Source: AlterNet
Pratap Chatterjee
Among the group was Tariq Aziz, a quiet 16-year-old, who had come after he received a phone call from a lawyer in Islamabad offering him an opportunity to learn basic photography to help document these strikes.
Pratap Chatterjee
The death of Tariq Aziz and his 12-year-old cousin Waheed Khan brought
the total number of children killed in drone strikes to 175.
A week ago I joined a group of elders and dozens of other young men who
had travelled from Waziristan, in northern Pakistan, to Islamabad to
discuss the impact of US drone strikes in their communities.
Among the group was Tariq Aziz, a quiet 16-year-old, who had come after he received a phone call from a lawyer in Islamabad offering him an opportunity to learn basic photography to help document these strikes.
We met for a grand dinner in the
conference hall of a luxury hotel. And the next day we all met again at
an official meeting – a ‘Waziristan Grand Jirga’. I filmed Tariq Aziz as
he walked in with his friends. Each of them pressed their right palms
on the chest of each of the elders who lined up to meet them.
Tariq
was proud to be part of this meeting. About 18 months earlier, in April
2010, his cousin Aswar Ullah was killed by a missile fired from a drone
as he rode a motorcycle near Norak.
Tariq, like all of us, listened intently to the speakers, who included the politician and former cricketer Imran Khan.
What
none of us could have imagined was that 72 hours later, this
football-loving teenager would himself be killed by a CIA drone, along
with his 12-year-old cousin Waheed Khan.
Children killed
Tariq
and Waheed’s death brought the total number of children killed in drone
strikes to 175, according to the Bureau’s own findings. As part of an ongoing investigation,
the Bureau has documented 306 strikes from remotely piloted drones that
have killed between 2,359 and 2,959 people. Over 85% of them have been
launched by the administration of President Barack Obama.
Akbar
says that the CIA had every opportunity to meet with Tariq, if they
wanted to, when he visited Islamabad. ‘If they were terrorists, why
weren’t they arrested in Islamabad, interrogated, charged or tried?’
On
Tuesday, Akbar spoke to Noor Kalam, Tariq’s uncle, who said he was
devastated by the news. ‘We are helpless. We cannot do anything against
the Americans,’ he told the lawyer. ‘We would like insaaf – justice.’
Mumtaz Khan, Tariq’s father, has flown back from the United Arab
Emirates, to mourn the death of his son. He is now in discussions with
Akbar to bring a lawsuit against the CIA. He will be the 31st family to
sign up.
‘Bar has been raised’ on CIA drone tactics
The
CIA has secretly agreed changes to how it conducts its drone war in
Pakistan after pressure from the military and State Department,
according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
Last month, the Bureau reported the 300th strike of the CIA’s seven-year drone campaign, and Bureau reporter Chris Woods suggested in an analysis piece that
the pattern of recent strikes suggests the CIA has changed tactics to
focus on killing senior militants, or High Value Targets.
The Wall Street Journal’s report appears to confirm this.
The
changes include the State Department having more influence in strike
decisions, Pakistani leaders being told about strikes in advance more
often, and the CIA holding off from strikes when Pakistani officials are
visiting the US, the report says.
‘The
bar has been raised. Inside CIA, there is a recognition you need to be
damn sure it’s worth it,’ the Journal quotes a senior official saying.
The
military and National Security Advisor Tom Donilon are increasingly
critical of strikes targeting large groups, as they fear the Pakistani
authorities may respond to such strikes by cutting off vital supply
routes into Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, senior State Department officials have been critical of
the strikes’ impact on diplomacy with Pakistan, when relations
are already strained following the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in
May.