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The United States will push ahead with more targeted drone strikes and special operations raids and fewer costly land battles like Iraq and Afghanistan in the continuing war against al Qaeda, according to a new national counterterrorism strategy unveiled Wednesday.
The doctrine, two ysears in the making, comes in the wake of the successful special operations raid that killed al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden in May, and a week after President Barack Obama's announcement that US troops will begin leaving Afghanistan this summer.
The document is a purposeful departure from the Bush administration's global war on terror. The world-wide hunt for terrorists that began after the September 11, 2001, attacks focused first on Afghanistan, and small numbers of al Qaeda are still active there. White House counterterrorism chief John Brennan said the reworked doctrine acknowledges the growing threat of terrorism at home, including al Qaeda attempts to recruit and attack inside the United States.
Brennan told a Washington audience Wednesday that more resources would be spent on the fight at home to spot would-be militants and their recruiters, and the US would resist al Qaeda's attempts to bleed it economically by drawing it into costly invasions overseas.
"Our best offence won't always be deploying large armies abroad, but delivering targeted, surgical pressure to the groups that threaten us," Brennan said at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Brennan said the strategy relies on "surgical" action against specific groups to decapitate their leadership and deny them safe havens and rejects costly wars like Iraq and Afghanistan that feed al Qaeda's narrative that America is out to occupy the Muslim world. He said the US would work whenever possible to help host countries fight al Qaeda so the US didn't have to, just as it was trying to hand over responsibility to the Afghans.
The operations Brennan describes are almost solely the province of the intelligence and military special operations agencies, especially the CIA and elite forces of the Joint Special Operations Command that worked together to carry out the bin Laden raid, but also including the special operations trainers that work with host nations' militaries.
Brennan, who is a former CIA officer, did not make specific mention of the covert armed drone program that targets militants in Pakistan and, on rare occasions, in countries like Yemen. But he referred to the administration's work to rush what he called "unique capabilities" to the field, an oblique reference to classified programs like the stepped-up construction of a CIA drone-launching base in the Persian Gulf region to use the unmanned aircraft to hunt militants in Yemen.
Bush White House veteran Juan Zarate questioned the wisdom of singling out al Qaeda as the main American enemy, "inadvertently aggrandising them when they are in decline, by making them the focus of the strategy." He also questioned the decision to "focus very mechanically on al Qaeda," with less emphasis on the violent Islamic ideology that drives the group. "You might miss a movement that is developing or evolving into a global platform" like al Qaeda, said Zarate, former White House deputy national security adviser for combating terrorism.

Copyright Associated Press, 2010

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