Jeremy Scahill Testifies Before Congress
on America's Secret Wars
by Jeremy Scahill
My name is Jeremy Scahill. I am the National Security correspondent for
The Nation
magazine. I recently returned from a two-week unembedded reporting trip
to Afghanistan. I would like to thank the Chairman and the Committee
for inviting me to participate in this important hearing. As we sit here
today in Washington, across the globe the United States is engaged in
multiple wars. Some, like those in Afghanistan and Iraq, are well known
to the US public and to the Congress.
They are covered in the media and are subject to Congressional
review. Despite the perception that we know what is happening in
Afghanistan, what is rarely discussed in any depth in Congress or the
media is the vast number of innocent Afghan civilians that are being
killed on a regular basis in US night raids and the heavy bombing that
has been reinstated by General David Petraeus. I saw the impact of these
civilian deaths first-hand and I can say that in some cases our own
actions are helping to increase the strength and expand the size of the
Taliban and the broader insurgency in Afghanistan.
As the war rages on in Afghanistan and--despite spin to the
contrary--in Iraq as well, US Special Operations Forces and the Central
Intelligence Agency are engaged in parallel, covert, shadow wars that
are waged in near total darkness and largely away from effective or
meaningful Congressional oversight or journalistic scrutiny. The actions
and consequences of these wars is seldom discussed in public or
investigated by the Congress.
The current US strategy can be summed up as follows: We are trying to
kill our way to peace. And the killing fields are growing in number.
Among the sober question that must be addressed by the Congress: What
impact are these clandestine operations having on US national security?
Are they making us more safe or less? When US forces kill innocent
civilians in "counterterrorism" operations, are we inspiring a new
generation of insurgents to rise against our country? And, what is the
oversight role of the US Congress in the shadow wars that have spanned
the Bush and Obama Administrations?
The most visible among these shadow wars is in Pakistan where the
United States regularly bombs the country using weaponized drones. As we
now know from diplomatic cables made public by Wikileaks, Pakistan's
Prime Minister told a senior US official in Islamabad, "I don't care if
[the US bombs Pakistan] as long as they get the right people. We'll
protest in the National Assembly and then ignore it."
At the same time, US Special Operations Forces are engaged in covert,
offensive actions in Pakistan, including hunting down so-called high
value targets, doing reconnaissance for drone strikes and conducting
raids with Pakistani forces in north and south Waziristan. These raids
are carried out in secret and denied by Pentagon spokespeople in public.
Leaked US diplomatic cables have now confirmed that the sustained
denials by US officials for more than a year are false. According to an
October 9, 2009 cable classified by Anne Patterson, then the US
ambassador to Pakistan, offensive operations have been conducted by US
Special Operations Forces and coordinated with the US Office of the
Defense Representative in Pakistan. A US Special Operations source told
me that the US forces described in the cable as "SOC(FWD)-PAK" were
"forward operating troops" from the Joint Special Operations Command
(JSOC), the most elite force within the US military made up of Navy
SEALs, Delta Force and Army Rangers. This despite senior Pentagon and
State Department officials, including by Ambassador Richard Holbrooke
and Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell, publicly claiming there are no US
troops in Pakistan or that the only role of US troops is to train the
Pakistani military. Those statements are demonstrably false.
In the fall of 2008, the US Special Operations Command asked top US
diplomats in Pakistan and Afghanistan for detailed information on
refugee camps along the Afghanistan Pakistan border and a list of
humanitarian aid organizations working in those camps. On October 6,
Ambassador Patterson, sent a cable marked "Confidential" to senior US
defense and intelligence officials saying that some of the requests,
which came in the form of emails, "suggested that agencies intend to use
the data for targeting purposes." Other requests, according to the
cable, "indicate it would be used for “NO STRIKE” purposes." The cable,
which was issued jointly by the US embassies in Kabul and Islamabad,
declared: "We are concerned about providing information gained from
humanitarian organizations to military personnel, especially for reasons
that remain unclear. Particularly worrisome, this does not seem to us a
very efficient way to gather accurate information." What this cable
says in plain terms is that at least one person within the US Special
Operations Command actually asked US diplomats in Kabul and/or Islamabad
point-blank for information on refugee camps to be used in a targeted
killing or capture operation.
What is clear is that US officials have consistently misled the
American and Pakistani people on the extent of US military operations
inside Pakistan. The reality is that US soldiers are fighting and dying
in Pakistan despite the absence of a declaration of war. It is
imperative that Congress investigates this shadow war to examine its
legality, but also its impact on Pakistan's stability and US national
security. If Congress is kept in the dark about these operations, how
can it expect to effectively and honestly debate US policy in Pakistan?
One of the most off-the-radar wars the US is currently waging is in
the areas around the Horn of Africa and the Gulf of Aden, where US
forces are increasingly militarily engaging forces from Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). While the stated US position is that the US
military role in this region is limited to training and weapons support,
we now know that on multiple occasions the US has launched cruise
missiles carrying cluster bombs at villages in Yemen, killing scores of
people. According to the Yemeni parliament, women and children have been
among those killed by American bombs. One of these strikes was
reportedly aimed at killing a US citizen, Anwar al Awlaki, who has been
placed on a targeted assassination list by the CIA and the Joint Special
Operations Command. Special Operations sources have told me that elite
forces from the US Joint Special Operations Command have also engaged in
unilateral direct actions--lethal operations--inside Yemen. As in the
case of US drone strikes in Pakistan, the Yemeni authorities are
colluding with American officials to mask the level of US involvement.
We now know that on September 6, 2009, President Obama's Deputy
National Security Advisor, John Brennan, met with Yemen's president, Ali
Abdullah Saleh, to discuss the rising influence of Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). According to one cable, "President Saleh
pledged unfettered access to Yemen's national territory for U.S.
counterterrorism operations… Saleh insisted that Yemen's national
territory is available for unilateral [counterterrorism] operations by
the U.S." As with the presence of US forces in Pakistan, publicly, the
Obama administration insists that its role in Yemen is limited to
training and equipping the country's military forces. In secret,
however, US Special Operations Forces have been conducting offensive
operations in Yemen, including airstrikes, and conspiring with Yemen's
president and other leaders to cover-up the US role.
On December 17, 2009, an alleged al-Qaeda training camp in Abyan,
Yemen was hit by a cruise missile killing 41 people. According to an
investigation by the Yemeni parliament, 14 women and 21 children were
among the dead, along with 14 alleged al-Qaeda fighters. A week later
another airstrike hit a separate village in Yemen.
Amnesty International released photographs from one of the strikes
revealing remnants of US cluster munitions and the Tomahawk cruise
missiles used to deliver them. At the time, the Pentagon refused to
comment, directing all inquiries to Yemen's government, which released a
statement on December 24 taking credit for both airstrikes, saying in a
press release, "Yemeni fighter jets launched an aerial assault" and
"carried out simultaneous raids killing and detaining militants."
US diplomatic cables now reveal that both strikes were conducted by
the US military. In a meeting with General Petraeus in early January
2010 President Saleh reportedly told Petraeus: "We'll continue saying
the bombs are ours, not yours." Yemen's Deputy Prime Minister Alimi then
boasted that he had just "lied" by telling the Yemeni Parliament "that
the bombs… were American-made but deployed by" Yemen. In that meeting,
Petraeus and Saleh also discussed the US using "aircraft-deployed
precision-guided bombs" with Saleh saying his government would continue
to publicly take responsibility for US military attacks. It is clear
that we have only seen the beginning of the shadow US war in Yemen and
Congress must demand accountability and examine the full extent of the
lethal actions currently underway in Yemen.
US forces have also struck multiple times in Somalia and have used
the Ethiopian Army as a proxy force to cover the role of US Special
Operations troops in a shadow war against al Shabaab and other militant
groups. In the years leading up to the December 2006 Ethiopian invasion
of Somalia, the Pentagon trained Ethiopian forces—including the
notorious Agazi special forces unit. The US role continued well into the
Ethiopian offensive. A series of at least six US Special Operation
incursions into Somalia followed the invasion, beginning with two AC-130
attacks in southern Somalia in early 2007 and another attack from a US
warship in mid-2007. In the spring of 2008, five Tomahawk cruise
missiles were fired from an unidentified US naval vessel at a target in
southern Somalia, followed by a second strike in central Somalia that
killed alleged al Qaeda commander Aden Hashi Ayro. The most recent
operation we know of occurred under President Obama's command in
September 2009, when at least two US helicopters—reported to have been
AH-6 Little Bird attack helicopters—tracked and killed an alleged senior
al-Qaeda leader in the al Shabaab-controlled southern region. A
diplomatic cable released by Wikileaks reveals that a foreign official
praised the US for the Somalia operation, saying "The Somalia job was
fantastic." But the reality is that the invasion of Somalia was a
disaster and actually increased support for Islamic radical movements.
These ongoing shadow wars confirm an open secret that few in Congress
are willing to discuss publicly--particularly Democrats: When it comes
to US counterterrorism policy, there has been almost no substantive
change from the Bush to the Obama administration. In fact, my sources
within the CIA and the Special Operations community tell me that if
there is any change it is that President Obama is hitting harder and in
more countries that President Bush. The Obama administration is
expanding covert actions of the military and the number of countries
where US Special Forces are operating. The administration has taken the
Bush era doctrine that the "world is a battlefield" and run with it and
widened its scope. Under the Bush administration, US Special Forces were
operating in 60 countries. Under President Obama, they are now in 75
nations.
The Obama administration's expansion of Special Forces activities
globally stems from a classified order dating back to the Bush
administration. Originally signed in early 2004 by then-Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld, it is known as the “AQN ExOrd," or Al Qaeda
Network Execute Order. The AQN ExOrd was intended to cut through
bureaucratic and legal processes, allowing US Special Forces to move
into “denied” areas or countries beyond the official battle zones of
Iraq and Afghanistan.
As a Special Operations veteran told me, "The ExOrd spells out that
we reserve the right to unilaterally act against al Qaeda and its
affiliates anywhere in the world that they operate." The current mindset
in the White House, he told me, is that "the Pentagon is already
empowered to do these things, so let the Joint Special Operations
Command off the leash. And that's what this White House has done." He
added: "JSOC has been more empowered more under this administration than
any other in recent history. No question." "The Obama administration
took the [Bush-era] order and went above and beyond," he said. "The
world is the battlefield, we've returned to that."
While some of the Special Forces missions are centered around
training of militaries in allied nations, that line is often blurred. In
some cases, "training" is used as a cover for unilateral, direct
action. As a former special ops guy told me: "It's often done under the
auspices of training so that they can go anywhere. It's brilliant. It is
essentially what we did in the 60s. Remember the 'training mission' in
Vietnam? That's how it morphs."
As I just returned from Afghanistan, I would like to share with this
committee part of my investigation into deadly US night raids in
Afghanistan where innocent civilians were killed. These operations,
carried out by the same Special Ops teams that operate in Yemen,
Pakistan and Somalia, are part of what is effectively a shadow war
within the more publicly visible war in Afghanistan. In one incident in
February of this year, US Special Operations Forces raided a civilian
compound in the Gardez District of Paktia province. They killed two
pregnant women, a teenage girl and two men. US forces tried to cover up
their responsibility for the killings and blamed the Taliban and said
the women were killed in an honor killing. That was a blatant lie and
eventually the US was forced to take responsibility, admitting the raid
was conducted by operators from the Joint Special Operations Command.
I went to visit with that family in their home. They were
pro-American and anti-Taliban before this raid. In fact, the night US
forces stormed their compound, they thought it was a Taliban attack. The
two men who were killed were actively working with US forces. One of
them was a top police commander trained by the US, the other was a local
prosecutor in the Karzai government. One man, who saw his pregnant wife
gunned down by US forces, was hooded and handcuffed and taken prisoner
for days by American forces. When he was released, he told me, he wanted
to become a suicide bomber and blow himself up among Americans. The
same was true of a similar raid on the Kashkaki family in Nangarhar
province in May 2010 where eight civilians were gunned down by US
forces. Local police officials told me the family had no connection to
the Taliban. That family is left asking why they should support the US
presence in their country after watching their loved ones shot dead
before their eyes by a military that claims to be there to liberate them
and free their country. The perception I heard expressed widely in
Afghanistan was that the US is killing with impunity and strengthening
the Taliban in the process.
Former senior State Department official in Afghanistan, Matthew Hoh,
recently told me that the night raids are "a really risky, really
violent operation," saying that when Special Operations Forces conduct
them, "We might get that one guy we’re looking for or we might kill a
bunch of innocent people and now make ten more Taliban out of them." I
told both of the families targeted in the raids I described that I would
bring their cases before the US Congress and ask that they be
investigated and that those responsible be held accountable for these
extrajudicial killings. On behalf of those families, I humbly ask this
committee to consider this request.
In closing, the stated focus of this hearing is US national security
policy and civil liberties. I believe strongly that the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan have a direct impact on what happens here in the United
States. The same is true for the covert, shadow wars from Pakistan to
Somalia to Yemen and beyond. These wars help to shape our domestic
policies as well as world opinion about our nation. It is essential for
journalists and this Congress to fulfill their oversight functions and
to shed light on actions--as unsavory or as difficult as they might be
at times--so that US policy moving forward can truly be based on what is
best for the people of this nation as well as the populations of the
nations where the US is waging wars, whether declared or undeclared. I
thank this body for the opportunity to testify today. I ask that my
full, prepared remarks be entered into the official record. I am
prepared to answer any questions you may have.