World | Pakistan 1 in 3 Killed by US Drones Are Civilians Think tank issues report on Pakistan casualties By Jane Yager Posted Mar 4, 2010 8:21 AM CST Copied Members of a Pakistani civil society hold a rally against the suspected U.S. missile attacks in the tribal areas along the Afghan border, Monday, April 20, 2009 in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed) One out of three people killed by unmanned US Predator drones in Pakistan is a civilian, according to a new report sure to fuel criticism of the unmanned attacks. The report by a Washington think tank found that 32% of the more than 1,200 people killed since 2004 were bystanders instead of militants. The use of drone attacks has increased since President Obama took office, with 51 attacks last year—more than in all eight years of the Bush presidency. The White House defends its increasing reliance on drones as an effective way to target top-ranking militants: They've killed three top Taliban leaders recently, and narrowly missed Osama bin Laden's deputy. Read These Next President Trump was not a fan of the halftime show at the Super Bowl. Some Olympians are struggling with representing the US. Vonn has surgery after 'heartbreaking' crash. Ghislaine Maxwell had a behind-the-scenes role in Clinton world. Report an error