Is this the kind of leadership you
want and will vote for?
Make up your own mind. I assume we
the people are still in charge, in the end.
Obama Kept Looser Rules for
Drones in Pakistan
Waived requirement to show
proposed targets pose imminent threat to the U.S.
By Adam Entous in the Wall Street Journal
President Barack Obama tightened
rules for the U.S. drone program in 2013, but he secretly approved a waiver
giving the Central Intelligence Agency more flexibility in Pakistan than
anywhere else to strike suspected militants, according to current and former
U.S. officials.
The rules were designed to reduce
the risk of civilian casualties. Mr. Obama also required that proposed targets
pose an imminent threat to the U.S.—but the waiver exempted the CIA from this
standard in Pakistan.
Last week, the U.S. officials
disclosed that two Western hostages, U.S. and Italian aid workers Warren
Weinstein and Giovanni Lo Porto, were killed on Jan. 15 by a U.S. drone
strike aimed at al Qaeda militants in Pakistan. If the exemption had
not been in place for Pakistan, the CIA might have been required to gather more
intelligence before that strike.
And though support for the drone
program remains strong across the U.S. government, the killings have renewed a
debate within the administration over whether the CIA should now be reined in
or meet the tighter standards that apply to drone programs outside of Pakistan.
Last week, Mr. Obama apologized for
the killings and took personal responsibility
for the mistake. He called the operation “fully consistent with the guidelines
under which we conduct counterterrorism efforts in the region” without
specifying what those guidelines are or how they differed from those applied in
the rest of the world.
He also announced a review to ensure
that such mistakes aren’t repeated. Current and former officials say many of
the changes he called for in 2013 haven’t been implemented or remain works in
progress.
Details about the CIA’s drone
program have been shrouded in official secrecy from its inception because it is
covert. Seeking to maintain an effective national-security weapon in the face
of opposition from within his own party, Mr. Obama in a 2013 speech at the
National Defense University spelled out some rules governing drone strikes,
which he codified in a “presidential policy guidance” directive.
Among them were that the threat
needed to be imminent and that the U.S. had to have “near-certainty” no
civilians would be killed or injured. Officials said the directive also
included language aimed at curbing and eventually eliminating a particular type
of drone strike in which the U.S. believes an individual is a militant, but
doesn’t know his identity.
These so-called “signature” strikes
have been responsible for killing more al Qaeda leadership targets than strikes
directly targeting high-value leaders, especially in Pakistan, where the
group’s leadership can be difficult to find, current and former U.S. officials
said.
The Jan. 15 strike that killed
Messrs. Weinstein and Lo Porto was a signature strike.
Under a classified addendum to the
directive approved by Mr. Obama, however, the CIA’s drone program in Pakistan
was exempted from the “imminent threat” requirement, at least until U.S. forces
completed their pullout from Afghanistan.
The exemption in the case of
Pakistan means that the CIA can do signature strikes and more targeted drone
attacks on militant leaders who have been identified without collecting
specific evidence that the target poses an imminent threat to the U.S. Being
part of the al Qaeda core in Pakistan is justification enough in the Obama
administration’s eyes.
The CIA still has to meet the
near-certainty requirement to avoid civilian casualties in Pakistan, as it does
everywhere else it operates.
A CIA spokesman declined to comment.
The waiver gave the CIA more flexibility
in Pakistan than anywhere else, including Yemen where both the CIA and the U.S.
military conduct drone strikes, and Somalia, where the military has its own
targeted killing campaign.
When the U.S. troop presence in
Afghanistan was extended, so too was the “imminent threat” waiver, officials
said. The administration had initially thought the waiver would expire at the
end of 2014 with the withdrawal of most U.S. forces, but Mr. Obama decided to
keep U.S. troops in Afghanistan for longer.
Building a case that a militant
poses an “imminent threat” in Pakistan could have required the CIA to undertake
additional surveillance before launching a strike, officials said. That could
have affected the Jan. 15 operation, these officials said, though it is unclear
whether it would have reduced the chances of the hostages being killed.
Critics within the administration
say the CIA has done little to curb the use of signature strikes, although they
acknowledge that, despite the January killings, they have become less common
and have otherwise resulted in few civilian casualties in recent years.
“Signatures have been exploited in a
way that was not intended,” a senior U.S. official said. “This is where the
policy discussions have to go over the next few months.”
Defenders of the program say the CIA
was following guidelines provided by the White House and described the strikes
as highly effective. They also say the CIA abided by the requirement concerning
civilian casualties even before Mr. Obama issued his directive.
In the weeks before the Jan. 15
strike that killed Messrs. Weinstein and Lo Porto, CIA drones hovering overhead
observed a total of five militants. Drone operators zeroed in on one particular
militant whom the CIA concluded was an al Qaeda leader whose identity wasn’t
known, according to U.S. officials briefed on the operation.
Just before the Jan. 15 strike, the
CIA saw one of the lower-ranking militants leaving. Three were visible just
outside the compound while the al Qaeda leader remained hidden from view
inside.
To track the al Qaeda leader’s
movements, and to make sure nobody else was hiding inside the compound, the CIA
used the drone’s heat sensors, which can detect the unique heat signature of a
human body. These sensors and others are typically used to meet the
“near-certainty” standard.
The only heat signature inside the
compound detected before the Jan. 15 strike was of the al Qaeda leader, the
officials said.
After the compound was destroyed,
drones overhead watched as six bodies were pulled from the rubble. The heat
sensors and other intelligence had showed only four. They didn’t see any
evidence at the time to suggest who the two additional bodies were, but didn’t
think they were Westerners based on how the bodies were treated after the
strike.
In early February, the U.S.
intercepted communications by militants saying two Western hostages had been
killed. CIA officials brushed aside suggestions the deaths came from a drone
strike, pointing instead to the possibility that a Pakistan military operation
might have been the responsible.
Analysts now believe the hostages
were kept underground, either in a basement or an escape tunnel, which is why
the heat sensors didn’t detect them before the strike, U.S. officials said.
The FBI informed the Weinstein
family in February that he might be dead but said the U.S. was still
investigating, a process which stretched into early April.
Once U.S. intelligence agencies
concluded the drone strike killed the hostages, officials across the government
agreed on the need to disclose the mistake. The question was whether to
acknowledge the CIA’s role.
Officials at the CIA, the State
Department, the Pentagon and the Justice Department argued against making such
a disclosure, warning that doing so could make it difficult if not impossible
for the CIA to continue the strikes. Diplomats warned it could reopen a rift
with Pakistan, where the government publicly opposes the strikes but security
services privately abet them.
On the other side was Deputy White
House National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes and U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations, Samantha Power, who argued for disclosing the CIA’s direct role. In
meetings at the White House, they argued that Mr. Obama had promised more
transparency two years ago and that it was critical to live up to that pledge.
They received support from the
director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, much to the surprise of his
counterparts at the CIA and the Pentagon, according to officials involved in
the discussions.
In what turned out to be a key
opinion, the Attorney General’s office warned Mr. Obama that publicly
disclosing the CIA’s role in this case would undermine the administration’s
standing in a series of pending lawsuits challenging its legality.
Mr. Obama decided to brief the
families of the dead in full but to disclose publicly only that Messrs.
Weinstein and Lo Porto were killed in a “counterterrorism operation” which took
place somewhere along the Afghan-Pakistan border.
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