“Are Drone Strikes Moral?” Is The Wrong Question

The right question: are drone strikes better or worse than the alternatives?

Nicholas Grossman
Arc Digital

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This essay was adapted from Drones and Terrorism, the new book by Arc editor-at-large Nicholas Grossman, published in March 2018 by I.B.Tauris, (available now).

Upon taking office, Donald Trump changed a lot, repudiating much of Obama’s legacy. But not the drone campaign.

Under both presidents, the CIA and U.S military fire missiles from unmanned aircraft at suspected terrorists and insurgents, primarily in Pakistan and Yemen, as well as a few in Somalia. These attacks take place outside active military theaters, such as Afghanistan, which makes them extrajudicial, outside the laws of war.

In Obama’s eight years, American drones launched 5.6 attacks per month in Pakistan and Yemen. The Trump administration has maintained a similar rate, 4.6 per month. Trump has focused more on Yemen and less on Pakistan, though that continues a trend that began in Obama’s second term.

Because the drone campaign falls in a gray area of international law — not explicitly illegal, but not legal either — and because attacks sometimes kill civilians, the policy is widely criticized, often on moral grounds. However, most of these criticisms judge drone…

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Nicholas Grossman
Arc Digital

Senior Editor at Arc Digital. Poli Sci prof (IR) at U. Illinois. Author of “Drones and Terrorism.” Politics, national security, and occasional nerdery.