On Saturday, as Glenn Greenwald reports, "in Somalia, the U.S. fired missiles
from a drone and killed the 27-year-old Lebanon-born, ex-British
citizen Bilal el-Berjawi. His wife had given birth 24 hours earlier and
the speculation is that the U.S. located him when his wife called to
give him the news."
Clearly, we are cranking up our drone operations, a targeted assassination program which often goes awry. (Tom Engelhardt
points out that according to he London-based Bureau of Investigative
Journalism, U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan have, over the years, killed at least 168 children.) Adam Weinstein at Mother Jones reports that the Pentagon will announce today that to meet new budget constraints it will be slashing Army troop levels by 80,000
soldiers, or 14 percent of the force, while expanding bases for drones. Legality and morality aside, as Nick Turse argues below, drones are counterproductive tools of war. Turse points to 70 drone mishaps which "draw attention not only to the technical limitations of drone warfare,
but to larger conceptual flaws inherent in such operations."
The Crash and Burn Future of Robot Warfare
What 70 Downed Drones Tell Us About the New American Way of War
By Nick Turse, cross-posted from Tom Dispatch
American fighter jets screamed over the Iraqi countryside heading for
the MQ-1 Predator drone, while its crew in California stood by
helplessly. What had begun as an ordinary reconnaissance mission was
now taking a ruinous turn. In an instant, the jets attacked and then it
was all over. The Predator, one of the Air Force’s workhorse
hunter/killer robots, had been obliterated.
An account of the spectacular end of that nearly $4 million drone in
November 2007 is contained in a collection of Air Force accident
investigation documents recently examined by TomDispatch. They catalog
more than 70 catastrophic Air Force drone mishaps since 2000, each
resulting in the loss of an aircraft or property damage of $2 million or
more.
These official reports, some obtained by TomDispatch through the
Freedom of Information Act, offer new insights into a largely covert,
yet highly touted war-fighting, assassination, and spy program involving
armed robots that are significantly less reliable than previously
acknowledged. These planes, the latest wonder weapons in the U.S.
military arsenal, are tested, launched, and piloted from a shadowy
network of more than 60 bases spread around the globe, often in support of elite teams of special operations forces.
Collectively, the Air Force documents offer a remarkable portrait of
modern drone warfare, one rarely found in a decade of generally triumphalist or awestruck press accounts that seldom mention the limitations of drones, much less their mission failures.
The aerial disasters described draw attention not only to the
technical limitations of drone warfare, but to larger conceptual flaws
inherent in such operations. Launched and landed by aircrews close to
battlefields in places like Afghanistan, the drones are controlled
during missions by pilots and sensor operators -- often multiple teams
over many hours -- from bases in places like Nevada and North Dakota.
They are sometimes also monitored by “screeners” from private security
contractors at stateside bases like Hurlburt Field in Florida. (A
recent McClatchy report revealed that it takes nearly 170 people to keep a single Predator in the air for 24 hours.)
In other words, drone missions, like the robots themselves, have many
moving parts and much, it turns out, can and does go wrong. In that
November 2007 Predator incident in Iraq, for instance, an electronic
failure caused the robotic aircraft to engage its self-destruct
mechanism and crash, after which U.S. jets destroyed the wreckage to
prevent it from falling into enemy hands. In other cases, drones --
officially known as remotely piloted aircraft, or RPAs -- broke down,
escaped human control and oversight, or self-destructed for reasons
ranging from pilot error and bad weather to mechanical failure in
Afghanistan, Djibouti, the Gulf of Aden, Iraq, Kuwait, and various other
unspecified or classified foreign locations, as well as in the United
States.
In 2001, Air Force Predator drones flew 7,500 hours. By the close of last year, that number topped 70,000. As the tempo
of robotic air operations has steadily increased, crashes have, not
surprisingly, become more frequent. In 2001, just two Air Force drones
were destroyed in accidents. In 2008, eight drones fell from the sky.
Last year, the number reached 13. (Accident rates are, however, dropping according to an Air Force report relying on figures from 2009.)
Keep in mind that the 70-plus accidents recorded in those Air Force
documents represent only drone crashes investigated by the Air Force
under a rigid set of rules. Many other drone mishaps have not been
included in the Air Force statistics. Examples include a haywire MQ-9 Reaper
drone that had to be shot out of the Afghan skies by a fighter jet in
2009, a remotely-operated Navy helicopter that went down in Libya last
June, an unmanned aerial vehicle whose camera was reportedly taken by
Afghan insurgents after a crash in August 2011, an advanced RQ-170 Sentinel lost during a spy mission in Iran last December, and the recent crash of an MQ-9 Reaper in the Seychelles Islands.
You Don’t Need a Weatherman... Or Do You?
How missions are carried out -- and sometimes fail -- is apparent
from the declassified reports, including one provided to TomDispatch by
the Air Force detailing a June 2011 crash. Late that month, a Predator
drone took off from Jalalabad Air Base in Afghanistan to carry out a
surveillance mission in support of ground forces. Piloted by a member
of the 432nd Air Expeditionary Wing out of Whiteman Air Force Base in
Missouri, the robotic craft ran into rough weather, causing the pilot to
ask for permission to abandon the troops below.
His commander never had a chance to respond. Lacking weather
avoidance equipment found on more sophisticated aircraft or on-board
sensors to clue the pilot in to rapidly deteriorating weather
conditions, and with a sandstorm interfering with ground radar, “severe
weather effects” overtook the Predator. In an instant, the satellite
link between pilot and plane was severed. When it momentarily flickered
back to life, the crew could see that the drone was in an extreme
nosedive. They then lost the datalink for a second and final time. A
few minutes later, troops on the ground radioed in to say that the $4
million drone had crashed near them.
A month earlier, a Predator drone took off from the tiny African
nation of Djibouti in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, which
includes operations
in Afghanistan as well as Yemen, Djibouti, and Somalia, among other
nations. According to documents obtained via the Freedom of Information
Act, about eight hours into the flight, the mission crew noticed a slow
oil leak. Ten hours later, they handed the drone off to a local
aircrew whose assignment was to land it at Djibouti’s Ambouli Airport, a
joint civilian/military facility adjacent to Camp Lemonier, a U.S. base
in the country.
That mission crew -- both the pilot and sensor operator -- had been
deployed from Creech Air Force
Base in Nevada and had logged a combined
1,700 hours flying Predators. They were considered “experienced” by the
Air Force. On this day, however, the electronic sensors that measure
their drone’s altitude were inaccurate, while low clouds and high
humidity affected its infrared sensors and set the stage for disaster.
An
investigation eventually found that, had the crew performed proper
instrument cross-checks, they would have noticed a 300-400 foot
discrepancy in their altitude. Instead, only when the RPA broke through
the clouds did the sensor operator realize just how close to the ground
it was. Six seconds later, the drone crashed to earth, destroying
itself and one of its Hellfire missiles.
Storms, clouds, humidity, and human error aren’t the only natural
dangers for drones. In a November 2008 incident, a mission crew at Kandahar Air Field
launched a Predator on a windy day. Just five minutes into the flight,
with the aircraft still above the sprawling American mega-base, the
pilot realized that the plane had already deviated from its intended
course. To get it back on track, he initiated a turn that -- due to the
aggressive nature of the maneuver, wind conditions, drone design, and
the unbalanced weight of a missile on just one wing -- sent the plane
into a roll. Despite the pilot's best efforts, the craft entered a
tailspin, crashed on the base, and burst into flames.
Going Rogue
On occasion, RPAs have simply escaped from human control. Over the
course of eight hours on a late February day in 2009, for example, five
different crews passed off the controls of a Predator drone, one to the
next, as it flew over Iraq. Suddenly, without warning, the last of
them, members of the North Dakota Air National Guard at Hector
International Airport in Fargo, lost communication with the plane. At
that point no one -- not the pilot, nor the sensor operator, nor a local
mission crew -- knew where the drone was or what it was doing. Neither
transmitting nor receiving data or commands, it had, in effect, gone
rogue. Only later was it determined that a datalink failure had
triggered the drone’s self-destruct mechanism, sending it into an
unrecoverable tailspin and crash within 10 minutes of escaping human
control.
In November 2009, a Predator launched from Kandahar Air Field in
Afghanistan lost touch with its human handlers 20 minutes after takeoff
and simply disappeared. When the mission crew was unable to raise the
drone, datalink specialists were brought in but failed to find the
errant plane. Meanwhile, air traffic controllers, who had lost the
plane on radar, could not even locate its transponder signal. Numerous
efforts to make contact failed. Two days later, at the moment the drone
would have run out of fuel, the Air Force declared the Predator “lost.”
It took eight days for its wreckage to be located.
Crash Course
In mid-August 2004, while drone operations in the Central Command
(CENTCOM) area of responsibility were running at high tempo, a Predator
mission crew began hearing a cascade of warning alarms indicating engine
and alternator failure, as well as a possible engine fire. When the
sensor operator used his camera to scan the aircraft, it didn’t take
long to spot the problem. Its tail had burst into flames. Shortly
afterward, it became uncontrollable and crashed.
In January 2007, a Predator drone was flying somewhere in the CENTCOM
region (above one of 20 countries in the Greater Middle East). About
14 hours into a 20-hour mission, the aircraft began to falter. For 15
minutes its engine was failing, but the information it was sending back
remained within normal parameters, so the mission crew failed to
notice. Only at the last minute did they become aware that their drone
was dying. As an investigation later determined, an expanding crack in
the drone’s crankshaft caused the engine to seize up. The pilot put the
aircraft into a glide toward an unpopulated area. Higher headquarters
then directed that he should intentionally crash it, since a rapid
reaction force would not be able to reach it quickly and it was carrying
two Hellfire missiles as well as unspecified “classified equipment.”
Days later, its remains were recovered.
The Crash and Burn Future of Robot Warfare
In spite of all the technical limitations of remote-controlled war
spelled out in the Air Force investigation files, the U.S. is doubling
down on drones. Under the president’s new military strategy, the Air Force is projected to see its share of the budgetary pie rise and flying robots are expected to be a major part of that expansion.
Already, counting the Army’s thousands of tiny drones, one in three military aircraft -- close to 7,500 machines
-- are robots. According to official figures provided to TomDispatch,
roughly 285 of them are Air Force Predator, Reaper, or Global Hawk
drones. The Air Force's arsenal also includes more advanced Sentinels, Avengers, and other classified unmanned aircraft. A
report published by the Congressional Budget Office last year, revealed
that “the Department of Defense plans to purchase about 730 new
medium-sized and large unmanned aircraft systems” during the next 10
years.
Over the last decade, the United States has increasingly turned to
drones in an effort to win its wars. The Air Force investigation files
examined by TomDispatch suggest a more extensive use of drones in Iraq
than has previously been reported. But in Iraq, as in Afghanistan,
America’s preeminent wonder weapon failed to bring the U.S. mission
anywhere close to victory. Effective as the spearhead of a program to cripple al-Qaeda in Pakistan, drone warfare in that country’s tribal borderlands has also alienated almost the entire population of 190 million. In other words, an estimated 2,000 suspected or identified guerrillas
(as well as untold numbers of civilians) died. The populace of a key
American ally grew ever more hostile and no one knows how many new
militants in search of revenge the drone strikes may have created, though the numbers are believed to be significant.
Despite a decade of technological, tactical, and strategic
refinements and improvements, Air Force and allied CIA personnel
watching computer monitors in distant locations have continually
failed to discriminate between armed combatants and innocent civilians
and, as a result, the judge-jury-executioner drone assassination program
is widely considered to have run afoul of international law.
In addition, drone warfare seems to be creating a sinister system of
embedded economic incentives that may lead to increasing casualty
figures on the ground. “In some targeting programs, staffers have
review quotas -- that is, they must review a certain number of possible
targets per given length of time,” The Atlantic’s Joshua Foust recently wrote
of the private contractors involved in the process. “Because they are
contractors,” he explains, “their continued employment depends on their
ability to satisfy the stated performance metrics. So they have a
financial incentive to make life-or-death decisions about possible kill
targets just to stay employed. This should be an intolerable situation,
but because the system lacks transparency or outside review it is almost
impossible to monitor or alter.”
As flight hours rise year by year, these stark drawbacks are
compounded by a series of technical glitches and vulnerabilities that
are ever more regularly coming to light. These include: Iraqi
insurgents hacking drone video feeds, a virulent computer virus
infecting the Air Force’s unmanned fleet, large percentages of drone
pilots suffering from "high operational stress," a friendly fire
incident in which drone operators killed two U.S. military personnel,
increasing numbers of crashes, and the possibility of an Iranian drone-hijacking, as well as those more than 70 catastrophic mishaps detailed in Air Force accident investigation documents.
Over the last decade, a more-is-better mentality has led to increased numbers of drones, drone bases,
drone pilots, and drone victims, but not much else. Drones may be
effective in terms of generating body counts, but they appear to be even
more successful in generating animosity and creating enemies.
The Air Force’s accident reports are replete with evidence of the
flaws inherent in drone technology, and there can be little doubt that,
in the future, ever more will come to light. A decade’s worth of futility
suggests that drone warfare itself may already be crashing and burning,
yet it seems destined that the skies will fill with drones and that the
future will bring more of the same.
Nick Turse is the associate editor of TomDispatch.com. An award-winning journalist, his work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Nation, and regularly at TomDispatch. This article is the fifth in his new series on the changing face of American empire, which is being underwritten by Lannan Foundation.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
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