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Drone Wars: Experts ponder implications of remote, robotic warfare

Published: Thursday, March 11, 2010

Updated: Thursday, March 11, 2010

drone

U.S. Air Force / Lt. Col. Leslie Pratt

They are watching you.  Thousands of feet above, circling endlessly with cameras that record your every move.  They are quiet, they are deadly, and you cannot stop them.  They are Predators, drones sent into areas where the U.S. Army needs surveillance, where the Air Force needs to execute precision strikes, and where the CIA seeks to conduct covert operations.  The revolution in unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technology that has swept the U.S. military over the last decade has generated massive amounts of reconnaissance data and increased the cost efficiency and safety of precision aerial combat missions, dramatically altering the psychological landscape of war.  

“My entire career was removing or displacing the cockpit pilot from the battlefield,” said Lt. Gen. Tad Oelstrom, speaking at the symposium of the National Security Journal and National Security Law Association on March 5th.  From his time guiding the AGM-12 Bullpup missile as an F-4 pilot to the later introduction of the F-15 Eagle, Oelstrom, who is the head of the National Security Program at Harvard's Kennedy School, saw the engagement of pilots with the enemy move progressively farther from the location of the target.  The greatest challenge created by recent change, says Oelstrom, is that doctrine has not kept apace with innovation.  The three elements of strategy, doctrine, and vision, he says, are each essential to maintain a proper balance between robotics and the other tools of modern warfare.  

Gen. Oelstrom's greatest fear is that we will fall down the slippery slope of unpredictable implications of technology that we put into action before it is fully understood.  “How is the U.S. looked upon by the rest of the world in terms of the way we go to war?  What would we look like as a nation if we showed up and all our robots got off the back of the C-17?” Oelstrom believes that as the cost of warfare in lives and money falls due to innovation, strategies like those employed by Gen. Stanley McChrystal in Afghanistan – reducing civilian casualties, even at the cost of greater risk to one's own troops – will be an important part of maintaining the support of the local population in future military engagements.

Speaking in a later panel, Afsheen John Radsan ’87, a professor at William Mitchell College of Law, questioned the legality of the Predator operations currently being conducted by the CIA.  “If we are going to have a symbol of Obama’s war, it is the Predator. This is Obama's tool.” Prof. Radsan, who worked in the office of the general counsel of the CIA from 2002 to 2004, pointed to the weaponization of the Predator drones as an example of the CIA's unique legal status having made it an attractive candidate for Bush-era programs of questionable legality.  “Should the CIA be involved in the Predator program?  Should the CIA be running secret prisons?  Should the CIA be involved in rendition?” The key, he noted, is that as a non-military agency, the CIA is accustomed to conducting covert operations and espionage activities outside the view of the public. 

Because of the sensitivity of national security issues, Prof. Radsan believes that Congress and the courts are less effective checks on legality than internal review boards and the inspector general, but the most effective check is the scrutiny of the public.  “What is the CIA most worried about?  It's not Congress, it's not the courts.  It may be the internal agencies, but mainly it is the media.”

While legal norms and military doctrine evolve in response to new applications of technology, the success of UAV technology on the battlefield has only served to further stimulate innovation.  But according to Missy Cummings, Director of the Humans and Automation Lab at MIT, unmanned systems are less interesting as weapons systems than they are due to the novel challenges they create in the organization of the command structure and work load of flight missions.  “There is functionally no difference between firing a hellfire missile from a UAV and reprogramming a Tomahawk [cruise missile] mid-flight.” Under the traditional model of Air Force combat missions, officers were in the cockpit to pull the trigger for authorized weapons release.  But with UAVs being increasingly controlled by automated systems and operated from the comfort of a command center, the decision to release weapons can be made by an entire team, usually including a lawyer.  “The pilot is a mere voting member in the system that decides how to control the vehicle.” While the Air Force has held to the old model and employed officers with two years of special training as unmanned mission pilots, the Army has successfully run the same missions using enlisted personnel with ten weeks of training.  Soon, she predicts that the increasing automation will make it possible for each pilot to command multiple UAVs at a time.  The result will be that the pilots of the future will be more like video game players than the Chuck Yeager daredevils of the past.

Cummings also foresees UAVs having a dramatic impact on personal privacy, since as they become easier to fly and cheaper to build they will be used more frequently for civilian and police purposes.  Gen. Oelstrom also pointed out the serious security implications UAVs will present once they are employed by terrorists as weapons. “You could imagine 30 simultaneous attacks occurring around New York City with WMDs.” Regardless of these dangers, Oelstrom was bullish about innovation, expressing fear that the enemy is “one step behind us.” “We need to press technology as hard as we can, as long as we have the framework around it that gives us the strategy, the doctrine, the vision that comes with it.”

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2 comments

Anonymous
Fri Apr 9 2010 06:42
During the early part of the second world war, bomber command in the UK had a policy of flying the bombers back over the cities they had hit, in order that the crew could take pride in their work. Before long, the incidence of suicides and acute depression became so alarming that bomber command altered the policy and order its crews to avoid flying over the carnage they had created. Moral improved. The lesson was learned. If you are going to butcher civilians, pretend you are doing something else, like when you are eating something from third world swamp and you tell yourself it is chicken.In the modern context however, it is possible that this policy of removing people from their victims in war will create blowback that nobody inside the US military can properly perceive or understand. I have alot of friends in the US military, as I was once in the Australian infantry before moving to law. But now I live in Switzerland and mostly meet with folks from all over the world. One thing i notice with increasing frequency is the growing gulf of understanding between US citizens and the rest of the world. It is as if America is sailing out into the lonely ocean, whilst the rest of the world watches from the shore.Let me blunt. Americans are becoming hated and feared. I don't mean in AFPAK, where children and mothers are being butchered by drones with a terrible regularity. I mean in Europe, in India, in Russia, in China, in Africa, in South America. In fact, you name it, they are starting to fear and therefore hate you. Probably Australians, Canadians and English are the only ones who understand and still like you.This technology is not just taking our military personal away from danger, it is removing us from the reality of war, and that is making us incredibly brutal, cruel and merciless. Not to us. Of course, the whole point is that we are sheltered from the brutality and cruelty of what we do. But for the victims, we are beginning to resemble the pure mechanical evil residing within the Terminator. We are seen as heartless, and even cheered by bloodshed. Recently I was in the presence of two Indians and a Russian, and we were watching the leaked footage of the helicopter pilots cheering and whooping it up as they critically injured children and slaughtered journalists. It was the cheering and the high fives which were unsettling. One indians said "They have become monsters. They have lost their humanity. Everything is a movie for them." The russian said "It is a video game. They have made the killing like a video game. Even the nazis knew what they were doing, and had to live with it."So there is a cost to this technology, and that cost may end up being far, far more dreadful than we can imagine. I have studied combat, and i know what it is. Combat is waiting for your prey, and watching him. You wait for him to be vulnerable, and then you strike unseen at a vital organ, swift and sure with a crippling blow. Then you fade back into the shadows, and wait for blood to ebb away from the living flesh.American policy is making us the target. We have isolated ourselves, and we have made ourselves objects of real fear and loathing. When the world comes for us, and it will if we continue to engage with it as if force is our right and all other nations must obey our foreign policy or else suffer force, the world will come for us like a predator.It will strike at us from the shadows, and it will strike at a vital organ. We will be most vulnerable. It is the nature of combat.I am not talking about a few arabs full of half witted religious theory and moneyed up with dad's credit card. If you are scared of that, you're an idiot.I am talking about Russia, China, India, Japan, the EU and Brazil. All acting in concert, all acting as one united force against the tyrant.30 nuclear bombs could detonate in 30 American cities in 30 seconds, and that would be the stone cold of the Imperialist dream.America needs to stop drifting off into a lonely killing zone. It must stop using force as though violence within a social group has no consequences. If it does not, it will become the prey of all other states.Iran is not a threat. It is barely a country.Russia, China and Europe. These places are dangerous adversaries. Most of all because you will never see them coming. And they are beginning to hate and fear you. they are are beginning to unite out of hatred and fear. Before it was dislike of the arrogance mixed with envy of the technology and wealth. Now it is far more dangerous, it is hate and fear. We kill what we hate and fear. We group against it, we stalk it, we hunt it, and we kill it. It is our nature to do so.Look now at Krygyztan. Do you not understand that this is a joint sino-russian middle finger to the USA? Scheduled as Obama the Pure sits down to sign some idiotic and meaningless piece of paper for the sake of a photo opportunity, this event is calculated and organized. America is being tested. They must either withdraw...
SJPONeill
Mon Mar 15 2010 17:03
1. The other similarity between UAVs and Tomahawks is that you have to have a target worth hitting with a Hellfire or similar system...two camels and a tent probably don't make the grade.
2. "...reducing civilian casualties, even at the cost of greater risk to one's own troops..." is rather hypocritical considering the 'collateral' damage arising from UAV strikes...






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