When Barack
Obama took the oath of office three years ago, no one associated the phrase
"targeted killing" with his optimistic young presidency. In his inaugural
address, the 47-year-old former constitutional law professor uttered the
word "terror" only once. Instead, he promised to use technology to
"harness the sun and the winds and the soil to fuel our cars and run our
factories."
Oddly,
technology has enabled Obama to become something few expected: a president who
has dramatically expanded the executive branch's ability to wage high-tech
clandestine war. With a determination that has surprised many, Obama has
embraced the CIA, expanded its powers, and approved more targeted killings than
any modern president. Over the last three years, the Obama administration has
carried out at least 239 covert drone strikes, more than five times the 44
approved under George W. Bush. And after promising to make counterterrorism
operations more transparent and rein in executive power, Obama has arguably
done the opposite, maintaining secrecy and expanding presidential authority.
Just as
importantly, the administration's excessive use of drone attacks undercuts one
of its most laudable policies: a promising new post-9/11 approach to the use of
lethal American force, one of multilateralism, transparency, and narrow focus.
In a series
of recent interviews, current and former administration officials outlined what
could be called an "Obama doctrine" on the use of force. Obama's
embrace of multilateralism, drone strikes, and a light U.S. military presence
in Libya, Pakistan, and Yemen, they contend, has proved more effective than
Bush's go-heavy approach in Iraq and Afghanistan. "We will use force unilaterally
if necessary against direct threats to the United States ," Ben Rhodes,
the administration's deputy national security advisor for strategic
communications, told me. "And we'll use force in a very precise way."
Crises the
administration deems indirect threats to the United
States -- such as the uprisings in Libya and Syria
-- are "threats to global security," Rhodes
argued, and will be responded to multilaterally and not necessarily by force.
The drawdown of U.S. troops
in Iraq and Afghanistan , as well as the creation of a
smaller, more agile U.S.
military spread across Asia, the Pacific, and the Middle
East , are also part of the doctrine. So is the discreet backing of
protesters in Egypt , Iran , and Syria .
The
emerging strategy -- which Rhodes touted as
"a far more focused approach to our adversaries" -- is a welcome
shift from the martial policies and bellicose rhetoric of both the Bush
administration and today's Republican presidential candidates. But Obama has
granted the CIA far too much leeway in carrying out drone strikes in Pakistan and Yemen . In both countries, the
strikes often appear to be backfiring.
Obama and
other administration officials insist the drones are used rarely and kill few
civilians. In arare public comment on the program, the president
defended the strikes in late January. "I want to make sure the people
understand, actually, drones have not caused a huge number of civilian
casualties," Obama said. "For the most part, they have been very precise
precision strikes against al Qaeda and their affiliates. And we are very
careful in terms of how it's been applied."
But from
Pakistan to Yemen to post-American Iraq, drones often spark deep resentment
where they operate. When they do attack, they kill as brutally as any weapon of
war. The administration's practice of classifying the strikes as secret only
exacerbates local anger and suspicion. Under Obama, drone strikes have become
too frequent, too unilateral, and too much associated with the heavy-handed use
of American power.
In 2008, I
saw this firsthand. Two Afghan colleagues and I were kidnapped by the Taliban
and held captive in the tribal areas of Pakistan for seven months. From the
ground, drones are terrifying weapons that can be heard circling overhead for
hours at a time. They are a potent, unnerving symbol of unchecked American
power. At the same time, they were clearly effective, killing foreign
bomb-makers and preventing Taliban fighters from gathering in large groups. The
experience left me convinced that drone strikes should be carried out -- but
very selectively.
In the January
interview, Obama insisted drone strikes were used only surgically. "It is
important for everybody to understand," he said, "that this thing is
kept on a very tight leash."
Drones,
though, are in no way surgical.
IN
INTERVIEWS, CURRENT AND FORMER Obama administration officials told me the
president and his senior aides had been eager from the outset to differentiate
their approach in Pakistan and Afghanistan from Bush's. Unlike in Iraq, where
Democrats thought the Bush administration had been too aggressive, they thought
the Bush White House had not been assertive enough with Afghan and Pakistani
leaders. So the new administration adopted a unilateral, get-tough approach in
South Asia that would eventually spread elsewhere. As candidate Obama vowed in a2007 speech, referring to Pakistan's president at the time,
"If we have actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist targets and
President Musharraf won't act, we will."
In his
first year in office, Obama approved two large troop surges in Afghanistan and
a vast expansion of the number of CIA operatives in Pakistan. The CIA was also
given more leeway in carrying out drone strikes in the country's ungoverned
tribal areas, where foreign and local militants plot attacks for Afghanistan,
Pakistan, and beyond.
The
decision reflected both Obama's belief in the need to move aggressively in
Pakistan and the influence of the CIA in the new administration. To a far
greater extent than the Bush White House, Obama and his top aides relied on the
CIA for its analysis of Pakistan, according to current and former senior
administration officials. As a result, preserving the agency's ability to carry
out counterterrorism, or "CT," operations in Pakistan became of
paramount importance.
"The
most important thing when it came to Pakistan was to be able to carry out drone
strikes and nothing else," said a former official who spoke on condition
of anonymity. "The so-called strategic focus of the bilateral relationship
was there solely to serve the CT approach."
Initially,
the CIA was right. Increased drone strikes in the tribal areas eliminated
senior al Qaeda operatives in 2009. Then, in July 2010, Pakistanis working for
the CIA pulled up behind a white Suzuki navigating the bustling streets of
Peshawar. The car's driver was later tracked to a large compound in the city of
Abbottabad. On May 2, 2011, U.S. commandos killed Osama bin Laden there.
The U.S.
intelligence presence, though, extended far beyond the hunt for bin Laden,
according to former administration officials. At one point, the CIA tried to
deploy hundreds of operatives across Pakistan but backed off after suspicious
Pakistani officials declined to issue them visas. At the same time, the
agency aggressively used the freer hand Obama had given it to launch more drone
strikes than ever before.
Established
by the Bush administration and Musharraf in 2004, the covert CIA drone program
initially carried out only "personality" strikes against a
preapproved list of senior al Qaeda members. Pakistani officials were notified
before many, but not all, attacks. Between 2004 and 2007, nine such attacks
were carried out in Pakistan, according to the New
America Foundation.
In 2008,
the Bush administration authorized less-restrictive "signature"
strikes in the tribal areas. Instead of basing attacks on intelligence
regarding a specific person, CIA drone operators could carry out strikes based
on the behavior of people on the ground. Operators could launch a drone strike
if they saw a group, for example, crossing back and forth over the
Afghanistan-Pakistan border. In 2008, the Bush administration carried out 33
strikes.
Under
Obama, the drone campaign has escalated rapidly. The number of strikes nearly
doubled to53 in 2009 and then doubled again to 118
in 2010. Former administration officials said the looser rules resulted in
the killing of more civilians. Current administration officials insisted that
Obama, in fact, tightened the rules on the use of drone strikes after taking
office. They said strikes rose under Obama because improved technology and
intelligence gathering created more opportunities for attacks than existed
under Bush.
But as
Pakistani public anger over the spiraling strikes grew, other diplomats
expressed concern as well. The U.S. ambassador in Pakistan at the time, Anne
Patterson, opposed several attacks, but the CIA ignored her objections. When
Cameron Munter replaced Patterson in October 2010, he objected even more
vigorously. On at least two occasions, CIA Director Leon Panetta dismissed
Munter's protests and launched strikes, the Wall Street Journal later reported. One strike
occurred only hours after Sen. John Kerry, head of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, had completed a visit to Islamabad.
A March
2011 strike brought the debate to the White House. A day after Pakistani
officials agreed to release CIA contractor Raymond Davis, the agency -- again
over Munter's objections -- carried out a signature drone strike that the
Pakistanis say killed four Taliban fighters and 38 civilians. Already angry
about the Davis case, Pakistan's Army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, issued
an unusual public statement, saying a group of tribal elders
had been "carelessly and callously targeted with complete disregard to
human life." U.S. intelligence officials dismissed the Pakistani
complaints and insisted 20 militants had perished. "There's every
indication that this was a group of terrorists, not a charity car wash in the
Pakistani hinterlands," one official told the Associated Press.
Surprised
by the vehemence of the official Pakistani reaction, national security advisor
Tom Donilon questioned whether signature strikes were worthwhile. Critics
inside and outside the U.S. government contended that a program that began as a
carefully focused effort to kill senior al Qaeda leaders had morphed into a
bombing campaign against low-level Taliban fighters. Some outside analysts even
argued that the administration had adopted a de facto "kill not
capture" policy, given its inability to close Bush's Guantánamo Bay prison
and create a new detention system.
In April
2011, the director of Pakistan's intelligence service, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja
Pasha, visited Washington in an effort to repair the relationship, according to
news accounts and former administration officials. Just after his visit, two
more drone strikes occurred in the tribal areas, which Pasha took as a personal
affront. In a rare concession, Panetta agreed to notify Pakistan's intelligence
service before the United States carried out any strike that could kill more
than 20 people.
In May,
after the bin Laden raid sparked further anger among Pakistani officials,
Donilon launched an internal review of how drone strikes were approved,
according to a former administration official. But the strikes continued. At
the end of May, State Department officials were angered when three missile
strikes followed Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to Pakistan.
As
Donilon's review progressed, an intense debate erupted inside the
administration over the signature strikes, according to the Journal. Adm.
Mike Mullen, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the strikes
should be more selective. Robert Gates, then the defense secretary, warned that
angry Pakistani officials could cut off supplies to U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
Clinton warned that too many civilian casualties could strengthen opposition to
Pakistan's weak, pro-American president, Asif Ali Zardari.
The CIA
countered that Taliban fighters were legitimate targets because they carried
out cross-border attacks on U.S. forces, according to the former official. In
June, Obama sided with the CIA. Panetta conceded that no drone strike would be
carried out when Pakistani officials visited Washington and that Clinton and
Munter could object to proposed strikes. But Obama allowed the CIA director to
retain final say.
Last
November, the worst-case scenario that Mullen, Gates, and Clinton had warned of
came to pass. After NATO airstrikes mistakenly killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on
the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, Kayani demanded an end to all U.S. drone strikes
and blocked supplies to U.S. troops in Afghanistan. At the same time, popular
opposition to Zardari soared. After a nearly two-month lull that allowed
militants to regroup, drone strikes resumed in the tribal areas this past
January. But signature strikes are no longer allowed -- for the time being,
according to the former senior official.
Among
average Pakistanis, the strikes played out disastrously. In a 2011 Pew Research Centerpoll, 97 percent of Pakistani respondents who knew about the
attacks said American drone strikes were a "bad thing." Seventy-three percent of Pakistanis had an unfavorable
view of the United States, a 10 percentage point rise from 2008.
Administration
officials say the strikes are popular with Pakistanis who live in the tribal
areas and have tired of brutal jihadi rule. And they contend that Pakistani
government officials -- while publicly criticizing the attacks -- agree in
private that they help combat militancy. Making the strikes more transparent
could reduce public anger in other parts of Pakistan, U.S. officials concede.
But they say some elements of the Pakistani government continue to request that
the strikes remain covert.
For me, the
bottom line is that both governments' approaches are failing. Pakistan's
economy is dismal. Its military continues to shelter Taliban fighters it sees
as proxies to thwart Indian encroachment in Afghanistan. And the percentage of
Pakistanis supporting the use of the Pakistani Army to fight extremists in the
tribal areas -- the key to eradicating militancy -- dropped from a 53 percent
majority in 2009 to 37 percent last year. Pakistan is more unstable today than
it was when Obama took office.
A similar
dynamic is creating even worse results on the southern tip of the Arabian
Peninsula. Long ignored by the United States, Yemen drew sudden attention after
a suicide attack on the USS Cole killed 17 American sailors in the port of Aden
in 2000. In 2002, the Bush administration carried out a single drone strike in
Yemen that killed Abu Ali al-Harithi, an al Qaeda operative who was a key
figure in orchestrating the Cole attack. In the years that followed, the
administration shifted its attentions to Iraq, and militants began to regroup.
A failed
December 2009 attempt by a militant trained in Yemen to detonate a bomb on a
Detroit-bound airliner focused Obama's attention on the country. Over the next
two years, the United States carried out an estimated 20 airstrikes in Yemen,
most in 2011. In addition to killing al Qaeda-linked militants, the strikes
killed dozens of civilians, according to Yemenis. Instead of decimating the
organization, the Obama strikes have increased the ranks of al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula from 300 fighters in 2009 to more than 1,000 today, according
to Gregory Johnsen, a leading Yemen expert at Princeton University. In January,
the group briefly seized control of Radda, a town only 100 miles from the
capital, Sanaa. "I don't believe that the U.S. has a Yemen policy,"
Johnsen told me. "What the U.S. has is a counterterrorism strategy that it
applies to Yemen."
The deaths
of bin Laden and many of his lieutenants are a step forward, but Pakistan and
Yemen are increasingly unstable. Pakistan is a nuclear-armed country of 180
million with resilient militant networks; Yemen, an impoverished, failing state
that is fast becoming a new al Qaeda stronghold. "They think they've won
because of this approach," the former administration official said,
referring to the administration's drone-heavy strategy. "A lot of us think
there is going to be a lot bigger problems in the future."
THE
BACKLASH FROM drone strikes in the countries where they are happening is
not the only worry. In the United States, civil liberties and human rights
groups are increasingly concerned with the breadth of powers Obama has claimed
for the executive branch as he wages a new kind of war.
In the
Libya conflict, the administration invoked the drones to create a new legal
precedent. Under the War Powers Resolution, the president must receive
congressional authorization for military operations within 60 days. When the
deadline approached in May, the administration announced that because NATO
strikes and drones were carrying out the bulk of the missions, no serious
threat of U.S. casualties existed and no congressional authorization was
needed. "It's changed the way politicians talk about what should be the
most important thing that a nation engages in," said Peter W. Singer, a
Brookings Institution researcher. "It's changed the way we in the public
deliberate war."
Last fall,
a series of drone strikes in Yemen set another dangerous precedent, according
to civil liberties and human rights groups. Without any public legal
proceeding, the U.S. government executed three of its own citizens. On Sept.
30, a drone strike killed Anwar al-Awlaki, a charismatic American-born cleric
of Yemeni descent credited with inspiring terrorist attacks around the world.
Samir Khan, a Pakistani-American jihadist traveling with him, was killed as
well. Several weeks later, another strike killed Awlaki's 16-year-old son,
Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, also a U.S. citizen. Administration officials insisted a
Justice Department review had authorized the killings but declined to release
the full document.
"The
administration has claimed the power to carry out extrajudicial executions of
Americans on the basis of evidence that is secret and is never seen by
anyone," said Jameel Jaffer, deputy legal director of the American Civil
Liberties Union. "It's hard to understand how that is consistent with the
Constitution."
After
criticizing the Bush administration for keeping the details of its
surveillance, interrogation, and detention practices secret, Obama is doing the
same thing. His administration has declined to reveal the details of how it
places people on kill lists, carries out eavesdropping in the United States, or
decides whom to detain overseas. The administration is also prosecuting six
former government officials on charges of leaking classified information to the
media -- more cases than all other administrations combined.
Administration
officials deny being secretive and insist they have disclosed more information
about their counterterrorism practices than the Bush administration, which
fiercely resisted releasing details of its "war on terror" and
established the covert drone program in Pakistan. Obama administration
officials say they have established a more transparent and flexible approach
outside Pakistan that involves military raids, drone strikes, and other
efforts. They told me that every attack in Yemen was approved by Yemeni
officials. Eventually, they hope to make drone strikes joint efforts carried
out openly with local governments.
For now,
keeping them covert prevents American courts from reviewing their
constitutionality, according to Jaffer. He pointed out that if a Republican
president followed such policies, the outcry on the left would be deafening.
"You have to remember that this authority is going to be used by the next
administration and the next administration after that," Jaffer said.
"You need to make sure there are clear limits on what is really
unparalleled power."
TO THEIR
CREDIT, Obama and his senior officials have successfully reframed Bush's global
battle as a more narrowly focused struggle against al Qaeda. They stopped using
the term "war on terror" and instead described a campaign against a
single, clearly identifiable group.
Senior
administration officials cite the toppling of Muammar al-Qaddafi as the prime
example of the success of their more focused, multilateral approach to the use
of force. At a cost of zero American lives and $1 billion in U.S. funding, the
Libya intervention removed an autocrat from power in five months. The
occupation of Iraq claimed 4,484 American lives, cost at least $700 billion,
and lasted nearly nine years.
"The
light U.S. footprint had benefits beyond less U.S. lives and resources,"
Rhodes told me. "We believe the Libyan revolution is viewed as more
legitimate. The U.S. is more welcome. And there is less potential for an
insurgency because there aren't foreign forces present."
In its most
ambitious proposal, the administration is also trying to restructure the U.S.
military, implement steep spending cuts, and "right-size" U.S. forces
around the world. Under Obama's plan, the Army would be trimmed by 80,000
soldiers, some U.S. units would be shifted from the Middle East to the Pacific,
and more small, covert bases would be opened. Special Forces units that have
been vastly expanded in Iraq and Afghanistan would train indigenous forces and
carry out counterterrorism raids. Declaring al Qaeda nearly defeated, administration
officials say it is time for a new focus.
"Where
does the U.S. have a greater interest in 2020?" Rhodes asked. "Is it
Asia-Pacific or Yemen? Obviously, the Asia-Pacific region is clearly going to
be more important."
Rhodes has
a point, but Pakistan and its nuclear weapons -- as well as Yemen and its
proximity to vital oil reserves and sea lanes -- are likely to haunt the United
States for years.
Retired
military officials warn that drones and commando raids are no substitute for
the difficult process of helping local leaders marginalize militants. Missile
strikes that kill members of al Qaeda and its affiliates in Pakistan and Yemen
do not strengthen economies, curb corruption, or improve government services.
David Barno, a retired lieutenant general who commanded U.S. forces in
Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005, believes hunting down senior terrorists over and
over again is not a long-term solution.
"How
do you get beyond this attrition warfare?" he asked me. "I don't
think we've answered that question yet."
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