The enduring problem of ‘grey’ drone violence

IF 2.5 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS European Journal of International Security Pub Date : 2021-11-04 DOI:10.1017/eis.2021.24
C. Enemark
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Abstract

Abstract This article addresses the problem of drone violence that is ‘grey’ in the sense of being hard to categorise. It focuses on circumstances, such as arose in Pakistan, in which a foreign government's armed drones are a constant presence. A lesson from US experience there is that the persistent threat of drone strikes is intended to suppress activities that endanger the drone-using state's security. However, this threat inevitably affects innocent people living within potential strike zones. To judge such drone use by reference to military ethics principles is to assume that ‘war’ is going on, but indefinite drone deployments are difficult to conceptualise as war, so traditional Just War thinking does not suffice as a basis for moral judgement. In assessing the US government's commitment to drone-based containment of risks emerging along its ‘terror frontier’, the article considers three alternative conceptualisations of drone violence arising in non-war contexts: vim (‘force short of war’), terrorism, and imperialism. It then rejects all three and proposes that such violence is better conceptualised as being merely ‘quasi-imperialistic’. On this basis, however, the sustaining of a drone strike campaign against a series of suspected terrorists can still be condemned as violating the right to life.
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“灰色”无人机暴力的持久问题
摘要本文讨论了无人机暴力的问题,这种暴力在很难归类的意义上是“灰色的”。它关注的是巴基斯坦出现的情况,在这种情况下,外国政府的武装无人机经常存在。美国在那里的经验教训是,无人机袭击的持续威胁旨在利用国家安全压制危及无人机的活动。然而,这种威胁不可避免地影响到生活在潜在打击区内的无辜人民。参照军事伦理原则来判断这种无人机的使用是假设“战争”正在进行,但无限期的无人机部署很难被概念化为战争,因此传统的正义战争思想不足以作为道德判断的基础。在评估美国政府对基于无人机遏制其“恐怖边界”出现的风险的承诺时,文章考虑了非战争背景下出现的无人机暴力的三种替代概念:vim(“战争之外的力量”)、恐怖主义和帝国主义。然后,它拒绝接受这三种暴力,并提出将这种暴力更好地概念化为仅仅是“准帝国主义”。然而,在此基础上,继续对一系列恐怖嫌疑人进行无人机打击,仍然可以被谴责为侵犯生命权。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
13.60%
发文量
30
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