9/28/22 Reminders of Why We Keep on Keeping on |
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By Nick Mottern Here are recent news items that reminded me of why we keep working to ban weaponized drones regardless of how far away that goal may seem.
Ethiopia "The Ethiopian military's increasing use of drones to conduct airstrikes over the last year has changed the conflict landscape. In theory, drones should allow for more precise targeting of military objectives; however, our investigation indicates that their use has exposed civilians to new and heightened risks. Our findings are especially concerning given reports of airstrikes in Tigray since August, which have killed and injured civilians, including children."
Both items from ReThink Round-up. This news summary is definitely worth subscribing to.
Afghanistan "The U.S. is negotiating with Uzbekistan and Tajikistan to trade nearly 50 military aircraft flown across the border as the Afghan government collapsed last summer for help hunting terrorists in Afghanistan, according to two people with knowledge of the talks."
Quote from this Politico article indicating that the U.S. hopes that an arms deal with Uzbekistan and Tajikistan will solve its problem of not having killer drone bases in any countries surrounding Afghanistan.
Here are Human Rights Watch reports for 2022 on Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. CIA Prould of Illegal Killing of al-Zawahiri Perhaps with an eye to the November midterms, President Biden, or someone, apparently thinks it is a good idea to attract more publicity to the CIA killing of Ayman al-Zawahiri. Apparently, there is less concern with secrecy about this execution than other exhibits in the CIA museum, if it puts a bloody feather in Biden's cap. Perhaps the architectural model is intended to show the public how careful Biden was in ordering an illegal execution. Weaponized drones make it so much easier for leaders to kill for the pack. A tip of the hat to Mike Allen for putting news of the CIA model in his Axios AM newsletter of Sept. 25, 2022.
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