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Drones. These are the people killed

No doubt uncomfortable to read about, but if we are going to allow politicians unfettered use of drones wherever, and whenever, they like it - and remain unaccountable in the process - we need to confront what the deadly effect of these drones is.  

The Huffington Post is to be congratulated for taking up the issue in a dramatic way....


"In an editorial decision clearly designed to provoke emotion and bring attention to the often ignored death toll of innocent people—especially children—killed by missiles from US drones in recent years, the Huffington Post on Thursday used its masthead to show grim pictures of dead or wounded child victims of a program widely defended by the president, politicians from both parties, and the military.

Accompanying the photos, the report by staff writers Ryan Grim and Joshua Hersh discusses how the recent nomination fight over Obama's nominee for the CIA, John Brennan, has sparked renewed interest and controversy over a program that frequently receives too little interest by large portions of the media and much too little oversight by Congress.

As Grim and Hersh report;"


'Civilian casualties are central to the debate over the use of drones, because public support hinges on the false belief that the weapons kill with surgical precision. If the public were aware of the human toll of the policy, opposition would be widespread, according to a series of HuffPost/YouGov surveys.

Noor Behram, a Pakistani photojournalist who lives in North Waziristan, has been documenting the human cost of U.S. drone policy for several years and said he "wants people to know" what the weapons have wrought. The photographer provided photos to documentary filmmaker Robert Greenwald, in Pakistan doing research and interviews for his forthcoming documentary, "UNMANNED: America's Drone Wars," in fall 2012. Some of Behram's photos are used to illustrate this article.

Some Behram kept to himself, thinking they are "so horrific he didn't want anyone to see them," Greenwald told HuffPost. "So we're seeing the ones he felt were painful, but not so stomach-turning it'd be impossible to look at them."'

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