RT
January
17, 2014
President Barack Obama said last May that control of the United States’
weaponized drone program would shift away from the Central Intelligence Agency
and into the hands of the Pentagon, but a new report suggests Congress could
keep that from happening.
According to a front-page article on this Thursday’s edition of the Washington
Post, members of the US House and Senate appropriations committee have in
total secrecy been spearheading efforts to ensure that a classified provision
pertaining to America’s drone war is included in the latest government spending
bill. Should those lawmakers be successful in their attempt, Pres. Obama’s
stated intentions with regards to America’s controversial drone program could
effectively be quashed and control over an arsenal of robotic killing machines
would stay within the CIA’s jurisdictions.
Greg Miller, an intelligence reporter for the Post, wrote that the provision
is buried within a classified annex included in the contents of a $1.1 trillion
funding bill unveiled late Monday in Congress that would divvy up spending among
federal programs across the board. Now according to Miller’s sources, a secret
provision would stall Pres. Obama’s attempts to overhaul America’s use of
weaponized drones to fight suspected terrorists overseas.
Miller wrote that Monday’s bill does not touch on any changes to the drone
program in its publically available contents, though one section that explains
spending for the Pentagon notes: “adjustments to classified programs are
addressed in the accompanying classified annex.”
Spokespeople for the White House, the CIA and the Pentagon all declined to
comment to the Post, Miller wrote, but sources speaking on condition of
anonymity confirmed to the paper that the measure would restrict the use of any
federal monies towards transferring control over the drone program to the
Department of Defense.
During his address
at the Defense University in DC last May, the president said he wanted his drone
program to be more transparent. That same week he signed a classified
presidential policy guidance, and one senior administration official who spoke
at the time with Gannet’s Defense
News said, “there’s an indication of a preference for the Department of
Defense to engage in the use of force outside of war zones.”
As recently as this week, though, a drone strikes reportedly waged in Yemen
by the Pentagon, not the CIA, killed an innocent farmer. Last month, a similar
strike conducted by the Department of Defense took the lives at least six
civilians.
Those latest incidents have only increased doubts among lawmakers that the
DoD is as capable of the CIA when it comes to conducting drone strikes without
causing multiple civilian casualties. But even if the CIA ultimately maintains
control of those operations, not all agree with some lawmakers’ attempt to do so
under the table.
Hours after the Post published their report, Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona)
erupted on the floor of the Senate over allegations that his colleagues are
covertly trying to keep the president’s plans with regards to the drone program
from coming into fruition.
“The Appropriations Committee has no business making these
decisions,” the senator insisted.
“The job of the Armed Services Committee and the job of the Intelligence
Committee is to authorize these things. There was no hearing on the Intelligence
Committee. There was no hearing on the Armed Services Committee,” he
said.
“The appropriations have gotten into the business of the authorizing
committees,” McCain added. “That is a violation of every procedure and
process that this Senate is supposed to be pursuing.”
Friday, January 17, 2014
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