Strategic Drones

Alfano, Marco and Clarr, Margaux and Marques Pereira, Jaime and Maystadt, Jean-Francois (2025) Strategic Drones. Working Paper. Lancaster University, Department of Economics, Lancaster.

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Abstract

US drone strikes are popular with the electorate and overseen by the President. This paper investigates whether the US President uses drone strikes strategically for political gain. We document that US drone strikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen are significantly more likely before US elections, when popularity has high payoffs. We find no changes for unpopular, piloted airstrikes. Consistent with unusually high drone approvals, abnormally cloudy skies before US elections lead to a postponement or redirection of strikes to other target countries. To examine whether drone strikes are used strategically to divert attention from damaging media coverage, we gather closed captions from all cable TV coverage of the President and analyze their tone using natural language processing. Drone strikes are more likely in weeks when news anchors cover the President more negatively, a relation that holds both during and outside of election periods. We find no such relationship for piloted airstrikes or during weeks of high news pressure.

Item Type:
Monograph (Working Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/no_not_funded
Subjects:
?? drone strikesstrategic timingconflictpolitical economyno - not fundedd72d74h56l82 ??
ID Code:
230397
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
14 Nov 2025 16:40
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
20 Nov 2025 00:36