Secret Unit Expands Rumsfeld's Domain
New Espionage Branch Delving Into CIA Territory
By Barton Gellman
Washington Post Staff Writer
09/10/06 "Washington
Post" -- -- The Pentagon, expanding into
the CIA's historic bailiwick, has created a new espionage arm
and is reinterpreting U.S. law to give Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld broad authority over clandestine operations abroad,
according to interviews with participants and documents obtained
by The Washington Post.
The previously undisclosed organization, called the Strategic
Support Branch, arose from Rumsfeld's written order to end his
"near total dependence on CIA" for what is known as human
intelligence. Designed to operate without detection and under
the defense secretary's direct control, the Strategic Support
Branch deploys small teams of case officers, linguists,
interrogators and technical specialists alongside newly
empowered special operations forces.
Military and civilian participants said in interviews that the
new unit has been operating in secret for two years -- in Iraq,
Afghanistan and other places they declined to name. According to
an early planning memorandum to Rumsfeld from Gen. Richard B.
Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the focus of the
intelligence initiative is on "emerging target countries such as
Somalia, Yemen, Indonesia, Philippines and Georgia." Myers and
his staff declined to be interviewed.
The Strategic Support Branch was created to provide Rumsfeld
with independent tools for the "full spectrum of humint
operations," according to an internal account of its origin and
mission. Human intelligence operations, a term used in
counterpoint to technical means such as satellite photography,
range from interrogation of prisoners and scouting of targets in
wartime to the peacetime recruitment of foreign spies. A recent
Pentagon memo states that recruited agents may include
"notorious figures" whose links to the U.S. government would be
embarrassing if disclosed.
Perhaps the most significant shift is the Defense Department's
bid to conduct surreptitious missions, in friendly and
unfriendly states, when conventional war is a distant or
unlikely prospect -- activities that have traditionally been the
province of the CIA's Directorate of Operations. Senior Rumsfeld
advisers said those missions are central to what they called the
department's predominant role in combating terrorist threats.
The Pentagon has a vast bureaucracy devoted to gathering and
analyzing intelligence, often in concert with the CIA, and news
reports over more than a year have described Rumsfeld's drive
for more and better human intelligence. But the creation of the
espionage branch, the scope of its clandestine operations and
the breadth of Rumsfeld's asserted legal authority have not been
detailed publicly before. Two longtime members of the House
Intelligence Committee, a Democrat and a Republican, said they
knew no details before being interviewed for this article.
Pentagon officials said they established the Strategic Support
Branch using "reprogrammed" funds, without explicit
congressional authority or appropriation. Defense intelligence
missions, they said, are subject to less stringent congressional
oversight than comparable operations by the CIA. Rumsfeld's
dissatisfaction with the CIA's operations directorate, and his
determination to build what amounts in some respects to a rival
service, follows struggles with then-CIA Director George J.
Tenet over intelligence collection priorities in Afghanistan and
Iraq. Pentagon officials said the CIA naturally has interests
that differ from those of military commanders, but they also
criticized its operations directorate as understaffed,
slow-moving and risk-averse. A recurring phrase in internal
Pentagon documents is the requirement for a human intelligence
branch "directly responsive to tasking from SecDef," or
Rumsfeld.
The new unit's performance in the field -- and its latest
commander, reserve Army Col. George Waldroup -- are
controversial among those involved in the closely held program.
Pentagon officials acknowledged that Waldroup and many of those
brought quickly into his service lack the experience and
training typical of intelligence officers and special operators.
In his civilian career as a federal manager, according to a
Justice Department inspector general's report, Waldroup was at
the center of a 1996 probe into alleged deception of Congress
concerning staffing problems at Miami International Airport.
Navy Vice Adm. Lowell E. Jacoby, director of the Defense
Intelligence Agency, expressed "utmost confidence in Colonel
Waldroup's capabilities" and said in an interview that
Waldroup's unit has scored "a whole series of successes" that he
could not reveal in public. He acknowledged the risks, however,
of trying to expand human intelligence too fast: "It's not
something you quickly constitute as a capability. It's going to
take years to do."
Rumsfeld's ambitious plans rely principally on the Tampa-based
U.S. Special Operations Command, or SOCOM, and on its
clandestine component, the Joint Special Operations Command.
Rumsfeld has designated SOCOM's leader, Army Gen. Bryan D.
Brown, as the military commander in chief in the war on
terrorism. He has also given Brown's subordinates new authority
to pay foreign agents. The Strategic Support Branch is intended
to add missing capabilities -- such as the skill to establish
local spy networks and the technology for direct access to
national intelligence databases -- to the military's much larger
special operations squadrons. Some Pentagon officials refer to
the combined units as the "secret army of Northern Virginia."
Known as "special mission units," Brown's elite forces are not
acknowledged publicly. They include two squadrons of an Army
unit popularly known as Delta Force, another Army squadron --
formerly code-named Gray Fox -- that specializes in close-in
electronic surveillance, an Air Force human intelligence unit
and the Navy unit popularly known as SEAL Team Six.
The Defense Department is planning for further growth. Among the
proposals circulating are the establishment of a
Pentagon-controlled espionage school, largely duplicating the
CIA's Field Tradecraft Course at Camp Perry, Va., and of
intelligence operations commands for every region overseas.
Rumsfeld's efforts, launched in October 2001, address two widely
shared goals. One is to give combat forces, such as those
fighting the insurgency in Iraq, more and better information
about their immediate enemy. The other is to find new tools to
penetrate and destroy the shadowy organizations, such as al
Qaeda, that pose global threats to U.S. interests in conflicts
with little resemblance to conventional war.
In pursuit of those aims, Rumsfeld is laying claim to greater
independence of action as Congress seeks to subordinate the 15
U.S. intelligence departments and agencies -- most under
Rumsfeld's control -- to the newly created and still unfilled
position of national intelligence director. For months, Rumsfeld
opposed the intelligence reorganization bill that created the
position. He withdrew his objections late last year after House
Republican leaders inserted language that he interprets as
preserving much of the department's autonomy.
Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin, deputy undersecretary for
intelligence, acknowledged that Rumsfeld intends to direct some
missions previously undertaken by the CIA. He added that it is
wrong to make "an assumption that what the secretary is trying
to say is, 'Get the CIA out of this business, and we'll take
it.' I don't interpret it that way at all."
"The secretary actually has more responsibility to collect
intelligence for the national foreign intelligence program . . .
than does the CIA director," Boykin said. "That's why you hear
all this information being published about the secretary having
80 percent of the [intelligence] budget. Well, yeah, but he has
80 percent of the responsibility for collection, as well."
CIA spokeswoman Anya Guilsher said the agency would grant no
interviews for this article.
Pentagon officials emphasized their intention to remain
accountable to Congress, but they also asserted that defense
intelligence missions are subject to fewer legal constraints
than Rumsfeld's predecessors believed. That assertion involves
new interpretations of Title 10 of the U.S. Code, which governs
the armed services, and Title 50, which governs, among other
things, foreign intelligence.
Under Title 10, for example, the Defense Department must report
to Congress all "deployment orders," or formal instructions from
the Joint Chiefs of Staff to position U.S. forces for combat.
But guidelines issued this month by Undersecretary for
Intelligence Stephen A. Cambone state that special operations
forces may "conduct clandestine HUMINT operations . . . before
publication" of a deployment order, rendering notification
unnecessary. Pentagon lawyers also define the "war on terror" as
ongoing, indefinite and global in scope. That analysis
effectively discards the limitation of the defense secretary's
war powers to times and places of imminent combat.
Under Title 50, all departments of the executive branch are
obliged to keep Congress "fully and currently informed of all
intelligence activities." The law exempts "traditional . . .
military activities" and their "routine support." Advisers said
Rumsfeld, after requesting a fresh legal review by the
Pentagon's general counsel, interprets "traditional" and
"routine" more expansively than his predecessors.
"Operations the CIA runs have one set of restrictions and
oversight, and the military has another," said a Republican
member of Congress with a substantial role in national security
oversight, declining to speak publicly against political allies.
"It sounds like there's an angle here of, 'Let's get around
having any oversight by having the military do something that
normally the [CIA] does, and not tell anybody.' That immediately
raises all kinds of red flags for me. Why aren't they telling
us?"
The enumeration by Myers of "emerging target countries" for
clandestine intelligence work illustrates the breadth of the
Pentagon's new concept. All those named, save Somalia, have
allied themselves with the United States -- if unevenly --
against al Qaeda and its jihadist allies.
A high-ranking official with direct responsibility for the
initiative, declining to speak on the record about espionage in
friendly nations, said the Defense Department sometimes has to
work undetected inside "a country that we're not at war with, if
you will, a country that maybe has ungoverned spaces, or a
country that is tacitly allowing some kind of threatening
activity to go on."
Assistant Secretary of Defense Thomas O'Connell, who oversees
special operations policy, said Rumsfeld has discarded the
"hide-bound way of thinking" and "risk-averse mentalities" of
previous Pentagon officials under every president since Gerald
R. Ford.
"Many of the restrictions imposed on the Defense Department were
imposed by tradition, by legislation, and by interpretations of
various leaders and legal advisors," O'Connell said in a written
reply to follow-up questions. "The interpretations take on the
force of law and may preclude activities that are legal. In my
view, many of the authorities inherent to [the Defense
Department] . . . were winnowed away over the years."
After reversing the restrictions, Boykin said, Rumsfeld's next
question "was, 'Okay, do I have the capability?' And the answer
was, 'No you don't have the capability. . . . And then it became
a matter of, 'I want to build a capability to be able to do
this.' "
Known by several names since its inception as Project Icon on
April 25, 2002, the Strategic Support Branch is an arm of the
DIA's nine-year-old Defense Human Intelligence Service, which
until now has concentrated on managing military attachés
assigned openly to U.S. embassies around the world.
Rumsfeld's initiatives are not connected to previously reported
negotiations between the Defense Department and the CIA over
control of paramilitary operations, such as the capture of
individuals or the destruction of facilities.
According to written guidelines made available to The Post, the
Defense Department has decided that it will coordinate its human
intelligence missions with the CIA but will not, as in the past,
await consent. It also reserves the right to bypass the agency's
Langley headquarters, consulting CIA officers in the field
instead. The Pentagon will deem a mission "coordinated" after
giving 72 hours' notice to the CIA.
Four people with firsthand knowledge said defense personnel have
already begun operating under "non-official cover" overseas,
using false names and nationalities. Those missions, and others
contemplated in the Pentagon, skirt the line between clandestine
and covert operations. Under U.S. law, "clandestine" refers to
actions that are meant to be undetected, and "covert" refers to
those for which the U.S. government denies its responsibility.
Covert action is subject to stricter legal requirements,
including a written "finding" of necessity by the president and
prompt notification of senior leaders of both parties in the
House and Senate.
O'Connell, asked whether the Pentagon foresees greater
involvement in covert action, said "that remains to be
determined." He added: "A better answer yet might be, depends
upon the situation. But no one I know of is raising their hand
and saying at DOD, 'We want control of covert operations.' "
One scenario in which Pentagon operatives might play a role,
O'Connell said, is this: "A hostile country close to our borders
suddenly changes leadership. . . . We would want to make sure
the successor is not hostile."
Researcher Rob Thomason contributed to this report.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
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