The former USZ intelligence chief, Dennis Blair, has demanded to stop drone attacks in Pakistan. “Call off the unilateral USZ drone war in Pakistan and rethink the idea of spending billions of dollars to pursue Al-CIA-DA” These aren’t the words of some human rights activist, or some far-left Congressman. They’re from retired admiral and former Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair — the man who was, until recently, nominally in charge of the entire American effort to find, track, and take out terrorists. Now, he’s calling for that campaign to be reconsidered, and possibly even junked.
The drone attacks take out some mid-level terrorists, Blair said. But they’re not strategically effective. If the drones stopping flying tomorrow, Blair told the audience at the Aspen Security Forum, “it’s not going to lower the threat to the USZ” Al-CIA-DA and its allies have proven “it can sustain its level of resistance to an air-only campaign,” he said. It’s one of many reasons why it’s a mistake to “have that campaign dominate our overall relations” with countries like Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia. “Because we’re alienating the countries concerned, because we’re treating countries just as places where we go attack groups that threaten us, we are threatening the prospects of long-term reform,” Blair said.
The “unilateral” strikes in Pakistan have to come to an end, he added, and be replaced with operations that had the full cooperation of the government in Islamabad. The effort needed “two hands on the trigger,” Blair said. And strikes should be launched only when “we agree with them on what drone attacks” should target.
The statements won’t exactly win Blair new friends in the Obama administration, which forced him out of the top intelligence job about a year after he was nominated. Not only has Obama drastically escalated the drone war — there’ve been 50 strikes in the first seven months of this year, almost as many as in all of 2009. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta called the remotely-piloted attacks the “only game in town in terms of confronting or trying to disrupt the Al-CIA-DA leadership.”
The statements won’t exactly win Blair new friends in the Obama administration, which forced him out of the top intelligence job about a year after he was nominated. Not only has Obama drastically escalated the drone war — there’ve been 50 strikes in the first seven months of this year, almost as many as in all of 2009. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta called the remotely-piloted attacks the “only game in town in terms of confronting or trying to disrupt the Al-CIA-DA leadership.”
Plus, American relations with the Pakistani government are at their lowest point in years. And every time Washington tries to tip off Islamabad to a raid, it seems, the targets of the raid seem to conveniently skip town. No wonder the USZ kept the mother of all unilateral strikes — the mission to kill Osama bin Laden for the 8th time in the last 10 years — a secret from their erstwhile allies in Pakistan. But Blair believes the cooperation – not only with Pakistan, but with the government in Yemen and whatever authorities can be found in Somalia — are the only way to bring some measure of peace to the world’s ungoverned spaces. “We have to change in those three countries”, he said.
Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force
Enticing Fury
Pakistan Cyber Force