Contexto Internacional ()

‘No Boots on the Ground’: Reflections on the US Drone Campaign through Virtuous War and STS Theories

  • Alcides Eduardo dos Reis Peron,
  • Rafael de Brito Dias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/s0102-8529.2017400100003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 1
pp. 53 – 71

Abstract

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Abstract Since 2004, the US Air Force (USAF) and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have persecuted insurgents in Somalia, Yemen and Pakistan with armed drones. Despite its alleged efficiency, this practice has been widely criticised on the grounds that it contravenes international humanitarian law. In order to understand the controversies involving this practice, we examine how this new technology was linked to and allowed the emergence of a new US international security strategy first applied in the Middle East. Drawing on James Der Derian’s post-structuralist theories about virtuous wars, the sociotechnical approach allowed by Science and Technology Studies (STS), and Gregoire Chamayou’s theories about drones, we argue that the US intention in adopting these technologies was not to enhance its military capability but to allow the USA to remain active in several risky theatres while avoiding the political and social costs of conventional military engagement.

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