<p>More <a href="http://www.onlinehermesoutlet.com/hermes-kelly-22cm/162-hermes-kelly-tote-bag-fish-stripe-black.html">Hermes Kelly Tote Bag Fish Stripe Black</a> than half of the <a href="http://www.onlinehermesoutlet.com/hermes-kelly/124-hermes-kelly-bag-22cm-green-yellow-brown.html">Hermes Kelly Bag 22CM Green Yellow Brown</a> British public would support the UK Government helping in a drone missile strike if it was to target a known terrorist, new research has shown.</p> </p> <p>But people are far less supportive if innocent people are likely to be injured, according to a new joint study from the University of Surrey's Centre for International Intervention (cii) and defence think-tank the Royal United Services Institute <a href="http://www.onlinehermesoutlet.com/hermes-kelly/119-hermes-kelly-bag-22cm-brown.html">Hermes Kelly Bag 22CM Brown</a> (RUSI), carried out in collaboration with YouGov.</p><p>The new findings feature in a joint cii/RUSI Whitehall report - Hitting the Target? How New Capabilities are Shaping International Intervention - which looks at the debate on drones, and how much is known or understand about them by the public.</p><p>The YouGov study examined to what extent the British public support or oppose the UK Government assisting in a drone strike and gathered information from six separate surveys between February 27 and March 8, including a nationally representative poll of 1,966 British adults and several survey experiments looking at different scenarios, involving at least 700 respondents in each case.</p><p>In each case, respondents were first shown the text: "It was recently reported that the UK Government might be passing information to US authorities to help them carry out missile strikes from <a href="http://www.onlinehermesoutlet.com/hermes-passport-holder/107-hermes-compact-passport-holder-skyblue.html">Hermes Compact Passport Holder Skyblue</a> unmanned aircraft called 'drones' to kill known terrorists overseas in countries like Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia."</p><p>The study found that 55% of respondents would support the UK Government helping in a drone strike to kill a known terrorist overseas, with that support rising to 67% if it <a href="http://www.onlinehermesoutlet.com/hermes-kelly-35cm/582-hermes-kelly-handbag-35cm-deep-skyblue-gold.html">Hermes Kelly Handbag 35CM Deep Skyblue Gold</a> could be guaranteed that no innocent civilians would be killed.</p><p>But support dropped steadily as the risk to civilians got higher - falling to just 43% if two or three innocent people might be killed, with opposition from 41%. If it was "likely that 10-15 innocent civilians might be killed", support dropped to 32%, <a href="http://www.onlinehermesoutlet.com/hermes-passport-holder/107-hermes-compact-passport-holder-skyblue.html">Hermes Compact Passport Holder Skyblue</a> with opposition rising to 46%, the study found.</p><p>YouGov academic director Dr Joel Faulkner Rogers, whose research is published in Hitting the Target? said: "The British public are clearly divided on whether the current use of drones is ultimately doing more harm or good to Western security. </p><p>"But there's also a distinction between attitudes to the weapon and the way it's used, which go beyond binary moral judgements about 'drones good' or 'drones bad'.</p><p>"The findings show notable public concern that drones could make foreign intervention too easy. But a majority of Brits also support the policy, at least in principle, of targeted drone strikes against known terrorists, with many who support a view that drones can help to reduce, as well as cause, casualties if military action is required."</p><p> Copyright (c) Press Association Ltd. 2013, All Rights Reserved. </p> |