PDA

View Full Version : Confessions of an American Drone Operator




twomp
10-28-2013, 04:26 PM
From the darkness of a box in the Nevada desert, he watched as three men trudged down a dirt road in Afghanistan. The box was kept cold—precisely sixty-eight degrees—and the only light inside came from the glow of monitors. The air smelled spectrally of stale sweat and cigarette smoke. On his console, the image showed the midwinter landscape of eastern Afghanistan’s Kunar Province—a palette of browns and grays, fields cut to stubble, dark forests climbing the rocky foothills of the Hindu Kush. He zoomed the camera in on the suspected insurgents, each dressed in traditional shalwar kameez, long shirts and baggy pants. He knew nothing else about them: not their names, not their thoughts, not the thousand mundane and profound details of their lives.

He was told that they were carrying rifles on their shoulders, but for all he knew, they were shepherd’s staffs. Still, the directive from somewhere above, a mysterious chain of command that led straight to his headset, was clear: confirmed weapons. He switched from the visible spectrum—the muted grays and browns of “day-TV”—to the sharp contrast of infrared, and the insurgents’ heat signatures stood out ghostly white against the cool black earth. A safety observer loomed behind him to make sure the “weapon release” was by the book. A long verbal checklist, his targeting laser locked on the two men walking in front. A countdown—three…two…one…—then the flat delivery of the phrase “missile off the rail.” Seventy-five hundred miles away, a Hellfire flared to life, detached from its mount, and reached supersonic speed in seconds.

It was quiet in the dark, cold box in the desert, except for the low hum of machines.

He kept the targeting laser trained on the two lead men and stared so intently that each individual pixel stood out, a glowing pointillist dot abstracted from the image it was meant to form. Time became almost ductile, the seconds stretched and slowed in a strange electronic limbo. As he watched the men walk, the one who had fallen behind seemed to hear something and broke into a run to catch up with the other two. Then, bright and silent as a camera flash, the screen lit up with white flame.

Airman First Class Brandon Bryant stared at the scene, unblinking in the white-hot clarity of infrared. He recalls it even now, years later, burned into his memory like a photo negative: “The smoke clears, and there’s pieces of the two guys around the crater. And there’s this guy over here, and he’s missing his right leg above his knee. He’s holding it, and he’s rolling around, and the blood is squirting out of his leg, and it’s hitting the ground, and it’s hot. His blood is hot. But when it hits the ground, it starts to cool off; the pool cools fast. It took him a long time to die. I just watched him. I watched him become the same color as the ground he was lying on.”




Really interesting read. Definitely worth reading the entire article:

Read More http://www.gq.com/news-politics/big-issues/201311/drone-uav-pilot-assassination#ixzz2j3fmdWB1

surf
10-28-2013, 05:11 PM
I thought I read that drone operators have one of the higher ptsd rates.

phill4paul
10-28-2013, 05:15 PM
Um, I would have to question this particular quote....


The air smelled spectrally of stale sweat and cigarette smoke.

I'm pretty sure that smoking wouldn't be allowed in this environment especially not in the military anymore. I may be wrong. Anybody that can confirm?

Other than this particular question it is worth the read in its entirety.

kcchiefs6465
10-28-2013, 07:34 PM
Good read.

Anti Federalist
10-28-2013, 07:40 PM
Why we need autonomous drones with their own kill authority.

kcchiefs6465
10-28-2013, 08:05 PM
Why we need autonomous drones with their own kill authority.
Also to consider, these men and women were often times given no information on who they were targeting or why. That they simply followed the orders, against their better judgement and morality, is perhaps telling of what is to be expected.

Probably signatures strikes in which nothing more than "patterns of life" and a group of males in a particular area are justifications for evaporation with the names or identities of the victims not being known at the moment, and probably not ever to be determined. More mass graves for freedom. And democrats balk at the idea that a great deal of Obama's cabinet, as well as he himself, are war criminals.

HOLLYWOOD
10-28-2013, 08:30 PM
This how you get around the blame or following the trail to those that call the shots... of course if there's an inquiry, the lawyers have already created a barrier of 'State Secrets' of immunity and anonymity from lawsuits or charging those with war crimes.
Still, the directive from somewhere above, a mysterious chain of command that led straight to his headset, was clear: confirmed weapons...

Brian4Liberty
10-28-2013, 09:33 PM
An extreme Milgram Experiment, where not only do they do the killing on command, they are forced to watch the aftermath, and then do it again.


In Milgram's first set of experiments, 65 percent (26 of 40) of experiment participants administered the experiment's final massive 450-volt shock,...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milgram_experiment