Drones at the forefront of the Brennan hearing
One study estimates as many as 3,200 have been killed by drone attacks in Pakistan alone
Thursday's Senate confirmation hearing will be, in popular mythology at least, a brief moment when light flashes into the darkness.
John Brennan hopes to make his way from his windowless office (bunker, if you like a bit of drama) in the White House where he is President Barack Obama's counter-terrorism chief to Langley, in the state of Virginia, where he hopes to occupy the director's office in the CIA.
He will be at home in Langley: Mr Brennan spent 25 of his 57 years working for the Agency. He is an Arabist, was station chief in Saudi Arabia in the 90s and chief of staff to Director George Tenet in the years after 9/11.
After time in the private sector during president George W Bush's second term, he was tipped to be Mr Obama's nominee to lead the CIA in 2009.
But his time with Mr Tenet, and the CIA's involvement in what the administration called "enhanced interrogation" but what much of the rest of world saw as torture, put an end to that.
Instead he has laboured in the shadows in the White House, hugely influential, as a president who picked up a Nobel Peace Prize on pretty much his first day in office has expanded the programme of drone-killing with an aggression that has surprised friends and enemies alike.
Drones in the spotlightIt is that drone programme, acknowledged by the US government but never detailed, that will fall under the Senate spotlight. And it will be Mr Brennan's role in the expansion and running of it that will be up for examination.
The hearing comes as the use of unmanned aerial combat vehicles to winnow the ranks of America's enemies is attracting unprecedented domestic attention.
On Tuesday came the leak to NBC News of the justice department's white paper giving its legal justification for killing an American citizen.
It is widely believed to be the briefing paper given to members of Congress in the light of the drone-killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, a US citizen killed in Yemen in September 2011.
On Wednesday came the news - apparently long-known to some parts of the US media, who chose not share it - that the US is operating a drone base out of Saudi Arabia.
And drones are on the front page of the magazines Time and New York Review of Books.
Much of America's drone operation is hidden from view, carried out by the CIA and thus away from public gaze and accountability.
The New America Foundation estimates that between 1,953 and 3,279 have been killed by drone attacks in Pakistan alone, of whom roughly one in 10 were civilians.
Mr Brennan is believed to have been at the heart of trying to formalise the rules of this new war through the creation of a "playbook": a set of criteria and methods for how decisions of life and death should be made.
The organisation he hopes to lead will not, however, be bound by the playbook.
Unanswered questions"Why not?" asks Georgetown University Professor of Law David Cole, in the New York Review of Books.
How, he asks, does the administration decide whether or not capturing an enemy (rather than killing them) is feasible? What are the criteria for targeted killing? Just how many civilians have been killed?
The questions roll on.
How much we will learn from the Senate hearing is difficult to guess. Senators have received many confidential briefings.
They are often shy of talking about national security matters. The hearings themselves can descend swiftly into publicity seeking and point scoring, rather than probing questioning.
In a speech last year, Mr Brennan acknowledged that many questions have yet to be answered about the drone programme - questions much like the ones posed by Mr Cole.
But he said that in amongst the struggle over the moral questions thrown up by the drone programme, he was certain about one thing:
"We are at war. We are at war against a terrorist organisation called al-Qaeda that has brutally murdered thousands of Americans… with the help of targeted strikes, we have turned al-Qaeda into a shadow of what it once was. They are on the road to destruction."
There are many questions to be asked as Mr Brennan makes his way from one dark corner of the administration to another. But for most Americans, Mr Brennan's words sum up all they want to know about the war being played out in the shadows.
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Comment number 50.
Chryses7th February 2013 - 23:58
dimbry (45),
“@Chryses; Are you a "civilian", too? Let's just leave ironic quote marks well away from that word, shall we?”
Ah, you missed it! I was quoting MilwaukeeRay @38. The “ironic” quotes were his. Ironic, eh?
Link to this (Comment number 50)
Comment number 49.
dimbry7th February 2013 - 23:32
@38; Terrorism goes back a lot further than 9/11. And it does NOT and has NEVER meant that the word 'civilian' has lost its meaning, not in the context of war, not under international law, period.
Not a word of what you say stands up under even the slightest amount scrutiny. Tactics like this only breed escalation. Look up the history of COIN, see where it invariably leads:
http://goo.gl/L96f6
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Comment number 48.
lordBanners7th February 2013 - 23:12
If Brennan is Truthful he will not get the job,and Senate Ctee knows that.A display in Natl Hypocrisy for local consumption.
People need to wrap their heads around the fact CIA was formed specifically to Discredit anyone deemed Enemy of US by Any Means incl Fabrication.Nothing to do with Law & Order.
My irk is with whipping up Hate to Defend our Way of Life.Unneccessary and most harmful to us.
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Comment number 47.
lordBanners7th February 2013 - 23:00
27.Chryses
12 Hours ago
lordBanners (5),
“Death count from US Drones is far higher,any male 16 or over is automatically deemed 'Enemy Combatant' even if in School Uniform …”
Was exposed in a report covering Dead Women,Children and Youth in canoes going home from school in Honduras where US drones were not supposed to be.Minimising death count is as much US stgy as using Drones.
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Comment number 46.
Swing Lowe7th February 2013 - 22:55
Drones are fantastic weapons and should be used far more widely to protect lives and reduce risk to coalition forces. When you are fighting against people who use terror as one of their main tools, these drones completely take away the ability of these lunatics to even have contact with civilized people, they will be killed before they get the chance.
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Comments 5 of 50