by DAN CALLOWAY
Published on 15 August 2010

WASHINGTON, DC – The Obama administration has launched a shadow war against Al Qaeda and terrorism on a worldwide scale. From the deserts of North Africa, to the desolate mountains of Pakistan, even to former Soviet republics that have been crippled by ethnic and religious strife, and covering more than a dozen countries throughout the world, the United States has expanded its worldwide war against terrorism and its military and intelligence operations, pursuing the enemy through the use of commando teams and robotic drones, paying civilian contractors to spy on terrorists and training local operatives to defeat terrorism wherever it exists.

On May 25th of this year, an airstrike hit a suspected group of Al Qaeda operatives in the remote desert region of Marib Province. The airstrike, unfortunately, also hit and killed the province’s deputy governor, a well-respected leader who Yemeni officials claim was attempting to talk Al Qaeda into halting their war on terrorism in the region. The President of Yemen, Ali Abdullah Selah, took responsibility for the attack and paid the terrorists blood money as compensation for the loss.

As it turns out, the airstrike in Marib Province was not the work of President Selah’s forces, but was a secret mission launched by the United States, and was the fourth such mission against Al Qaeda launched by the United States military in the desert and mountainous regions of Yemen since December, 2009.

The White House and the Obama administration has increased its efforts against terrorism by strengthening the CIA’s drone missile campaign in Pakistan, approved secret raids against Al Qaeda in Samalia, and launched clandestine operations in Kenya. Working with its European allies, the United States has helped to dismantle known terrorist groups in North Africa, and assisted the French in removing terrorists in Algeria. In addition, the United States is paying contractors to spy on terrorist group activities in Pakistan and other locations and report back to the government on what they have uncovered.

Unlike his predecessor, George W. Bush, President Obama’s secret shadow war against terrorism in Yemen and other parts of the world have never been publicly acknowledged. The troop buildup in Afghanistan is the only publicly announced campaign against terrorism that the White House has officially admitted is underway.

The Obama administration has chosen to take a different approach to fighting terrorism; one that does not boast about what it is doing, but secretly accomplishes the same mission and ultimately saving the American taxpayer millions of dollars by not involving the United States in an all-out war against any particular group or country, such as the war on Iraq, toppling huge governments and resulting in years of occupation. The “scalpel” rather than “hammer” approach taken by the White House in its fight against worldwide terrorism is seen as an advantage in “getting the job done” without the aftereffects that come from public acknowledgement of the activities.

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by DAN CALLOWAY
Published 2 January 2010 @ 19:36 UTC

From: Editorial, New York Times, 1 January 2010

DETROIT, MI - It will take some time before all the facts about the Christmas Day terrorism plot are known and analyzed. One thing is already clear: The government has to urgently improve its ability to use the reams of intelligence it receives every day on suspected terrorists and plots. That was supposed to have been addressed after the infamous “failure to connect the dots” before the 9/11 attacks. The echoes of the earlier disaster in this near-disaster are chilling.

There were plenty of clues about Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian man accused of trying to blow a hole in the side of Northwest Flight 253. But no one in the vast (and vastly expensive) intelligence and homeland security bureaucracy put them together.

In May, Britain refused to renew Mr. Abdulmutallab’s visa and put him on a watch list. In August, the National Security Agency overheard leaders of an Al Qaeda branch in Yemen discussing a plot involving a Nigerian man. In November, Mr. Abdulmutallab’s father, a respected banker, warned the American Embassy in Abuja (he even met with an official of the Central Intelligence Agency) that his son was being radicalized and had disappeared in Yemen.

The son was put on the least-restrictive American watch list — one that flagged him for future investigation. His plane ticket to Detroit was bought with cash. He boarded the trans-Atlantic flight with no luggage. Homeland security officials routinely receive lists of passengers before planes take off and the Transportation Security Administration can request that a plane return to its departure airport if a suspicious passenger is on board. Still no one raised an alarm.

Following the recommendations of the 9/11 commission, Congress created the National Counterterrorism Center to unify the government’s data collection and ordered the welter of intelligence agencies to put aside their rivalries and share what they know and suspect. Everyone insists that is happening; but still something went terribly wrong.

According to The Times, a preliminary review ordered by President Obama has found that because of human error, the agencies were still looking at discrete pieces of the puzzle without adequately checking other available databases — and, in some cases, were not sharing what they knew. The State Department says that it relayed the father’s warnings to the National Counterterrorism Center. C.I.A. officials in Nigeria prepared a separate report on Mr. Abdulmutallab that was sent to the C.I.A. headquarters but not to other agencies. At this point, we don’t know who was told of the N.S.A. intercepts. (more…)

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