Drones and the Democracy Disconnect
By Firmin DeBrabander
September 14, 2014 7:30 pm
With President Obama’s announcement that we will open a new
battlefront in yet another Middle Eastern country — in Syria,
against ISIS (the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) — there is
widespread acknowledgement that it will be a protracted, complex,
perhaps even messy campaign, with many unforeseeable consequences
along the way. The president has said we will put “no boots on the
ground” in Syria; he is wary of simply flooding allies on the ground
with arms, for fear that they will fall into the wrong hands — as
they already have. Obama wants to strike against ISIS in a part of
Syria that is currently outside the authority of the Syrian
government, which the president has accused of war crimes, and is
thus, in our eyes, a legal no-man’s land. He has also made clear
that he is ready to go it alone in directing attacks on ISIS — he
has asked for Congress’s support, but is not seeking their
authorization. All these signs point to drones playing a prominent
role in this new war in Syria.
Increasingly, this is how the United States chooses to fight its
wars. Drones lead the way and dominate the fight against the several
non-state actors we now engage — Al Qaeda, the Shabab in Somalia and
now ISIS. Drones have their benefits: They enable us to fight ISIS
without getting mired on the ground or suffering casualties, making
them politically powerful and appealing. For the moment, the
American public favors striking ISIS; that would likely change if
our own ground forces were involved.
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http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/09/14/drones-and-the-democracy-disconnect/