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Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Julie Bessler: Entry no. 5 (Gregory)

Derek Gregory’s analysis of drone warfare dispels many of the common and

mainstream viewpoints heard in the media and political rhetoric today. What I think is

extremely important to note is that Derek Gregory is a geographer. Knowing this, his

arguments of time and space make sense and are in itself different than the general

rhetoric of human geography. Taking a Military Geography class last semester at

GW, human geography and physical geography go hand-in-hand, and the situation of

drone pilots and the culture surrounding drone warfare that Gregory lays out fits this

framework in a unique way.

Gregory points out that the mainstream advocates’ viewpoint of drone warfare is

that it is simultaneously a virtual and ‘virtuous’ war that plays an important role in

counterterrorism/counterinsurgency campaigns, surveillance, and in conducting

precision-strikes with the least possible civilian casualties. The mainstream critics’

viewpoint is that the use of drones have reduced war to a video game, where killing

becomes a casual act. Gregory denounces both of these arguments, saying that the

problem lies NOT in the detachment of drone pilots to the battlefield, but rather a sense

of proximity to ground troops “inculcated” by the high-definition video feeds. Thus,

Gregory focuses on what he calls the ‘scopic regime’ through which drone operations

take place. A ‘scopic regime,’ he defines, is a term to “distinguish the...theatrical way of

staging and seeing the world,” which denotes a certain degree of understanding that is

culturally/socially constructed, prescriptive, and shared. What I think is his main point is

the following: “My central argument is that these visibilities are necessarily conditional-

spaces of constructed visibility are also always spaces of constructed invisibility-

because they are not technical but rather techno-cultural accomplishments.”

These “visibilities” that he speaks of are important in understanding that the kill-chain

is created based on networks that establish a certain ‘pattern of life’ that is necessary

in counterinsurgency operations. Yet, how do you measure the ‘pattern of life’ (or

the “production of a macro-field of micro-vision”) from a distance? The kill-chain lays

down to a certain degree, in my opinion, a certain set of “norms” or “activities” that are

deemed normal/abnormal and therefore give the process of not killing/killing via drone

justification in the commander’s eyes. While drone warfare is overall concerning, this

is particularly concerning, especially after reading the account where the drone pilots

mistakingly killed 23 innocent civilians on their way to the market in order to “protect”

ground troops. The pilots created these abnormalities in their minds, converting

“civilians into combatants.”

This issue of visibility that Gregory constantly brings up is important to understand

not only in the context of what the kill-chain has constructed as the “culture” of the

people they are surveying, but also visibility in the sense of what the average American

citizen understands about drone warfare. As I’ve stated before, the mainstream critics’/

advocates’ viewpoints on drone warfare is the only conversation mainstream media will

have about drones. Videos will come out showing the misuse of drones, but it is not

enough to change the debate. Drone warfare is conducted in countries, like Pakistan,

that are not in war with the United States. While this is a clear violation of international

law, this will continue as long as the discussion about drones remains stagnant. In the

first ever testimony to Congress by a victim of a drone strike, 5 members of Congress

attended. There are over 500 members in Congress. http://www.theguardian.com/world/

2013/oct/29/pakistan-family-drone-victim-testimony-congress

Visibility needs to increase not only in the realm of understanding the cultures/peoples

of the places we place drones over, but also in the realm of what citizens should know

and understand about drone warfare apart from the mainstream rhetoric.

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