By Medea Benjamin
Counterterrorism adviser John Brennan spoke at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington DC on April 30 to mark the one-year anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden. It was the first time a high level member of the Obama Administration spoke at length about the U.S. drone strikes that the CIA and the Joint Special Operations Command have been carrying out in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia.
“President Obama has instructed us to be more open with the American people about these efforts,” Brennan explained.
I had just co-organized a Drone Summit over the weekend, where Pakistani lawyer Shahzad Akbar told us heart-wrenching stories about the hundreds of innocent victims of our drone attacks. We saw horrific photos of people whose bodies were blown apart by Hellfire missiles, with only a hand or a slab of flesh remaining. We saw poor children on the receiving end of our attacks—maimed for life, with no legs, no eyes, no future. And for all these innocents, there was no apology, no compensation, not even an acknowledgement of their losses. Nothing.
The U.S. government refuses to disclose who has been killed, for what reason, and with what collateral consequences. It deems the entire world a war zone, where it can operate at will, beyond the confines of international law.
So there I was at the Wilson Center, listening to Brennan describe our policies as ethical, “wise,” and in compliance with international law. He spoke as if the only people we kill with our drone strikes are militants bent on killing Americans. “It is unfortunate that to save innocent lives we are sometimes obliged to take lives – the lives of terrorists who seek to murder our fellow citizens.” The only mention of taking innocent lives referred to Al Qaeda. “Al Qaeda’s killing of innocent civilians, mostly Muslim men, women and children, has badly tarnished its image and appeal in the eyes of Muslims around the world.” This is true, but the same must be said of U.S. policies that fuel anti-American sentiments in the eyes of Muslims around the world.
So I stood up and in a calm voice, spoke out (video).
“Excuse me, Mr. Brennan, will you speak out about the innocents killed by the United States in our drone strikes? What about the hundreds of innocent people we are killing with drone strikes in the Philippines, in Yemen, in Somalia? I speak out on behalf of those innocent victims. They deserve an apology from you, Mr. Brennan. How many people are you willing to sacrifice? Why are you lying to the American people and not saying how many innocents have been killed?”
“I speak out on behalf of Tariq Aziz, a 16-year-old in Pakistan who was killed simply because he wanted to document the drone strikes. I speak out on behalf of Abdulrahman Al-Awlaki, a 16-year-old born in Denver, killed in Yemen just because his father was someone we don’t like. I speak out on behalf of the Constitution and the rule of law.” My parting words as they dragged me out the door 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.”
I was handcuffed and taken to the basement of the building, where I was questioned about my background and motives. To their credit, it seems the Wilson Center thought it would not be good to have someone arrested for exercising their right to free speech, so I was released.
Brennan’s speech came the day after another U.S. drone strike in Pakistan, one that killed three alleged militants. After the strike, the Pakistani government voiced its strongest and most public condemnation yet, accusing the United States of violating Pakistani sovereignty, calling the campaign “a total contravention of international law and established norms of interstate relations.” Earlier in April the Pakistani Parliament unanimously condemned drone strikes and established a new set of guidelines for rebuilding the country’s frayed relationship with the United States, which included the immediate cessation of all drone strikes in Pakistani territory.
The attacks in Pakistan, carried out by the CIA, started in 2004. Since then, there have been over 300 strikes. The areas where the strikes take place have been sealed off by the Pakistani security forces, so it has been difficult to get accurate reports about deaths and damages. John Brennan has denied that innocents have even been killed. Speaking in June 2011 about the preceding year, he said “there hasn’t been a single collateral death because of the exceptional proficiency, precision of the capabilities we’ve been able to develop.” Mr. 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.”
This is just not true. The UK-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism is the group that keeps the best count of casualties from U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. According to its figures, since 2004, U.S. has killed between about 2,500-3,000 people in Pakistan. Of those, between 479 and 811 were civilians, 174 of them children.
Shahzad Akbar, a Pakistani lawyer who has been representing drone victims and who started the group Foundation for Fundamental Rights, disputes even these figures and claims that the vast majority of those killed are ordinary civilians. “I have a problem with this word ‘militant.’ Most of the victims who are labeled militants might be Taliban sympathizers but they are not involved in any criminal or terrorist acts, and certainly not against the United States,” he claimed. He said the Americans often assumes that if someone wears a turban, has a beard and carries a weapon, he is a combatant. “That is a description of all the men in that region of Pakistan. It is part of their culture.” Shahzad believes that only those people who the Americans label “high-value targets”, which would be less than 200, should be considered militants; all others should be considered civilian victims.
While President Obama is gearing up for an election campaign and using his drone-strike killing spree to as a sign of his tough stance on national security, people from across the United States and around the world are organizing to rein in the drones.
Gathering in Washington DC on April 28-29, they came up with a new campaign to educate the American public about civilian deaths in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and elsewhere as a result of the use of drones for illegal killing and to pressure members of Congress, President Obama, federal agencies, and state and local governments to restrict the use of drones for illegal killing and surveillance. The tactics include court challenges, delegations to the affected regions, direct action at U.S. bases from where the drones are operated, student campaigns to divest from companies involved in the production of killer drones and outreach to faith-based communities.
If you would like to get involved, make sure to sign up here.
Medea Benjamin (medea@globalexchange.org), cofounder of Global Exchange and CODEPINK: Women for Peace, is the author of Drone Warfare: Killing by Remote Control. Her previous books include Don’t Be Afraid Gringo: A Honduran Woman Speaks from the Heart., and (with Jodie Evans) Stop the Next War Now (Inner Ocean Action Guide).




37 Comments

If the Unites States has declared the planet a war zone, and an endless war on terror, how come members of the United Nations are not reviewing American war actions/atrocities across the globe?
Why is the UN silent and not reviewing American wars in the rest of the world?
P.S. Brennan, I don’t believe a word he says.
i prefer Walter Brennan he was the Real McCoy…this guy is a slimeball murderer
BHO winner of the Nobel Piece Prize phooooooey
Brennan and the other taxpayer supported murderers have a plan. They kill innocent people, women and children, with a “signature murder strike”. They also use CIA spies to create False Flag murder, either attempted, Undie Bomber, or actual, David Headley, Mumbai.
Blackwater assassins sit at consoles where they attack any group of people for no reason. Or the reason is the war profits. That creates more enemies of the American people. I expect Obama and his Blackwater kill teams will be expanding their Drones program to include the Al Qaeda in North America affiliate.
You were simply amazing …again.Thank you for standing up and saying what thousands of us also wanted to say. But why did no one else stand up [with me here at home] and applaud your action ? Were they all so afraid for their jobs ? Guess so.
Why does Pakistan abide these drones? Why dont they just say that they are no longer allowed to fly over Pakistan and the next one who does will be shot down ? Why is no other country going to the U.N. or world court and filing complaints? Cant the U.N. make a statement condemning drones ? And then downing them ? Why has only Iran bring one down ?
Bravo Medea.
“Brought” one down, of course.
Thank you, Medea, for all that you do.
Medea, you have guts and what you did truly meets the definition of courage.
Heartily recommended.
Thank you Medea Benjamin for confronting the Machine.
That the President claims he can pre-pardon himself for ordering Murder of suspects and their neighbors, doesn’t make much sense. And it is a Crime Against Humanity. Good work.
I love Medea Benjamin- She’s a spitfire that one. I have this great video I shot of Medea being accosted by the Sacramento PD on horseback while we were protesting Bush before 9/11. Little Woman, Big Horses. What a bunch of pussies.
This comment gets to the middle … POTUS Obama killing innocents makes POTUS Obama not innocent … consequences need to take place and happen.
Thank you for courage and calmness. That was a beautiful thing you did.
Thank you, Medea!
You are so gutsy. Congratulations on a principled act of resistance.
Yes, he was, by cracky!
Someday these monsters (obama, bush, cheney, brennan, petraeus, and others complicit in the killing of innocents and the destruction of so many countries, will pay. They may not be tried in court but they will die – some with cancer and die with excrutiating pain, some with fatal heart attacks, some with long, painful terminal diseases. I can only hope. This is where I came come to.
I note without comment that although I’ve heard reports of Brennan’s speech in the media, this is the first time I’ve heard that he was interrupted by a protester. The corporate media not reporting the news. Gosh, who’da thunk it?
Medea, you should have been the Nobel Peace Prize winner the year 0 had it given to him. 0 got it for a political speech but no track record. He now has a record and it isn’t that of a Peace Prize winner. That committee should be totally ashamed and disband itself in favor of people that actually look at the record.
Medea, there certainly is great fear of people like you who stand up and speak the truth. That is why there is so much repression of free speech in this country. The motu don’t want any rebellious ideas or charismatic leaders to emerge.
Medea totally rawks…! Check out her awesome job, on this great (short)PressTV report… Drones needed to save American Lives…
It’s the “corporate” media. Empire serves the interests of the corporations.
Frank33, you are so right. The mic has to continue to manufacture enemies so they can keep the war going without much thought by the general population. In Afghanistan, we had ‘mission-creep’ by switching the ‘enemy’ from al Qaeda to the Taliban. Our stated mission was to destroy al Qaeda. Well, they are pretty much long gone from the field, so we turned to the Taliban. Now the Taliban are locals who are trying to rid their country of invaders. They are filling the role of the American colonists in throwing out the British soldiers. We are losing to them because we are making more and more enemies among the people, but, as I said, it fills the coffers of the motu.
The recently-released letters of Usama bin Ladin clearly indicate that he had little control of “al-Qaeda” groups in various places.
Now, first, there is no proof of bin Ladin’s involvement in the 9/11 attacks, which is why the FBI Wanted notice includes other events but not 9/11.
But even if you don’t accept that, then there is the fact that these other groups, according to the letters, are not under any central control.
So given these facts, there is no legal basis for assassinating people because the AUMF (Authorization for the Use of Military Force, 2001) doesn’t apply. Without a legal basis they are simply wanton killings, particularly under the new “signature” provisions whereby the US can direct explosive rockets toward targets based solely on their intelligence “signatures” — patterns of behavior that are detected through signals intercepts, human sources and aerial surveillance. These are NOT attacks against those responsible for the 9/11 attacks and therefore even against that flimsy “authorization” these current attacks have no basis.
I’ve been advocating for Oily Bomber’s return of the Nobel medal and the $1.4 million sent back to Oslo since Libya at least…! 8-(
The Nobel Peace Prize is now meaningless.
Thanks for bringing the authorization to this firing squad of discontent. I don’t like the situation that requires any “measured response” to a suspected threat, but we used to give medals for scalps and bodycounts confirmed by ears. Realpolitik is not pretty, nice, or avoidable. If you have to fight, win it. It will piss many off, but will put the fear of God in all of them. Paraphrased Machiavelli. Speaking softly and big sticks don’t work with Muslims.
The insanity of this Drone warfare is beyond the pale. Who in their right mind would want to do this. America, we must save our name and our country.
Medea Benjamin and the brave people of Codepink, thank you from the bottom of my heart. My heart, the Mother’s Heart.
I don’t have words to express the admiration and encouragement your constant presence confronting these Horrors has done to change my life. You have made me a braver person. A person willing to take one step forward when evryone else is taking one step back.
Thank you. I’m a better Mother for the lesson.
Seems to me that that somehow engineering of the Obitler to have the Nobel is an attempt to neutralize/invalidate the work and Institution(s) of the Uppity Peaceniks and the prior folks acknowledged who are the real deal and are still very much a pain in the @ss to the mammon-is-my-copilot, war-profiteering totalitarian$. It’s a kind of capture-the-flag thing in a vain hope to rip the heart out of or demoralize the supporters of an active and egalitarian peace. #FAIL.
Because the US is like the bully on the playground. They don’t speak out for fear of repercussions. For example, the US stopped funding a worthy UN organization because they had the audacity to voice support for the recognition of Palestine. The offense wasn’t so much on the issue of Palestinian statehood but that they acted in open defiance of the US.
Medea- I watched the video of your words and actions. Your heart may have been pounding but you appeared totally poised and composed. You very calmly… kicked-ass and instantly became a hero of mine.
Thanks! Shaming is the least he deserves.
Rock on Codepink…..you are the true patriots.
Unforgettable that image of Big Burly pressing a spread-eagled Medea through the door as she gets off her parting shots.
I’m surprised they don’t have a Medea early warning system.
We are not where we should be — with you, Medea.
You were great, Medea. Thank you for speaking so eloquently. To interrupt the Serious People like that is hard enough; but to do it while they are taking you away was fantastic. The only way I know to thank you is to keep contributing to Code Pink and wait until I retire so I can be there.
Then vote the A-hole out.