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The Bush administration says it wants to end extremism by addressing
underlying conditions, but the money goes to military might.
Story from the Los Angeles Times by Josh Meyer, Times Staff Writer, March 18, 2007
WASHINGTON — President Bush, members of Congress and virtually all
counter-terrorism experts have acknowledged that defeating terrorists
cannot be accomplished solely by dropping bombs on them. Ultimately,
they say, ending terrorism will come only by addressing its underlying
causes.
"Our long-term strategy to keep the peace is to help change the
conditions that give rise to extremism and terror by spreading the
universal principle of human liberty," Bush said in March 2005.
But a close look at the United States' counter-terrorism priorities shows a strategy going in a different direction.
In recent years, the Pentagon has received a larger share of the
counter-terrorism budget, whereas "indirect action" programs to win the
campaign through diplomacy and other nonmilitary means have struggled
for funding and attention, according to a review of budget documents
and interviews with dozens of current and former U.S. officials.
Nonmilitary counter-terrorism programs have budgets that are measured
in millions instead of billions, and in many cases are seeing their
funding remain flat or drop.
Even within the Pentagon, many "soft power" programs, which don't
include direct military action, appear to be getting squeezed out as
more money goes to support combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan
and special forces missions elsewhere.
Some top counter-terrorism officials, seeing their noncombat programs
languishing, are leaving the government, including a top Pentagon
official.
Three at the State Department who ran the highly regarded Regional Strategic Initiative are also leaving.
And increasingly, even civilian anti-terrorism operations are being run by current or former military members.
The shift has troubled many terrorism experts.
The U.S. approach to counter-terrorism is that "enemies simply need to
be killed or imprisoned so that global terrorism or the Iraqi
insurgency will end," Bruce Hoffman, a senior fellow at the Combating
Terrorism Center at the U.S. Military Academy, told a House Armed
Services subcommittee last month.
"This is a monumental failing," Hoffman said, "not only because
decapitation strategies have rarely worked in countering mass
mobilization, terrorist or insurgent campaigns, but also because Al
Qaeda's ability to continue this struggle is … predicated on its
capacity to attract new recruits" by publicizing U.S. military actions.
For their part, senior Pentagon officials say their campaign to kill or
capture terrorists in Iraq, Afghanistan and smaller hot spots such as
Somalia is a necessary step in stabilizing those countries before
nonmilitary efforts can even be attempted.
The Pentagon is also moving to transform the military into one focused
not only on fighting wars but on combating terrorism by eliminating the
conditions that cause it, said Ryan Henry, principal deputy
undersecretary of Defense for policy, in an interview.
As evidence of their noncombat efforts, Pentagon officials cite the
Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Central
Command's Combined Joint Task Force in the Horn of Africa, which is not
only trying to kill or capture terrorists, but also is working to
promote regional stability and offer humanitarian assistance, including
building schools and medical clinics.
The overall cost of the U.S. war on terrorism has ballooned to at least $502 billion since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, with the administration now requesting that Congress fund another $93 billion this year for the Pentagon's counter-terrorism programs alone, and $142 billion for 2008.
Conditions are much different at the State Department, which is charged
with coordinating the U.S. government's international role in the war
on terrorism. Its task includes overseeing aid to foreign governments
and making sure the overall campaign balances military power,
diplomacy, economic development, law enforcement and intelligence
gathering.
The State Department requested $157.5 million for its major
counter-terrorism programs this year but received $20 million less than
that from Congress. That meant cuts in training and equipping allied
counter-terrorism forces and in improving international terrorism
interdiction efforts, according to budget documents and a State
Department official. The department asked for $150 million for next
year, said the official, one of several who spoke on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss classified
counter-terrorism efforts.
The funding squeeze has meant that the State Department's Regional
Strategic Initiative, a key counter-terrorism program, nearly ceased
operations last year for lack of funding just as it was getting off the
ground.
Its annual budget is about $1 million — roughly what the Pentagon spends on counterterrorism in Iraq every five minutes.
"The fact that they can only get $1 million is criminal. It is
unconscionable," said Robert Richer, who retired as associate deputy
CIA director for operations in 2005.
"Most of the war on terrorism should have nothing to do with guys with
guns. But we have walked away from the hearts-and-minds campaign."
The increasing militarization of the U.S. counter-terrorism campaign is
not just a matter of funding; it also involves personnel decisions.
Over the last several years, the Bush administration has appointed a
current or former military commander to virtually every senior post in
the U.S. counter-terrorism campaign.
Air Force Gen. Michael V. Hayden now heads the CIA; retired Navy Vice
Adm. John Scott Redd is in charge of the National Counterterrorism
Center; and the White House just appointed retired Navy Vice Adm. J.
Michael McConnell as director of national intelligence. Last month, the
administration tapped Dell L. Dailey, an Army lieutenant general and
director of the Center for Special Operations at MacDill Air Force
Base, as the State Department's ambassador-at-large for
counter-terrorism.
"When everyone out there representing us is a general or a retired
general, we have a problem," said Richer, now the chief executive of a
company called Total Intelligence Solutions. "The United States used to
be an iron fist with a velvet glove over it. Now it is viewed by many
abroad as just an iron fist."
Mario Mancuso, the outgoing deputy assistant Defense secretary for
special operations and combating terrorism, told reporters late last
year that the military was still transforming. But he said the Pentagon
was getting large infusions of funding to do so, in part because the
State Department and other civilian agencies didn't have the resources
or staff to meet the task, especially in conflict zones.
"We're not purposely trying to put a military face on it," Mancuso
said, according to a transcript of the briefing. "The balance would be
otherwise if there were more deployable capability in other departments
and agencies."
Last fall, the Pentagon announced it would create a special Global War
on Terrorism Task Force of experts to come up with alternatives to
military solutions in the coming years and decades. But according to
Henry, the deputy Defense undersecretary, that task force is on hold
and the Pentagon is reassessing whether it needs it.
Several Pentagon officials involved in "soft power" approaches have
left or are soon departing out of frustration, including Thomas W.
O'Connell, assistant Defense secretary for special
operations/low-intensity conflict.
Mancuso, who did not return calls seeking comment, is also leaving the
Pentagon. His position has been redefined and no longer involves
combating terrorism.
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