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The Central Intelligence Agency's armed remotely piloted vehicle-supported counter-insurgency campaign in Pakistan - a mission undermined by unintended consequences?

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journal contribution
posted on 2014-10-21, 13:19 authored by Simon Ashley Bennett
This paper views America's 'drones-first' counter-insurgency effort in Pakistan through the lens of Merton's theory of the unintended consequences of purposive action. It also references Beck’s Risk Society thesis, America’s Revolution in Military Affairs doctrine, Toft’s theory of isomorphic learning, Langer’s theory of mindfulness, Highly Reliable Organisations theory and the social construction of technology (SCOT) argument. With reference to Merton’s theory, the CIA-directed armed Remotely Piloted Vehicle (RPV) campaign has manifest functions, latent functions and latent dysfunctions. Measured against numbers of suspected insurgents killed, the campaign can be judged a success. Measured against the level of collateral damage or the state of US-Pakistan relations, the campaign can be judged a failure. Values determine the choice of metrics. Because RPV operations eliminate risk to American service personnel, and because this is popular with both US citizens and politicians, collateral damage (the killing of civilians) is not considered a policy-changing dysfunction. However, the latent dysfunctions of America's drones-first policy may be so great as to undermine that policy's intended manifest function – to make a net contribution to the War on Terror. In Vietnam the latent dysfunctions of Westmoreland’s attritional war undermined America’s policy of containment. Vietnam holds a lesson for the Obama administration.

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Citation

Journal of Terrorism Research, 2014, 5 (3), pp. 14-30

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Institute of Lifelong Learning

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Terrorism Research

Publisher

The Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence

issn

2049-7040

eissn

2049-7040

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2014-10-21

Publisher version

http://jtr.st-andrews.ac.uk/articles/10.15664/jtr.943/

Language

en

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