Ham-fisted and implausible
*spoiler alert*
I enjoyed the film. A "thinking man's" war movie that was both exciting and frustrating in ways that make it a worthwhile watch no matter what. However, the entire story hinged on a single implausible plot point - that a drone pilot would disobey a direct order from a superior and delay a military strike for over an hour.
I'm no military expert, but I know enough to believe that a pair of weepy drone pilots disobeying a direct order to strike on multiple high-value targets would be grounds for court-martial or at the very least remedial training, reassignment, counseling, or discharge. The entire purpose of military chain of command is to, for better or worse, take the responsibility and culpability of killing away from lower level personnel. Any hesitation on the battlefield might cost countless lives.
Furthermore, the idea that any multinational military operation would simply halt for that great length of time, based on protecting the life of a single unknown little girl seems ludicrous. And, does every military command center have a lawyer on duty reviewing and approving every action?
Another thing -
Portraying that high level American, (I can't recall if he was a politician or military guy, maybe the President?) who was in China playing ping-pong, as sort of an unfeeling cowboy douchebag in contrast with the conflicted weepy pilots, and by-the-book Brits, was incredibly ham-fisted. American politicians and military brass are ALWAYS the supreme villains in these kinds of movies. But, that character was the only plausible decision maker in the whole film.
I guess that's the point. In a liberal-minded filmmaker's mind, warfare should require protracted hand-wringing. Maybe if we meditated long enough about it, we would see the error of our ways and wage war no more. I guess we can dream.