Has It Become Too Easy to Kill?

In September, on national TV, I said that "I am very disturbed by this idea that whenever we see something bad in the world, we should bomb it." Last week I felt even more disturbed, when I met some of the victims of that brutal idea.
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In September, on national TV, I said that "I am very disturbed by this idea that whenever we see something bad in the world, we should bomb it." Last week I felt even more disturbed, when I met some of the victims of that brutal idea.

Last week, we made history, a very sad sort of history. I hosted the first Congressional briefing that featured the testimony of drone warfare victims.

A year ago, a grandmother in her sixties was picking okra from her garden in a small village in South Waziristan. Her nine-year-old granddaughter was with her. Neither one was an enemy of the United States. Neither one was a threat to any American. Neither one was any kind of militant. In fact, neither really had ever given much thought to the United States.

A U.S. military drone flew overhead. It bombed them. The grandmother screamed and died. Her body was so butchered that the villagers would not allow her own children to see it. Her granddaughter was permanently injured.

The grandmother joined the 1,000 innocent victims of American drone warfare in Pakistan. A list that includes almost 200 children. By most accounts, between 10 percent and 30 percent of drone victims are guilty of nothing but being in the wrong place, at the wrong time.

Last week, I hosted the first Congressional briefing with Pakistani drone victims. One broken family got to tell its sad story to Congress, to the world, and now to you.

The son of the victim, Rafiq ur Rehman, spoke first. He and his mother lived in a village with no public services, far from any road. He is a teacher. His mother was the village storyteller. In the eyes of the villagers, he said in elegy and in eulogy, she was the string that held the pearls on a necklace. And now she is gone.

His two children also testified. His daughter, who was with her grandmother that fateful day, spoke about her injuries. One of the children said that they used to pray for blue skies, because they were so beautiful. Now they pray for gray skies, because the drones are absent -- temporarily.

They wanted to know why the United States had killed Grandma. I didn't have an answer. But at least I could listen, and learn.

Here is where we are at: A person sits in front of a computer screen somewhere in the United States. He has never been to the target area, has never seen it from the ground, doesn't know anyone there, doesn't speak their language, isn't even familiar with the clothes that they wear. Based on what he sees on that computer screen, and whatever else he's got, he launches bombs from a drone aircraft flying in the sky 8,000 miles away. The bombs then kill people.

Does that seem like an effective means to prevent attacks on the United States? Seriously? Is it any wonder that so many innocent people die? And should it even be so easy to kill?

The CIA doesn't even admit that it is running a drone warfare program, much less accept responsibility for its innocent victims. The State Department refused to issue a visa to the lawyer for this family of victims coming to the United States, even though he had visited the United States many times before without incident. The engineers of this machinery of death report from time to time that they claim to have killed the #3 in this sinister organization, or the #7 in that other sinister organization. But they never report on the death of a grandmother in her sixties. Nor do they consider the fundamental truth that such an execution leads to more terrorism, not less.

Momina Bibi is dead. She will not be telling any more grand, poetic and lyrical stories to her fellow villagers. There is no way to bring her back to life, or even to reassemble what's left of the parts of her body. But we can stop it from happening again.

And that's what we're trying to do.

So if you have the time, please watch.

Peace,

Alan Grayson

"Blessed be the peacemakers,
For they shall be called the children of God."
- Matthew 5:9

P.S. You can learn more about this topic and my other work in Congress at CongressmanWithGuts.com.

P.P.S. Please share this with your friends on Facebook and Twitter.

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