Small Wars Journal

A Newly Assertive CIA Expands Its Taliban Hunt in Afghanistan

Sun, 10/22/2017 - 2:52pm

A Newly Assertive CIA Expands Its Taliban Hunt in Afghanistan by Thomas Gibbons-Neff, Eric Schmitt and Adam Goldman – New York Times

The CIA is expanding its covert operations in Afghanistan, sending small teams of highly experienced officers and contractors alongside Afghan forces to hunt and kill Taliban militants across the country, according to two senior American officials, the latest sign of the agency’s increasingly integral role in President Trump’s counterterrorism strategy.

The assignment marks a shift for the CIA in the country, where it had primarily been focused on defeating Al Qaeda and helping the Afghan intelligence service. The CIA has traditionally been resistant to an open-ended campaign against the Taliban, the primary militant group in Afghanistan, believing it was a waste of the agency’s time and money and would put officers at greater risk as they embark more frequently on missions.

Former agency officials assert that the military, with its vast resources and manpower, is better suited to conducting large-scale counterinsurgencies. The CIA’s paramilitary division, which is taking on the assignment, numbers only in the hundreds and is deployed all over the world. In Afghanistan, the fight against the Islamic State has also diverted CIA assets.

The expansion reflects the CIA’s assertive role under its new director, Mike Pompeo, to combat insurgents around the world…

Read on.

Comments

RantCorp

Thu, 10/26/2017 - 7:37am

IMHO the primary benefit the spooks can bring to the fight (and it is a fight) is they readily accept that the Operational and Strategic solution to the conflict lies with the folks located in Rawallpindi and not in Kabul, Kandahar, Kunar, Kunduz or even Islamabad.

Because our military are strictly conditioned to accept every military action and actor they execute/command is subordinate to the political Executive they struggle intellectually to engage a hostile state actor/action that does not not answer to a political master.

In Rawallpindi the accepted drill has the very opposite effect - they can't even imagine taking advice/orders from an elected government official under any circumstance.