This is an interesting statement because it implies that Pakistan will have no problem with the drones if they are employed legally. What could that be?
One way of making the use ‘legal’ is for the US to get Pakistan’s permission before striking. This was the case until a point and Pakistan was not much concerned about who got killed and why. For several reasons, not least the now very high frequency of drones use, the high number of ‘signature’ strikes, and legal-normative questions over drone strikes, Islamabad cannot remain nonchalant about such attacks on its soil.
Politically, the issue has reached a point at home where no government can say to the people that strikes from X date onwards have become legal because the US now seeks our permission. They strike if we permit; they don’t if we don’t. Not only is this not possible to verify, it raises another question: who is determining the targets? Does the intel come from Pakistan or the US? Should Pakistan allow the killing on its soil of someone, anyone, who has been labelled a ‘terrorist’ by another state using procedures and information that cannot be verified by Pakistan independently? These questions increasingly inform the broader international debate on drones use.
The only ‘legal’ framework is for Pakistan to possess the platform and use it on its territory according to its own legal and targeting procedures. Short of this, it is difficult to see what possible, though improbable, mechanism the FM was/is pointing at.
The FM’s statement also puts the issue in the narrow operational framework: if they are killing terrorists that’s ok. But that’s a big ‘if’ and by the looks of it getting ‘iffy-er’. Neither is the use of drones and the questions it has thrown up just a bilateral issue. The questions go beyond the operational significance of the drones use. That is an important and commendable development, not just for normative, but for important strategic reasons.
Let’s put it this way: the increased tactical use (even success) of the US drones war is precisely the failure of the strategic objectives for which Washington had started this self-declared ‘war on terror’. That’s the central problem with drones use.
Operationally, the remotely-piloted vehicles armed with missiles are a force-multiplier platform. They can reconnoitre and kill effectively. The US is already experimenting with arming the RPVs with low-collateral damage missiles, lighter with less radius of destruction than the heavier Hellfire system currently in use. Soon enough, it will have more precision. But that’s about it — a very effective platform at the theatre and tactical levels, great operational significance that is unlikely to lead to any politico-strategic plus.
Clausewitz posited that the grammar of war is grounded in war’s “triple nature”. The first level is the “primitive violence of people”: “the ability to take risks and the willingness to kill”; the second level relates to managing violence and harnessing it to an aim. This is done by the military commanders; the third level is political where the government determines the ultimate objective of war.
Clausewitz determined that there would be tension between the first level and second and also between the second and third levels. But all the three levels have to be taken together since that is what constitutes the triple nature of war as well as its grammar.
He used the terms Zweck und Ziel, the first referring to “purpose”, the second to “aim”. The ‘Zweck’ denotes the political objective for which a war is being fought; the ‘Ziel’ relates to the actual conduct and aim of battles, of which many may be fought to achieve the political end. The Ziel must then add up to the Zweck or as Philip Windsor put it: “Clausewitz argues that the Ziel must always be defined in the context of the Zweck and be subordinate to it.”
If Clausewitz’s argument is to be used as performance metric, let’s see where the US began and how it has fared: from conjuring up grand scenarios of stabilising the greater Middle East to refashioning it to fighting insurgencies and learning to eat soup with a knife (instead of finding a spoon) to a narrowed-down focus on counterterrorism using covert ops teams and, now, drones. Refashioning is démodé, as is COIN with its McPetraeo-conceptualised Zen and the Art of Counterinsurgency Sustenance. Winning hearts and minds is passé.
So how does one win this war; more aptly, how does one extricate? That’s a tough proposition. It is important to create a narrative of victory, or relative victory. The night raids have been successful, as are the drones. The narrative should, therefore, focus on how good the intelligence is and how many of the Taliban and al Qaeda leaders have been taken out.
In come the armed RPVs, a cheaper option that can be used anywhere. Improved technology means they will be more effective. If a state allows them, good. If not, the US can use them unilaterally. Customary international law is subservient to domestic US legislation anyway. Add to this the ‘political question doctrine’ and the unilateral use of drones or its consequences — people killed, property destroyed, etc. — becomes non-justiciable: i.e., the US administration cannot be sued in any US court because national security and the conduct of foreign policy is the executive’s political domain and outside the purview of the courts.
So, we have tactics guiding strategy, success determined by how many ‘terrorists’ have been taken out. The idea seems like a variation on the stability-instability paradox. Keep the Homeland secure and use drones and other such platforms to strike at groups remotely. To keep the centre secure, keep the periphery unstable.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (23)
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@MilesToGo: We really have to decide who the terrorists are.
Well, a few Pakistanis came by boat and killed truckful of Indians. No one has been found guilty by any court so far in Pakistan. Effectively Pakistanis can't be prosecuted for crimes they commit inside India? If so - what option remains for countries aggrieved but to use extra-legal means to take out their threats?
To talk of Legality and lawfulness - Pakistan should be a good citizen of world community and shouldn't allow swamps of terrorists to exist within its territory, that can threaten other countries. When that happens Pakistan's argument will have a moral force.
@Afzaal Khan: "So if Tomorrow some other state finds “terrorists” inside some other country and use drones You guys won’t have problem right? " Drones were used only after Pakistan committed perfidy and breach of faith and trust between allies. So, yes, not only there is no problem if similar situation arises in future "inside some other country", but having the Pakistan experience now, there should be no hesitation in doing so much earlier in the game!
So if Tomorrow some other state finds "terrorists" inside some other country and use drones You guys won't have problem right?
Yawn...
Bravo Ejaz, well done, and Drones are and will always be a pivotal part in our fight against the TTP, Pak Army would do well if it could some how manage the role of the Drones to their benefit and liking, apart from that , hoping that we would find a collective use of the weapon and Americans would even consider that as an option, would be a far cry. But anyhow, nicely done, loved the part where you made analogies with statements by,"Clausewitz ", very informative, and like the style of employed to explain the issue.
Till the time Pakistan's ISI keeps backing the good Taleban in Afghanistan and in the bargain the Al-Qaieda ... This quagmire will go onnn.. Looks like Pakistan is still dreaming on the strategy they are trying to apply India of thousand cuts to America ... They must understand that India has so much blood in stock that Pakistan will drown in Indian blood in first few cuts .... More cuts .... better the chance of definate death !!!
"Islamabad cannot remain nonchalant about such (drone) attacks on its soil.."
Ummm.. you mean all those thousands of attacks on military, its installations and headquarters, on innocent people, on schools and mosques, on police posts and markets, on foreign cricket teams and delegations.. that has resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people and our soldiers.. ?
Why do you see only 'drones' breaching our sovereignty, like most Pakistani politicians ?
These lofty and wordy assessments in my opinion appear too late and too grandiose when talking about the current state of affairs in Pakistan.
The purpose of the war in Afghanistan after 9/11 was to prevent the use of that country by AlQaeda to launch terrorist attacks on countries such as the US. AlQaeda has been almost eliminated and its leader killed. The objective has been achieved. What remains is the Taliban, whose elimination was not the original objective. Why are the US and Nato still fighting there, whether with drones or night raids? As Ejaz Haider says the strategy has been overtaken by the tactics. To the credit of President Obama, it appears he has realised the futility of this war. In a couple of yeas the bulk of US and Nato forces will be gone. A VietNam style of withdrawal is not something any US President can afford. Afghanistan will remain a failed state but its capacity to damage will be restricted to the damage it inflicts on itself.
I think all the noises about the drones are only about finding out the humin part of Pakistan on the grounds. Otherwise what prevents Pakistan to file a case against US in ICJ.
Maybe it's just as simple as American's killing bad guys who find sanctuary inside the tribal territories - no deep thinking or analysis required.
They are killing your terrorist for free - what else do you want?
@Ejaz Haider: "Keep the Homeland secure and use drones and other such platforms to strike at groups remotely. To keep the centre secure, keep the periphery unstable."
No. To keep the homeland secure, we fight the enemy where he is, attack him, rather than let him come to us. If he is given a safe haven, he will surely attack us again eventually. Better to confront him directly, now. By drones, if sufficient. By other means, if not.
You seem to wish or think that we will forget why we are in Afghanistan and why we are concerned about Waziristan: we were attacked from there. This is fundamental, if you knew anything about us. If you were to regard us simply as a tribe much like the Pushtuns, with our own distinct cultural values and sense of honor, especially when it comes to war, we might perhaps make more progress.
Once again, drone strikes are only possible with forward target spotters ON THE GROUND in the target area providing real time target data to the drone control centers! If the PAKISTANI STATE had effective control of its "sovereignty" in the drone target region, then drone strikes would not be needed because the police/army could just arrest the "targets"! However, since the state has seen the many trials for "militants" resulting in few convictions due to "lack of evidence", the state has realized that drones are a vastly better solution for the militant problems the army/government faces. No expensive army operations into FATA resulting in dead soldiers and civilians, along with destruction of towns from protracted battles! The state gets to have it both ways.
It is the fear of unknown. The input to drone is from various instruments and collection of various information. The operator sitting in the Nevada dessert out side Los Vegas is not trigger happy. Also lot of valuable target have been hit. Pakistani establishment wants to know who those traitor are or what information goes in making decision, so that some other valuable strategic targets can be saved.
Drones must drone on - until the Pakistan Establishment agrees to stop supporting them goes after them.
Drone on...Clausewitz or not, without Pakistan's active commitment to destroy Taliban and its ilk, the war cannot be won. Clausewitz talked in terms of states acting in their self interest not in their own destruction. Pakistan rather defeat US through its proxies than see itself saved from the extremists. Such is the hatred for the US, the belief in religious supremacy and committment to "strategic depth". The fires of hatred neither the drones nor the great Clausewitz could extinguish.
You never made a lot of sense to me......
"Winning hearts and minds is passé."
You know why? BEcause all legitimate attempts to win hearts and minds are deliberately undermined by the deep state in conjunction with Mr. Malik utilzing media and organizations like DPC for the purpose.
The journalist Ejaz Haider explained some interesting concepts about the killing game, and when you think about it the whole thing of justification has been going on since the time of the Exodus. Someone has to be the good guy and the other the bad guy. Moving on a little some people may remember that the British used to strap the leaders of so called Indian militants (Indian/Pakistani personnel) to the front of their cannons and fire them in order to set an example to the followers. In WWII, the British and Americans had total air superiority in Europe and roamed around the countryside bombing bridges, roads, and anything that moved. As a result millions of people died from actual bombing or lack of nutrition. When war trials came along the NAZIS got all the blame and were hanged, but the British and Americans were given medals. Moving on to 2002 America/NATO invaded Iraq, Afghanistan, and then started bombing Pakistan. Nothing has changed. The people they invade are the bad guys and have to be blown up with drones, and the invaders, who are the good guys, are given medals. The innocents they kill are conveniently referred to as collateral damage