From the Los Angeles Times
THE NATION
CIA Expands Use of Drones in Terror War
'Targeted
killing' with missile-firing Predators is a way to hit Al Qaeda in
remote areas, officials say. Host nations are not always given notice.
By Josh Meyer
Times Staff Writer
January 29, 2006
WASHINGTON — Despite protests from other countries, the United States
is expanding a top-secret effort to kill suspected terrorists with
drone-fired missiles as it pursues an increasingly decentralized Al
Qaeda, U.S. officials say.
The CIA's failed Jan. 13 attempt to assassinate Al Qaeda
second-in-command Ayman Zawahiri in Pakistan was the latest strike in
the "targeted killing" program, a highly classified initiative that
officials say has broadened as the network splintered and fled
Afghanistan.
The strike against Zawahiri reportedly killed as many as 18
civilians, many of them women and children, and triggered protests in
Pakistan. Similar U.S. attacks using unmanned Predator aircraft
equipped with Hellfire missiles have angered citizens and political
leaders in Afghanistan, Iraq and Yemen.
Little is known about the targeted-killing program. The Bush
administration has refused to discuss how many strikes it has made, how
many people have died, or how it chooses targets. No U.S. officials
were willing to speak about it on the record because the program is
classified.
Several U.S. officials confirmed at least 19 occasions since Sept.
11 on which Predators successfully fired Hellfire missiles on terrorist
suspects overseas, including 10 in Iraq in one month last year. The
Predator strikes have killed at least four senior Al Qaeda leaders, but
also many civilians, and it is not known how many times they missed
their targets.
Critics of the program dispute its legality under U.S. and
international law, and say it is administered by the CIA with little
oversight. U.S. intelligence officials insist it is one of their most
tightly regulated, carefully vetted programs.
Lee Strickland, a former CIA counsel who retired in 2004 from the
agency's Senior Intelligence Service, confirmed that the Predator
program had grown to keep pace with the spread of Al Qaeda commanders.
The CIA believes they are branching out to gain recruits, financing and
influence.
Many groups of Islamic militants are believed to be operating in
lawless pockets of the Middle East, Asia and Africa where it is
perilous for U.S. troops to try to capture them, and difficult to
discern the leaders.
"Paradoxically, as a result of our success the target has become
even more decentralized, even more diffused and presents a more
difficult target — no question about that," said Strickland, now
director of the Center for Information Policy at the University of
Maryland.
"It's clear that the U.S. is prepared to use and deploy these weapons
in a fairly wide theater," he said.
Current and former intelligence officials said they could not
disclose which countries could be subject to Predator strikes. But the
presence of Al Qaeda or its affiliates has been documented in dozens of
nations, including Somalia, Morocco and Indonesia.
High-ranking U.S. and allied counter-terrorism officials said the
program's expansion was not merely geographic. They said it had grown
from targeting a small number of senior Al Qaeda commanders after the
Sept. 11 attacks to a more loosely defined effort to kill possibly
scores of suspected terrorists, depending on where they were found and
what they were doing.
"We have the plans in place to do them globally," said a former
counter-terrorism official who worked at the CIA and State Department,
which coordinates such efforts with other governments.
"In most cases, we need the approval of the host country to do
them. However, there are a few countries where the president has
decided that we can whack someone without the approval or knowledge of
the host government."
The CIA and the Pentagon have deployed at least several dozen of
the Predator drones throughout Iraq, Afghanistan and along the borders
of Pakistan, U.S. officials confirmed. The CIA also has sent the
remote-controlled aircraft into the skies over Yemen and some other
countries believed to be Al Qaeda havens, particularly those without a
strong government or military with which the United States can work in
tandem, a current U.S. counter-terrorism official told The Times.
Such incursions are highly sensitive because they could violate
the sovereignty of those nations and anger U.S. allies, the official
said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The Predator, built by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc.
of San Diego, is a slender craft, 27 feet long with a 49-foot wingspan.
It makes a clearly audible buzzing sound, and can hover above a target
for many hours and fly as low as 15,000 feet to get good reconnaissance
footage. They are often operated by CIA or Pentagon officials at
computer consoles in the United States.
The drones were designed for surveillance and have been used for
that purpose since at least the mid-1990s, beginning with the conflict
in the Balkans. After the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush ordered a
rapid escalation of a project to arm the Predators with missiles, an
effort that had been mired in bureaucratic squabbles and technical
glitches.
Now the Predator is an integral part of the military's
counter-insurgency effort, especially in Iraq. But the CIA also runs a
more secretive — and more controversial — Predator program that targets
suspected terrorists outside combat zones.
The CIA does not even acknowledge that such a targeted-killing
program exists, and some attacks have been explained away as car
bombings or other incidents. It is not known how many militants or
bystanders have been killed by Predator strikes, but anecdotal evidence
suggests the number is significant.
In some cases, the destruction was so complete that it was impossible
to establish who was killed, or even how many people.
Among the senior Al Qaeda leaders killed in Predator strikes were
military commander Mohammed Atef in Afghanistan in November 2001 and
Qaed Sinan Harithi, a suspected mastermind of the bombing of the U.S.
destroyer Cole in Yemen, in 2002. Last year, Predators took out two Al
Qaeda leaders in Pakistan: Haitham Yemeni in May and Abu Hamza Rabia in
December, one month after another missile strike missed him.
The attack on Rabia in North Waziristan also killed his Syrian
bodyguards and the 17-year-old son and the 8-year-old nephew of the
owner of the house that was struck, according to a U.S. official and
Amnesty International, which has lodged complaints with the Bush
administration following each suspected Predator strike.
Another apparent Predator missile strike killed a former Taliban
commander, Nek Mohammed, in South Waziristan in June 2004, along with
five others. A local observer said the strike was so precise that it
didn't damage any of the buildings around the lawn where Mohammed was
seated. At the time, the Pakistani army said Mohammed had been killed
in clashes with its soldiers.
Michael Scheuer, the former chief of the CIA's special unit
hunting Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda, said he was aware of at least
four successful targeted-killing strikes in Afghanistan alone by
November 2004, when he left the agency.
In the attack on Zawahiri, word spread quickly that a U.S. plane
had been buzzing above the target beforehand. Afterward, villagers
reportedly found evidence of U.S. involvement.
The missiles intended for Bin Laden's chief deputy incinerated
several houses in Damadola, a village near Pakistan's northwestern
border with Afghanistan. But Zawahiri was not there, U.S. officials now
believe. Pakistan said it was investigating whether the strikes killed
other high-ranking militants.
There were some well-publicized failures before the Zawahiri
strike. In February 2002, a Predator tracked and killed a tall man in
flowing robes along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The CIA believed
it was firing at Bin Laden, but the victim turned out to be someone
else.
Before the Sept. 11 attacks, the U.S. government had targeted Bin
Laden in at least one Cruise missile strike. But the CIA was reluctant
to engage in targeted killings because it said the laws regarding
assassinations were too vague and the agency could face criminal
charges.
Even today, documents and interviews suggest that the U.S. policy on
targeted killings is still evolving.
Some critics, including a U.N. human rights watchdog group and
Amnesty International, have urged the Bush administration to be more
open about how it decides whom to kill and under what circumstances.
A U.N. report in the wake of the 2002 strike in Yemen called it
"an alarming precedent [and] a clear case of extrajudicial killing" in
violation of international laws and treaties. The Bush administration,
which did not return calls seeking comment for this story, has said it
does not recognize the mandate of the U.N. special body in connection
with its military actions against Al Qaeda, according to Amnesty
International.
"Zawahiri is an easy case. No one is going to question us going
after him," said Juliette N. Kayyem, a former U.S. government
counter-terrorism consultant and Justice Department lawyer. "But where
can you do it and who can you do it against? Who authorizes it? All of
these are totally unregulated areas of presidential authority."
"Paris, it's easy to say we won't do it there," said Kayyem, now a
Harvard University law professor specializing in terrorism-related
legal issues. "But what about Lebanon?"
Paul Pillar, a former CIA deputy counter-terrorism chief, said the
authority claimed by the Bush administration was murky.
"I don't think anyone is dealing with solid footing here. There is
legal as well as operational doctrine that is being developed as we go
along," Pillar said. "We are pretty much in uncharted territory here."
Pillar, who was also the CIA's National Intelligence Officer for
the Near East and South Asia before retiring in mid-2005, said there
had long been disagreement within the intelligence community over
whether targeted killings were legally permissible, or even a good idea.
Before Sept. 11, Pillar said, CIA officers were issued vaguely
worded guidelines that seemed to give them authority to kill Bin Laden,
but only during an attempt to capture him.
The 9/11 commission investigating the attacks in New York and
Washington concluded that such vaguely worded laws and policies gave
little reassurance to those who might be pulling the trigger that they
would not face disciplinary action — or even criminal charges.
Although presidents Ford and Reagan issued executive orders in
1976 and 1981 prohibiting U.S. intelligence agents from engaging in
assassinations, the Bush administration claimed the right to kill
suspected terrorists under war powers given to the president by
Congress after the Sept. 11 attacks.
It is the same justification Bush has used for a recently
disclosed domestic spying program that has the National Security Agency
eavesdropping on American citizens without warrants, and a CIA
"extraordinary rendition" program to seize suspected terrorists
overseas and transport them to other countries with reputations for
torture.
Strickland, like some other officials, said the Predator program
served as a deterrent to foreign governments, militias and other groups
that might be harboring Al Qaeda cells.
"You give shelter to Al Qaeda figures, you may well get your
village blown up," Strickland said. "Conversely, you have to note that
this can also create local animosity and instability."
The CIA's lawyers play a central role in deciding when a strike is
justified, current and former U.S. officials said. The lawyers analyze
the credibility of the evidence, how many bystanders might be killed,
and whether the target is enough of a threat to warrant the strike.
Other agencies, including the Justice Department, are sometimes
consulted, Strickland said. "The legal input is broad and extensive,"
he said.
Scheuer said he believed the process was too cumbersome, and that
the agency had lost precious opportunities to slay terrorists because
it was afraid of killing civilians.
But others said they had urged the Bush administration to adopt a
multi-agency system of checks and balances similar to that used by
Israel, which for decades has convened informal tribunals to assess
each proposed targeted killing before carrying it out.
Amos N. Guiora, a senior Israeli military judge advocate who
participated in such tribunals, said that although the failed Zawahiri
strike itself appeared to be justifiable, the result suggested a lack
of adequate deliberations on the quality of the intelligence.
"I think [the] attack was a major screw-up, because so many kids
died. It raises questions about the entire process," said Guiora, who
now a professor at Case Western Law School and director of its
Institute for Global Security Law and Policy.
"It shows the absolute need to have a well-thought-through and
developed process that examines the action from a legal perspective, an
intelligence perspective and an operational perspective. Because the
price you pay here is that you are going to have to be hesitant the
next time you pull the trigger."
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times