How Drones Turned American Wars Into Manhunts and Humans Into
Prey
The remote-controlled hunting of human beings has become standard
practice in American warfare.
Grégoire Chamayou
April 7, 2015
This article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To stay on
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[The following is slightly adapted from chapters two and three of
Grégoire Chamayou’s new book, A Theory of the Drone, with special
thanks to his publisher, the New Press.]
Initially, the English word “drone” meant both an insect and a
sound. It was not until the outbreak of World War II that it began
to take on another meaning. At that time, American artillery
apprentices used the expression “target drones” to designate the
small remotely controlled planes at which they aimed in training.
The metaphor did not refer solely to the size of those machines or
the brm-brm of their motors. Drones are male bees, without stingers,
and eventually the other bees kill them. Classical tradition
regarded them as emblems of all that is nongenuine and dispensable.
That was precisely what a target drone was: just a dummy, made to be
shot down.
However, it was a long time before drones were to be seen cruising
above battlefields. To be sure, the idea dates back quite a while:
there were the Curtiss-Sperry aerial torpedo and the Kettering Bug
at the end of World War I, and then the Nazi V-1s and V-2s unleashed
on London in 1944. But those old flying torpedoes may be considered
more as the ancestors of cruise missiles than as those of
present-day drones. The essential difference lies in the fact that
while the former can be used only once, the latter are reusable. The
drone is not a projectile, but a projectile-carrying machine.
It was during the Vietnam War that the U.S. Air Force, to counteract
the Soviet surface-to-air missiles that had inflicted heavy
casualties on it, invested in reconnaissance drones nicknamed
“Lightning Bugs,” produced by Ryan Aeronautical. An American
official explained that “these RPVs [remotely piloted vehicles]
could help prevent aircrews from becoming casualties or prisoners…
With RPVs, survival is not the driving factor.”
[…]
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