[Dozens of other countries, including Pakistan ’s archrival, India , are in the process of
developing them, according to the foundation. And last month, the Obama administration said it would permit the export of armed
drones to U.S. allies who request them on a “case-by-case basis.”]
named Burraq, and its laser-guided missile, named Barq. (Courtesy of ISPR/Pakistan
Military)
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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan —The global proliferation of
armed aerial drones took a major leap forward Friday when Pakistan’s military
said it had successfully tested its own version and would soon deploy them
against terrorists.
The drone, designated the Burraq, will be equipped with a
laser-guided missile capable of striking with pinpoint accuracy in all types of
weather, the military said. In the Koran, Burraq is the name of the white horse
that took the Islamic prophet to heaven.
Gen. Raheel Sharif, Pakistan ’s army chief of staff,
witnessed the test and commended the country’s engineers and scientists for
“untiring efforts to acquire state-of-the-art technology” that puts “Pakistan in a different league.”
“It’s a great national achievement and momentous occasion,”
Sharif said.
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who is not related to the
army chief, said the weapons would “add a new dimension to Pakistan ’s defenses.”
According to the New America Foundation, there is evidence that eight other countries — the United States, South Africa,
France, Nigeria, Britain, Iran, Israel and China — have already put weapons
onto unmanned aircraft. The United States , Britain and Israel are the only three that have
fired a missile from a drone during a military operation, the foundation said.
Dozens of other countries, including Pakistan ’s archrival, India , are in the process of
developing them, according to the foundation. And last month, the Obama administration said it would permit the export of armed
drones to U.S. allies who request them on a “case-by-case basis.”
Peter W. Singer, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, said Pakistan ’s test confirms that the use
of drones in warfare is here to stay.
“This is not the start of the race; it’s mile seven of the
race,” said Singer, adding that India will probably also be able to
quickly deploy an armed drone.
Still, he cautioned, the introduction of drones into Pakistan ’s arsenal is not likely to alter
the balance of power between the two nuclear-armed countries.
“We are not talking about technology that requires the Manhattan Project,” said
Singer, referring to the U.S. effort to build the world’s
first nuclear weapon during World War II. “The ability to fire a rocket off a
drone is fundamentally different than a global operation where someone sitting
in Nevada can fire from a plane 7,000 miles away.”
It was not immediately clear how quickly Pakistan plans to deploy its drones on
the battlefield. But the military released a photo showing a dozen of them
arrayed in a parking lot. Pakistan ’s military said the drone was
indigenously produced, but there have been recent reports that it was alsoseeking drone technology from China .
In November 2013, Pakistan announced that it had developed an unarmed
drone. At the time, military leaders said the drone would be used only for
surveillance and suggested that they had no plans to arm the craft.
But Pakistan ’s military posture changed
after the Pakistani Taliban attacked an army-run school in Peshawar in December, killing about 150
students and teachers. After that attack, the military stepped up its campaign
against Taliban strongholds in the northwestern part of the country near the
border with Afghanistan . On Friday, before it
announced the drone test, Pakistan ’s military said airstrikes had
killed 48 militants in Pakistan ’s tribal area near the Afghan
border over the previous 24 hours.
Saad Muhammad, a retired brigadier general in the Pakistani
army, said the availability of drones will make it far easier for the military
to track and kill militants.
“Pakistan is going to be facing this
asymmetrical warfare for years to come,” Muhammad said. “There are areas where
the state still does not have complete control and the enemy comes into sight
for a very little time.. . . It’s very costly to keep
fighter planes in the air even for an hour.”
Pakistani leaders have repeatedly condemned those strikes, saying they have
killed scores of civilians and violate the country’s sovereignty.
James L. Cavallaro, director of the International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic at Stanford University , said Pakistan ’s decision to use drones
domestically should not absolve it from questions about whether they are moral
or a violation of international law.
“Weaponized drones facilitate killing by states,” Cavallaro
said. “The weapon is one that raises important concerns about unbridled state
power, the ease of killing and imbalance in the principles of risk involved in
warfare.”
The Shaheen-III missile has a range of 1,700
miles and is capable of carrying a warhead to any part of India as well as deep into the Middle East , including to Israel , the military said.