I became interested in this story after writing a previous blog about Pakistan and that country’s nuclear weapons. A 60 Minutes show in 2009 reported the United States was using drones, which the Air Force calls “unmanned aerial vehicles,” to attack insurgents and military targets in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iraq. George W. Bush stirred national and international debate and criticism when he authorized drone strikes in Pakistan. A Times Online report dated January 29, 2009 reported that multiple “suspected drones” killed at least 15 people in Pakistan. They were “…the first strikes since Barack Obama became president and a clear sign that the controversial military policy begun by George W. Bush has not changed.”
Pakistan watched U.S. drones operate successfully for years and finally asked for the some of their own. The U.S. denied the request, and Pakistan began developing the technology. They are now reported to be working closely with Italian, Chinese, and Turkish firms, all of which use Israeli technology “borrowed” from American technology, on upgrades.There is a YouTube video titled “Pakistan Starts Manufacturing Drones,” but unfortunately I neither read nor understand Pakistani.
The drones are controlled from Creech Air Force Base 45 miles north of Las Vegas. The drones are constantly on the hunt, and they are controlled by a pilot and crew member supported by a team of intelligence analysts. There is a video that has been going around that shows a drone pilot and crew member controlling a drone, being given a target, acquiring the target (a white pickup truck), and blowing it up.
Watching it made me remember an Army officer giving a lecture to my Infantry Officer Candidate class. He made what seemed to be an off-hand comment that made me think then and that I recall more than forty years later. “The more impersonal war becomes, the more dangerous it becomes.”