'Top Secret America’: A look at the military’s Joint Special
Operations Command
By Dana Priest and William M. Arkin, Washington Post Published:
September 2, 2011
The CIA’s armed drones and paramilitary forces have killed dozens of
al-Qaeda leaders and thousands of its foot soldiers. But there is
another mysterious organization that has killed even more of America’s enemies in the decade
since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
CIA operatives have imprisoned and interrogated nearly 100 suspected
terrorists in their former secret prisons around the world, but troops
from this other secret organization have imprisoned and interrogated 10
times as many, holding them in jails that it alone controls in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Since 9/11, this secretive group of men (and a few women) has grown
tenfold while sustaining a level of obscurity that not even the CIA has
managed. “We’re the dark matter. We’re the force that orders the
universe but can’t be seen,” a strapping Navy SEAL, speaking on the
condition of anonymity, said in describing his unit.
The SEALs are just part of the U.S.
military’s Joint Special Operations Command, known by the acronym JSOC,
which has grown from a rarely used hostage rescue team into America’s secret
army. When members of this elite force killed Osama bin Laden in
Pakistan in May, JSOC leaders celebrated not just the success of the
mission but also how few people knew their command, based in
Fayetteville, N.C., even existed.
This article, adapted from a chapter of the newly released “Top Secret
America: The Rise of the New American Security State,” by Washington
Post reporters Dana Priest and William M. Arkin, chronicles JSOC’s
spectacular rise, much of which has not been publicly disclosed before.
Two presidents and three secretaries of defense routinely have asked
JSOC to mount intelligence-gathering missions and lethal raids, mostly
in Iraq
and Afghanistan, but
also in countries with which the United
States
was not at war, including Yemen,
Pakistan, Somalia, the
Philippines,
Nigeria and Syria.
“The CIA doesn’t have the size or the authority to do some of the things
we can do,” said one JSOC operator.
The president has given JSOC the rare authority to select individuals
for its kill list — and then to kill, rather than capture, them. Critics
charge that this individual man-hunting mission amounts to
assassination, a practice prohibited by
U.S.
law. JSOC’s list is not usually coordinated with the CIA, which
maintains a similar but shorter roster of names.
Created in 1980 but reinvented in recent years, JSOC has grown from
1,800 troops prior to 9/11 to as many as 25,000, a number that
fluctuates according to its mission. It has its own intelligence
division, its own drones and reconnaissance planes, even its own
dedicated satellites. It also has its own cyberwarriors, who, on Sept.
11, 2008, shut down every jihadist Web site they knew.
Obscurity has been one of the unit’s hallmarks. When JSOC officers are
working in civilian government agencies or U.S. embassies abroad, which they do
often, they dispense with uniforms, unlike their other military
comrades. In combat, they wear no name or rank identifiers. They have
hidden behind various nicknames: the Secret Army of Northern Virginia,
Task Force Green, Task Force 11, Task Force 121. JSOC leaders almost
never speak in public. They have no unclassified Web site.
Despite the secrecy, JSOC is not permitted to carry out covert action as
the CIA can. Covert action, in which the U.S. role is to be kept hidden,
requires a presidential finding and congressional notification. Many
national security officials, however, say JSOC’s operations are so
similar to the CIA’s that they amount to covert action. The unit takes
its orders directly from the president or the secretary of defense and
is managed and overseen by a military-only chain of command.
Under President George W. Bush, JSOC’s operations were rarely briefed to
Congress in advance — and usually not afterward — because government
lawyers considered them to be “traditional military activities” not
requiring such notification. President Obama has taken the same legal
view, but he has insisted that JSOC’s sensitive missions be briefed to
select congressional leaders.
Lethal force
JSOC’s first overseas mission in 1980, Operation Eagle Claw, was an
attempted rescue of diplomats held hostage by Iranian students at the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran. It ended in a helicopter collision in the desert
and the death of eight team members. The unit’s extreme secrecy also
made conventional military commanders distrustful and, as a consequence,
it was rarely used during conflicts.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, smarting from the CIA’s ability to
move first into
Afghanistan
and frustrated by the Army’s slowness, pumped new life into the
organization. JSOC’s core includes the Army’s Delta Force, the Navy’s
SEAL Team 6, the Air Force’s 24th Special Tactics Squadron, and the
Army’s 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment and 75th Ranger
Regiment.
The lethality of JSOC was demonstrated in the December 2001 mountain
battle at Tora Bora. Although bin Laden and many of his followers
eventually escaped across the border into Pakistan, an Army history said
that on the nights of Dec. 13 and 14, JSOC killed so many enemy forces
that “dead bodies of al-Qaeda fighters were carted off the field the
next day” by the truckload.
It also made mistakes. On July 1, 2002, in what the Rand Corp. labeled
“the single most serious errant attack of the entire war,” a JSOC
reconnaissance team hunting Taliban came under attack and an AC-130
gunship fired upon six sites in the
village
of Kakarak. The
estimates of civilian deaths ranged from 48 to hundreds. The “wedding
party incident,” as it became known because a wedding party was among
the targets accidentally hit, convinced many Afghans that
U.S.
forces disregarded the lives of civilians.
Nevertheless, on Sept. 16, 2003, Rumsfeld signed an executive order
cementing JSOC as the center of the counterterrorism universe. It listed
15 countries and the activities permitted under various scenarios, and
it gave the preapprovals required to carry them out.
In Iraq and Afghanistan,
lethal action against al-Qaeda was granted without additional approval.
In the other countries — among them Algeria, Iran, Malaysia, Mali,
Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, Somalia and Syria — JSOC forces
needed the tacit approval from the country involved or at least a
sign-off from higher up on the American chain of command. In the
Philippines, for example, JSOC could
undertake psychological operations to confuse or trap al-Qaeda
operatives, but it needed approval from the White House for lethal
action. To attack targets in Somalia
required approval from at least the secretary of defense, while attacks
in Pakistan and Syria needed presidential sign-off.
In the fall of 2003, JSOC got a new commander who would turn the
organization into arguably the most effective weapon in the U.S. counterterrorism arsenal. From
his perch as vice director of operations on the Joint Staff, Brig. Gen.
Stanley A. McChrystal had come to believe there was an aversion to
decision making at the top of government. No one wanted to be wrong, so
they asked more questions or added more layers to the process. The new
emphasis on interagency cooperation also meant meetings were bigger and
longer. Any one of a multitude of agencies could stifle action until it
was too late.
McChrystal believed he had “to slip out of the grip” of Washington’s suffocating bureaucracy, he told
associates. He moved his headquarters to Balad Air Base, 45 miles
northeast of Baghdad, and worked inside
an old concrete airplane hangar with three connecting command centers:
one to fight al-Qaeda’s affiliate in
Iraq, one for the fight against Shiite
extremists in the country and a third for himself, so he could oversee
all operations.
He coaxed the other intelligence agencies to help him out — the CIA
presence grew to 100, the FBI and National Security Agency to a combined
80. He won their loyalty by exposing the guts of his operation to
everyone involved. “The more people you shared your problem with, the
better you’d do in solving it,” he would say.
McChrystal installed a simple, PC-based common desktop and portal where
troops could post documents, conduct chats, tap into the intelligence
available on any target — pictures, biometrics, transcripts,
intelligence reports — and follow the message traffic of commanders in
the midst of operations.
Then he gave access to it to JSOC’s bureaucratic rivals: the CIA, NSA,
FBI and others. He also began salting every national security agency in Washington with his top
commandos. In all, he deployed 75 officers to Washington agencies and 100 more around the
world. They rotated every four months so none would become disconnected
from combat.
Some thought of the liaisons as spies for an organization that was
already too important. But those suspicions did little to derail JSOC or
McChrystal.
Stories spread that he ate just one meal and ran 10 miles every day. He
looked the part, with his taut face, intense eyes and thin physique. A
sign inside the wire at Balad said it all: “17 5 2.” Seventeen hours for
work, five hours for sleep, two hours for eating and exercise.
McChrystal’s legendary work ethic mixed well with his Scotch Irish
exuberance and common-man demeanor. He viewed beer calls with
subordinates as an important bonding exercise. He made people call him
by his first name. He seemed almost naively trusting. (This trait would
become McChrystal’s undoing in 2010, after he was promoted to commander
of forces in Afghanistan. He and members of his
inner circle made what were seen as inappropriate comments about their
civilian leaders in the presence of a Rolling Stone reporter. McChrystal
offered to resign, and Obama quickly accepted.)
Harnessing technology
The Iraqi insurgency’s reliance on modern technology also gave
tech-savvy JSOC and its partners, particularly the National Security
Agency, an advantage. The NSA learned to locate all electronic signals
in Iraq. “We just had a field day,”
said a senior JSOC commander, speaking on the condition of anonymity to
describe secret operations.
One innovation was called the Electronic Divining Rod, a sensor worn by
commandos that could detect the location of a particular cellphone. The
beeping grew louder as a soldier with the device got closer to the
person carrying a targeted phone.
Killing the enemy was the easy part, JSOC commanders said; finding him
was the hard part. But thanks to Roy Apseloff, director of the
National
Media
Exploitation
Center, the U.S. government’s agency for
analyzing documents captured by the military and intelligence community,
JSOC’s intelligence collection improved dramatically. Apseloff offered
to lend McChrystal his small staff, based in
Fairfax, to examine items captured in raids.
Apseloff’s team downloaded the contents of thumb drives, cellphones and
locked or damaged computers to extract names, phone numbers, messages
and images. Then they processed and stored that data, linking it to
other information that might help analysts find not just one more bad
guy but an entire network of them.
The major challenge was how to find the gems in the trash quickly enough
to be useful. The key was more bandwidth, the electronic pipeline that
carried such information as e-mail and telephone calls around the world.
Luckily for the military and JSOC, the attacks of 2001 coincided with an
unrelated development: the dot-com bust. It created a glut in commercial
satellite capacity, and the military bought up much of it.
Within a year after McChrystal’s arrival, JSOC had linked 65 stations
around the world to enable viewers to participate in the twice-daily,
45-minute video teleconferences that he held. By 2006, JSOC had
increased its bandwidth capability by 100 times in three years,
according to senior leaders.
The other challenge JSOC faced was a human one: Ill-trained
interrogators had little information about individual detainees and
didn’t know what questions to ask or how to effectively ask them. Worse,
some members of the JSOC’s Task Force 121 were beating prisoners.
Even before the Army’s Abu Ghraib prison photos began circulating in
2004, a confidential report warned that some JSOC interrogators were
assaulting prisoners and hiding them in secret facilities. JSOC troops
also detained mothers, wives and daughters when the men in a house they
were looking for were not at home. The report warned these detentions
and other massive sweep operations were counterproductive to winning
Iraqi support.
An investigation of JSOC detention facilities in Iraq during a four-month period in
2004 found that interrogators gave some prisoners only bread and water,
in one case for 17 days. Other prisoners were locked up in cells so
cramped they could not stand up or lie down while their captors played
loud music to disrupt sleep. Still others were stripped, drenched with
cold water and then interrogated in air-conditioned rooms or outside in
the cold.
Eventually, 34 JSOC task force soldiers were disciplined in five cases
over a one-year period beginning in 2003.
McChrystal ordered his intelligence chief, Michael Flynn, to
professionalize the interrogation system. By the summer of 2005, JSOC’s
interrogation booths at Balad sat around the corner from the large
warren of rooms where specialists mined thumb drives, computers,
cellphones, documents to use during interrogations. Paper maps were torn
down from the walls and replaced with flat-panel screens and
sophisticated computerized maps. Detainees willing to cooperate were
taught how to use a mouse to fly around their virtual neighborhoods to
help identify potential targets.
JSOC had to use the rules laid out in the Army Field Manual to
interrogate detainees. But its interrogators were — and still are —
permitted to keep them segregated from other prisoners and to hold them,
with the proper approvals from superiors and in some case from Defense
Department lawyers, for up to 90 days before they have to be transferred
into the regular military prison population.
The new interrogation system also included an FBI and judicial team that
collected evidence needed for trial by the Iraqi Central Criminal Court
in Baghdad. From early 2005
to early 2007, the teams sent more than 2,000 individuals to trial, said
senior military officials.
Body counts
Al-Qaeda used the U.S. invasion of Iraq as a call to arms to terrorists
and recruits throughout the Middle East who flooded in from Tunisia,
Libya, Egypt and Saudi Arabia — as many as 200 of them a month at the
high point. By the end of 2005, a shocking picture emerged: Iraq was rife with semiautonomous
al-Qaeda networks.
Al-Qaeda had divided
Iraq
into sections and put a provincial commander in charge of each. These
commanders further divided their territory into districts and put
someone in charge of each of those, too, according to military
officials. There were city leaders within those areas and cells within
each city. There were leaders for foreign fighters, for finance and for
communications, too.
By the spring of 2006, using the expanded bandwidth and constant
surveillance by unmanned aircraft, JSOC executed a series of raids,
known as Operation Arcadia, in which it collected and analyzed 662 hours
of full-motion video shot over 17 days. The raid netted 92 compact discs
and barrels full of documents, leading to another round of raids at 14
locations. Those hits yielded hard drives, thumb drives and a basement
stacked with 704 compact discs, including copies of a sophisticated
al-Qaeda marketing campaign. Operation Arcadia led, on June 7, 2006, to the death of the al-Qaeda
leader in Iraq,
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, when JSOC directed an airstrike that killed him.
JSOC’s lethality was evident in its body counts: In 2008, in Afghanistan
alone, JSOC commandos struck 550 targets and killed roughly a thousand
people, officials said. In 2009, they executed 464 operations and killed
400 to 500 enemy forces. As
Iraq
descended into chaos in the summer of 2005, JSOC conducted 300 raids a
month. More than 50 percent of JSOC Army Delta Force commandos now have
Purple Hearts.
The most intense Iraqi raids reminded McChrystal of Lawrence of Arabia’s
description of “rings of sorrow,” the emotional toll casualties take on
small groups of warriors. Greatly influenced by T.E. Lawrence’s life
story, McChrystal thought of his JSOC troops as modern-day tribal
forces: dependent upon one another for kinship and survival.
If killing were all that winning wars was about, the book on JSOC would
be written. But no war in modern times is ever won simply by killing
enough of the enemy. Even in an era of precision weaponry, accidents
happen that create huge political setbacks.
Every JSOC raid that also wounded or killed civilians, or destroyed a
home or someone’s livelihood, became a source of grievance so deep that
the counterproductive effects, still unfolding, are difficult to
calculate. JSOC’s success in targeting the right homes, businesses and
individuals was only ever about 50 percent, according to two senior
commanders. They considered this rate a good one.
“Sometimes our actions were counterproductive,” McChrystal said in an
interview. “We would say, ‘We need to go in and kill this guy,’ but just
the effects of our kinetic action did something negative and they [the
conventional army forces that occupied much of the country] were left to
clean up the mess.”
In 2008, Bush also briefly sent JSOC into Pakistan. To soothe the worries of
U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson about the mounting civilian deaths from
JSOC raids in other countries, commandos brought her a Predator console
so she could witness a raid in real time. Because of public outcry in Pakistan, U.S. officials canceled the mission
after only three raids. The CIA has continued to conduct drone strikes
there.
Targeting bureaucracy
The Defense Department has given JSOC a bigger role in nonmilitary
assignments as well, including tracing the flow of money from
international banks to finance terrorist networks. It also has become
deeply involved in “psychological operations,” which it renamed
“military information operations” to sound less intimidating. JSOC
routinely sends small teams in civilian clothes to
U.S.
embassies to help with what it calls media and messaging campaigns.
When Obama came into office, he cottoned to the organization
immediately. (It didn’t hurt that his CIA director, Leon E. Panetta, has
a son who, as a naval reservist, had deployed with JSOC.) Soon Obama was
using JSOC even more than his predecessor. In 2010, for example, he
secretly directed JSOC troops to Yemen to kill the leaders of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
The Arab Spring forced the White House to delay some JSOC missions. In
the meantime, the organization is busy with its new 30,000-square-foot
office building turned command center. Unlike previous offices, it is
not in some obscure part of the world. It sits across the highway from
the Pentagon in pristine suburban splendor, just a five-minute drive
from McChrystal’s civilian office and the former general’s favorite
beer-call restaurants.
As its name implies, the focus of Joint Special Operations Task
Force-National Capital Region is not the next terrorist network but
another of its lifelong enemies: the
Washington
bureaucracy. Some 50 battle-hardened JSOC warriors and a handful of
other federal intelligence and law enforcement agencies work there.
Mexico
is at the top of its wish list. So far the Mexican government, whose
constitution limits contact with the U.S. military, is relying on the
other federal agencies — the CIA, the Department of Homeland Security,
the Drug Enforcement Administration and Immigration and Customs
Enforcement — for intelligence collection and other help.
But JSOC’s National Capital task force is not just sitting idly by,
waiting to be useful to its southern neighbors. It is creating targeting
packages for U.S. domestic agencies that have sought its help,
including the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, the
second-largest federal law enforcement agency and the latest to make a
big play for a larger
U.S.
counterterrorism role.
From the book “Top Secret America.” Copyright 2011 by Dana Priest and
William M. Arkin. Reprinted by permission of Little, Brown and Co., New York, N.Y.
All rights reserved.
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