25-11-2024 07:11 AM Jerusalem Timing

Obama to Issue Manual on Drone Strikes

Obama to Issue Manual on Drone Strikes

US President Barack Obama has fast-tracked the creation of a new rulebook on when it is ‘legal’ to use drones for targeted killings.

US JSF drone familyUS President Barack Obama has fast-tracked the creation of a new rulebook on when it is ‘legal’ to use drones for targeted killings. Obama reportedly feared that drones would be abused in a potential new administration after the November elections, RT website noted.

Two anonymous Obama administration officials claimed that explicit rules were being developed to establish clear standards and procedures for when “lethal action is acceptable,” the New York Times reported.

The administration wanted to accelerate the codification of these rules when there was a possibility that Obama would lose the November 6 presidential elections, and the “levers might no longer be in our hands,” one of the officials said.

However, since Obama was reelected to another four-year term, the rulebook “can now be finished at a more leisurely pace,” they said, adding that Obama “did not want to leave an amorphous program to his successor.”

The development of rulebook has sparked intergovernmental disagreements between the CIA and the departments of defense, justice and state. The center of the debate is whether the remote-control killing should be used as a last resort against direct threats to the US, or instead be available for other purposes such as aiding allies by killing combatants and securing territory.

Since Obama took office in 2009, more than 300 CIA and military drone strikes have killed about 2,500 people.

However, the US drone program remains technically classified – a hardcopy of the rulebook draft is reportedly being hand-carried from office to office, rather than emailed.

Many countries, organizations and activists view drone strikes as a violation of international law. The US previously condemned assassinations when the Zionist entity used targeted killing on suspected fighters in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

However, after 9/11 the US adopted the policy that it is at war with Al Qaeda, and thus can legally defend itself by using drone strikes to kill suspected terrorists abroad.

During Obama’s term in office, drone strikes have led to the deaths of innocent civilians.

The UN is also taking action against the US drone war by setting up an investigation unit as early as next year, which will examine the legality of US drone attacks abroad in cases where civilians have been killed.

The US government is currently facing two lawsuits by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the New York Times, which challenge targeted killings and seek more information on the issue.