The Predator drone has proven to be an effective weapon that offers both real-time surveillance and offensive firepower for troops on the ground. Rick Loomis/Los Angeles Times/MCT
New York Times: Deep Support in Washington for C.I.A.’s Drone Missions
WASHINGTON — About once a month, staff members of the congressional intelligence committees drive across the Potomac River to C.I.A. headquarters in Langley, Va., and watch videos of people being blown up.
As part of the macabre ritual the staff members look at the footage of drone strikes in Pakistan and other countries and a sampling of the intelligence buttressing each strike, but not the internal C.I.A. cables discussing the attacks and their aftermath. The screenings have provided a veneer of congressional oversight and have led lawmakers to claim that the targeted killing program is subject to rigorous review, to defend it vigorously in public and to authorize its sizable budget each year.
That unwavering support from Capitol Hill is but one reason the C.I.A.’s killing missions are embedded in American warfare and unlikely to change significantly despite President Obama’s announcement on Thursday that a drone strike accidentally killed two innocent hostages, an American and an Italian. The program is under fire like never before, but the White House continues to champion it, and C.I.A. officers who built the program more than a decade ago — some of whom also led the C.I.A. detention program that used torture in secret prisons — have ascended to the agency’s powerful senior ranks.
WNU Editor: Here is a good analysis on why the CIA continues to run America's drone war .... Why the CIA Is Allowed to Run America's Deadliest Drone War (Kate Knibbs, Gizmodo).
Update: Inside Obama's drone panopticon: a secret machine with no accountability (The Guardian)
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