Pentagon gets funds for clandestine payoffs
Saturday, October 30, 2004 11:42 PM PDT
By Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON -- Moving into an area of clandestine activity that traditionally has been the domain of the CIA, the Pentagon has secured new authority that allows U.S. special operations forces to dole out millions of dollars in cash, equipment and weapons to international warlords and foreign fighters.
The U.S. Special Operations Command will have, the new policy states, as much as $25 million a year to spend providing "support to foreign forces, irregular forces, groups or individuals" aiding U.S. efforts against terrorists and other targets. Previously, military units were prohibited from providing money or arms to foreign groups.
Pentagon officials said the new capability is critical in the war on terrorism, enabling America's elite soldiers to buy off tribal leaders or arm local militias in pursuing al-Qaida operatives and confronting other threats.
But the idea of entrusting soldiers with a job traditionally reserved for spies has raised concerns that the program might lead to abuse. Even those who support it say they worry that it could be used to fund and arm unsavory foreign elements that later might use their U.S.-provided weapons and equipment against American interests.
"In the right circumstances, like Iraq and Afghanistan, this makes sense," said one congressional official who spoke on condition of anonymity. "In the wrong circumstances it could lead us into some pretty bad stuff."
Current and former intelligence officials noted that military units are not subject to the same requirements as the CIA, which typically must secure a presidential directive before providing aid or arms to foreign groups. They also expressed concern that the measure might be just a first step toward a more aggressive encroachment on CIA turf by the Secretary of Defense and the military.
"If this plugs holes to meet valid national security concerns or problems, that comes first," said Jim Pavitt, who retired in August as director of operations at the CIA. "If it's the first step in an effort to duplicate what already exists in the (CIA's) clandestine service, I don't think we as a nation need it and I don't think we can afford it."
The new authority is contained in a little-noticed provision in the Defense Department authorization bill that was signed by President Bush on Friday. The changes are designed to make special forces units less dependent on the CIA in securing the support of -- and supplying arms to -- individuals and militias, including those not controlled by foreign governments.
The Pentagon had been lobbying for the changes since the aftermath of the war in Afghanistan, where the military's extensive reliance on the CIA became a source of frustration to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and special operations commanders.
Senior military officials praised the changes, saying it would strengthen the U.S. Special Operations Command - known as SOCOM -- based at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida
"We think it's very significant," said one defense official involved in special operations policy. "This would improve SOCOM's ability to carry out one of its key missions: unconventional war."
The new authority is in keeping with Rumsfeld's decision nearly two years ago to give special operations forces the leading role in the military's counterterrorism mission.
The $25 million set aside for the program is a paltry amount for a Pentagon with an annual budget approaching $450 billion. But military officials said the activities envisioned for the special forces -- the elite military units that include Army Green Berets and Navy SEALs -- don't require large budgets.
"For the kind of stuff they want to do -- buy AK-47s, pick-up trucks, stuff like that -- this is a lot of money," said retired Army Gen. Wayne Downing, the former commander in chief of the U.S. Special Operations Command. "If they can slip someone $100,000 to buy information or buy support (from foreign individuals or groups), then that would be very useful."
Several military officials said such capability would have been particularly useful in Afghanistan, where the CIA passed out an estimated $70 million in cash, equipment and arms to the Northern Alliance and other allied groups -- but the special forces couldn't do the same. Although CIA officers often worked alongside U.S. commando teams, there were breakdowns when the intelligence agency wasn't immediately on hand.
Col. Kathryn Stone, who was the senior legal adviser to commanders of the 10th Mountain Division in Afghanistan during the early part of the war, described one case in which a local warlord was making demands the military couldn't meet.
The warlord, Gen. Abdurrashid Dostum, had captured thousands of prisoners at Mazar-i-Sharif, and was willing to let U.S. forces screen them. In exchange, he wanted the United States to pay for cold weather clothing and other gear for his soldiers, and for food for the prisoners.
When a special operations officer asked if the military could cut such a deal, "I had to tell this officer that we didn't have the fiscal authority to do that," Stone said. "I said, `You need to go find your other government agency and see if they can help you out here."' The term "other government agency," or OGA, commonly refers to CIA.
Stone said the new authorities for the special forces are "a great tool," but pointed to problems that have cropped up when the United States has armed foreign groups in the past. American forces in Afghanistan confronted Taliban and al-Qaida fighters who had been armed by the CIA during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, she said.
Stone warned that warlords undoubtedly will try to double-dip -- seeking payoffs from the CIA and U.S. special forces simultaneously. She also questioned who would serve as referee in situations when the CIA and special operations commanders disagree on whether a foreign fighter or irregular militia should get U.S. support.
Michael Vickers, a military analyst who formerly served as both a CIA operative and special forces officer, said the new authority will fix a serious flaw in U.S. capabilities. Previously, he said, the only way to get arms to foreign groups was through the CIA or a separate, "ridiculously cumbersome" program managed by the State Department.
"If you send me in to do guerrilla warfare and you have no mechanism to give the guerrillas weapons, you've got a (flawed) system," Vickers said.
But the history of misdeeds by the CIA, including botched attempts to assassinate foreign leaders dating back 40 years, have fueled concerns.
"The danger is when you're doing this stuff in peacetime -- as the CIA does -- and you get out ahead of your political masters either in the executive branch or, more importantly, in Congress," Vickers said.
A former overseas CIA officer added a further caution. "If there is a disaster, a dust-up, a whole bunch of people do something really stupid, this will come and bite somebody," he said.
Anticipating some of these concerns, Congress included language in the bill warning that it "does not constitute authority to conduct a covert action," meaning the Pentagon can't use the money for CIA-style operations in which the U.S. seeks to deny involvement.
Lawmakers also built in certain safeguards: The authority will expire in September 2007 unless Congress votes to extend it; the Pentagon's request for $50 million a year was cut in half; and the secretary of Defense is required to notify Congress within 48 hours whenever the authority is used.
(Optional add end)
In the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks, Rumsfeld and CIA leaders frequently have lauded the level of cooperation between the military and the agency. But there also has been friction between the two sides, and considerable jostling over resources and assignments.
The Pentagon, for example, set up its own intelligence analysis unit when military policymakers became frustrated with CIA assessments that they considered too cautious on Baghdad's ties to al-Qaida and other terrorist groups. Many of the Pentagon unit's claims have been disputed or discredited.
More recently, the commission that investigated the Sept. 11 attacks recommended that responsibility for covert paramilitary operations should be taken away from the CIA and given to the Defense Department. CIA officials vehemently have opposed the idea, arguing that the CIA's Special Activities Division is more nimble than the military's special forces and is designed for covert missions in which the United States never wants to acknowledge any role.
Under Rumsfeld, the Pentagon has coveted the CIA's unique spying capabilities, with some officials saying that Rumsfeld would like to create his own cadre of overseas spies. A former U.S. intelligence official who asked not to be identified said he has seen such ideas outlined in slides during military briefings in recent years. But when CIA called attention to the slide, Pentagon briefers would minimize it, quickly moving on to the next image.
Rumsfeld's office recently drafted a directive -- a copy of which was obtained by the Los Angeles Times -- that urged expanding the military's role in intelligence gathering. The directive called for a "transformation of Defense human intelligence capabilities to provide sustained coverage and deep penetration" in nations where the United States might conduct future military operations.
Another stated Pentagon goal was to "reduce the reliance" on the CIA's practice of rapidly deploying case officers to war zones such as Afghanistan by developing a similar capability within the military.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.






Printable version
E-mail this article

Past Month's Most Commented Stories