement, “The American public can’t be confident that the government is using lethal force legally and wisely with a disclosure that’s so limited as to be virtually meaningless.”
President Barack Obama also on Friday signed an executive order requiring the annual release of civilian casualties caused by drone strikes—described by the Guardian‘s Spencer Ackerman as Obama’s “favored tactic of war”—by future presidents.
Responding on social media, drone experts catalogued the ways in which the report fell short.
“Today’s casualty data release and issuance of the executive order is a concrete step in the right direction, but more information is still needed for the public to meaningfully evaluate the lawfulness and effectiveness of the targeted killing program,” said Human Rights First’s Rita Siemion.
“For data on the number of non-combatant deaths to be meaningful, the administration should clarify how it classifies individuals as combatants, name the armed groups those classified as combatants are alleged to be members of, specify the legal basis for using lethal force, and provide strike locations and dates,” she added.
And while Friday’s revelations may mark Obama “starting to dismantle his own dangerous legacy,” as Amnesty International’s Naureen Shah put it in an op-ed at the Guardian, “the drone data could be completely misleading—and provide a veneer of legitimacy to unlawful killings.”
She wrote:
The Obama administration’s assessment comes just one day after Reprieve released a report exposing the U.S. government’s pattern of lying about the human toll of its aerial bombing campaign.
Meanwhile, a former U.S. drone technician, who spoke out Thursday in Europe about the targeted killing program, described the report on Twitter as “complete & utter horse shit, as expected.”
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