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Special Abu Muqawama Q&A: Counterstrike!

I spent part of my vacation reading the new book by Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt, Counterstrike: The Untold Story of America's Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda. Thom and Eric wrote the book while on a writing fellowship here at the Center for a New American Security, so I'm relieved that I a) very much enjoyed reading it and b) can recommend it to the readership. It's a brisk read -- short enough to read while trapped in your houses as a hurricane blows over, for example -- and has all the hallmarks of the great reporting you have come to expect from two of the NYT's finest. 

This will come as no surprise to those who have followed your reporting for the New York Times, but this book was carefully and exhaustively reported. You guys face a tough dilemma, though: when reporting on secret programs, the best sources will often not talk. And although you have managed to interview some of the key decision makers, are you worried that your reporting is limited by its sources? How do you write “The Untold Story of America’s Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda” and not “The Untold Story of America’s Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda As Told To Us By The People We Got To Speak On The Record?”

It’s wonderful to be asked why we had so many people on the record! Usually we are criticized for too many confidential sources. In Counterstrike, we used both, extensively. Our book is drawn from more than two hundred interviews conducted with current and former military personnel, diplomats, and intelligence officers, as well as law enforcement, Pentagon, and White House officials who participated in the operations, intelligence analysis, and policy making in the decade following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. When possible, we named the sources. But because of the nature of reporting on sensitive operations and policies, often involving classified information, many of our sources spoke to us on the condition that they remain anonymous. In each case where we used anonymous sources, we carefully weighed the trade-offs between the need for transparency in reporting this book and the important information that confidential sources could provide. We also found that many sources who might be otherwise reluctant to talk to us for an article for the daily newspaper agreed to speak to us for the book. They wanted to ensure that their perspective on this historic period was understood and chronicled.

You guys cover a lot of breaking, Page A1 news. How difficult is it to step back and write a more reflective piece of journalism looking at a decade-long era?

The hardest part was time-management. We found that to make it all work we had to give 50 percent of our time to our reporting for the Times; 50 percent of our time to the book; 50 percent of our time to our loving and long-suffering wives; and 50 percent of our time to our kids (we each have two). Fortunately, all the time left over was ours, and we could use it to relax. In many ways, we began reporting the book on 9/11, even though we didn’t begin considering a book until about three years ago. But this is what we have done for the past decade. What we discovered in our first work of long-form narrative was the incredible amount of detail a reporter can develop when working on a two-year book project: The ability to return to sources not just once, but multiple times. The ability to check and cross-check stories, and really dig for details. The ability to trace a tip about an important counterterrorism raid and have time to track down participants from the small unit up to the senior commanders – and trace the effect and impact across the inter-agency. The ability to identify characters who had significant counterterrorism roles throughout the decade after 9/11, and were willing to talk to us. Those things you simply cannot do on a daily deadline.

If I had a complaint about the book, it’s that it often read, especially in the middle chapters, like a list of inputs and not effects. This is a real and common problem we researchers have in evaluating counter-terror programs. We know what we are doing. What’s tougher to tell is, what effect are we having on the enemy? To that end, what programs do you think are having the biggest effects on al-Qaeda? What is working? What is not?

You are a smart reader. The insurmountable problem is that we are covering counterterrorism missions from only one side. For obvious reasons, we could not bounce our reporting off of some Al Qaeda press spokesman or operations officer or financier to say, “Hey, we are writing about this mission. Is this how it went down against you? Is this how successful it was?” But we did our due diligence by comparing what sources told us to what responses appeared on jihadist Web sites, and it usually tracked with what we heard from sources here. Clearly, the kinetics have had an impact, as have missions to dry up sources of finances. What remains in the D- department, if not failing, are the efforts to counter the message of violent extremism. If the United States and its allies have been forced to offer an effective counterposing narrative to those who bomb and behead innocents, then the United States has lost before it has even started.

Along the same lines, you guys don’t outright grade the performance of the past few administrations on counter-terror, so I’m going to give you the chance to do that. On an A-F scale, what grade would you assign …

a. The Bush Administration, 2001-2003?

b. The Bush Administration, 2003-2005?

c. The Bush Administration, 2005-2007?

d. The Bush Administration, 2007-2009?

e. The Obama Administration, 2009-2011?

We think readers of our book would come away seeing that the Bush administration adopted a muscular if clumsy capture-kill strategy in the months after 9/11. Understandable, necessary, but not sufficient. And, as Rumsfeld noted in his famous October 2003 memo, kinetics alone risked creating more jihadists than were taken off the battlefield. By the second Bush administration, officials were adopting a more nuanced strategy, one that involved the whole of government to try and counter violent extremism with every tool available. Although Obama was certainly the un-Bush, it is historic fact that his administration has been as much continuity in the CT world as change. Drone strikes? Embraced and expanded. SOF raids? Tempo increased. But Obama certainly has changed the tenor of the discussion with the Islamic world, and even with European allies, and his efforts to close Gitmo, while still unsuccessful, set him apart, to be sure.

This book covers a lot of ground. What chapter do you wish you could have expanded on or dug deeper into?

Cyber and counter-messaging.

I usually end these interviews by asking people to name their favorite bars and such. For you guys, I’ll ask a different question: what are the three weirdest places you have ever met a source for an interview?

Thom:

1. Radovan Karadzic’s chalet at Pale, his mountain redoubt above Sarajevo. He was not yet an indicted war criminal, but we were reporting extensively on the atrocities he had ordered, so it was difficult to get an interview with the Bosnian Serb leader. So we drove from Belgrade up into the mountains, and while my translator was speaking with his aides, I tried to strike up a conversation with his bodyguards, who were playing poker. “Hey guys. What’re the stakes?” I asked. One responded: “Winner gets to shoot the guy from the Trib.” At the time, I was the guy from the Trib.

2. When I was a Moscow bureau chief, dissidents and underground artists always wanted to meet foreign correspondents. So you’d choose a big public location, with signals to identify one another. One spot was a big toy store across Dzerzhinsky Square from the old Lubyanka KGB prison. Sort of hiding in plain sight, I guess. Many of those I met were legitimate outsiders who had a bona fide story to tell about the crimes of the Soviet state. But not always. And I guess the KGB didn’t want to send its stooges too far, because over the course of five years and hundreds of such meetings I went to Children’s World several dozen times -- and among those I met were a Ukrainian nationalist, a Jewish refusenik and a formerly imprisoned poet; but all three of these were the same guy, who obviously couldn’t keep track of which reporters he had tried to set up.

3. I have one defense industry source who likes quick meetings. He will drive up in front of our bureau on Farragut Square, roll down the darkened windows of his SUV and toss me documents. One day our bureau chief was heading out to lunch and saw the exchange, which was too bad. It made the job of Pentagon correspondent look way too easy.

Eric:

1. Inside a sweltering reed hut in Al Turaba, Iraq, a dust-choked village 20 miles from the Iranian border. I was traveling with Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz in July 2003. He had flown to the village to listen to a dozen wizened tribal elders from the area who asked him to restore a way of life that Saddam Hussein had taken away. Sitting cross-legged in his stocking feet on a Persian rug, Wolfowitz nodded in agreement as the old men chronicled the plight of the marsh Arabs, an ancient people whose homeland in southeastern Iraq had been drained into desert as punishment for their independence and Shiite faith. It was 120 degrees outside the hut and even hotter inside, but Wolfowitz still wore a blue blazer and red tie, both coated with dust. It was hard to hear him and the elders over the raucous banter of scores of villagers jammed inside the hut and a donkey's braying outside.

2. Several hundred feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean inside the U.S.S. Kentucky, one of the Navy’s Trident II ballistic-missile. When I was a young Pentagon correspondent in the early 1990’s, I tried to get out with troops as much as possible. I flew in an Air Force fighter jet. I rode in Army M1-A1 tank. But inside the submerged submarine on a training run in 1993 was eerie. Capt. Mike Riegel and his crew were amenable to talking about their vessel. But no loud voices, please. The cold war was over by then, but there were still reminders of a time when crew members feared that the slightest racket on board could give away a submarine’s position to the Soviets. Equipment was lined in plastic or rubber to avoid pings or banging. Signs in toilet stalls sternly warned crew members: "Don't Drop That Seat. Shhhhhh!"

3. On a very sensitive story several years ago that involved American spies, commandos and scandal, one of our main sources agreed to meet periodically at a coffee shop along a major Interstate freeway in a Western state. But we never met him in the same place twice. The source gave me and my colleague a cell phone. We never knew exactly when he was going to call. But when he did, he gave us the name of a highway exit and a coffee shop there. We met several times over about many months, each time collecting new information from him and corroborating (or rejecting) tips we heard from other sources. He was always spot on. After the article was published, we received a cryptic message, “Well done.” We never heard from him again.

Wow, who knew John McCain had gotten so paranoid about reporters! Anyway, thanks for the interview, guys. Buy Counterstrike here.

Books, CT

24 comments

All I have to say is

All I have to say is "Counter-terrorists win!" Hopefully you gaming nerds out there know what I'm talking about ;) I'm still working on A High Price, I'll make sure to get this when I'm done with my cued reading.

Be interesting to extend this

Be interesting to extend this discussion into the Clinton, Bush Sr., Reagan administration.

To get the whole answer, you really have to go back to when it started cause that is when the whole thing could have ended before it started.

Like I am not saying that staying in Afghanistan after the Soviet war was the solution. A lot of people that want to justify staying in Afghanistan now want us to believe that. OBL's beef was a lot broader in scope and a larger US footprint truly would have made it worse. Now that we closed the OBL door forever, we will never know. He was really the key. Obama may have done the worst thing to stop this war.

Could be pissing in the wind, but those first talks would have been the decision point. Guess it depends on if you find your solution in the existing population or with changing the thinking of the leaders of the people you fight.

BTW...One thing that I have a hard time getting my mind around it is the amount of money that the US has put into this war. Be interesting to see how that $4 odd Trillion dollars is balanced by the ($ put amount here) money spent by AQ. For all our people with advanced degrees, we really are not that smart. Are we.

Think that is one of the problems if getting your learning from a book, you tend to believe it is right. Usually your enemy has s different reading list that they hang their hat on. You really have to see it through there eyes for it to be effective.

Most of the people in key

Most of the people in key positions for the war on terror are the children of blue blooded employees, who's parent's are now retired and or are in consultant / contractor positions. It's all about money, high paying jobs, feeling important and keeping positions of power in the hands of certain blue blooded family's. Those families ensure there is a pecking order, those who are not part of the inner circle are kept out and all the info is kept at the top. None of these people want peace to break out because then they would be out of a job. A bourgeoisie class has always been in control, is slowly growing, they hide from real taxpayers and report to only themselves.

Biggest scam going on now is, those in management positions are obtaining Management Certificates from Stanford, Harvard and Yale - claiming that these certificates are the equivalent of Masters in Business Administration / Regents Certified Masters Degrees, when they are not. HR Offices for these agencies are being told to honor these certificates as Graduate Degrees and increasing the salaries of these individuals. Many of these folks are making $200,000 a year. The pay scales are much higher in comparison to other GS USG employment / jobs.

Sickening how much money is thrown away in over inflated salaries alone.

How well did they cover the

How well did they cover the financial war in their book?

Ex, much of what can be found

Ex, much of what can be found in this book has already been covered in Smith's "Killer Elite" and Warrick's "Triple Agent" (also Dickey's "Security the City", subject got some more attention this past week).

It'd be great though if you can make some sense on CERN's CLOUD experiment featured in Nature. So is Perry right and should I vote for him?

Sorry, Dickey's "Securing the

Sorry, Dickey's "Securing the City".

This seems like too little,

This seems like too little, too late. All I want to know about is our very little covered Mexican inter-op war, with Blackwater leading instead of DoD.

I'm just sick and tired of all things Middle East, it seems like we've just wasted trillions over there, with nothing but a T-shirt saying "I'm with STUPID" (the arrow pointing up).

Ummm, did they interview any

Ummm, did they interview any Asians at all? I realize that interviewing AQ operatives is hard, but the Pakistani and Indians might have a few different evaluations. (A book focused on that pov. would be much needed, btw)

Fjord, So you are saying a

Fjord,

So you are saying a book of interviews, like in Citizen Soldiers: The U. S. Army from the Normandy Beaches to the Bulge to the Surrender of Germany, could help us how?

Ambrose Jr.: No, Im saying

Ambrose Jr.: No, Im saying that if the aim is to asess the efficiency of various approaches to CT work, a book interviewing the various forces outside the line of command available would sure prrovide a necessary correction to inevitable positive spin. Heck, i would like to hear Russian and others assessment as well. would think such a books value in any critical process would be obvious.

Fnord's got a good point

Fnord's got a good point (wait, is that the first time I've ever said that? Kidding, fnord :) ) Although, it's the first time I've ever said that.

Maybe you mean this sort of thing?:

Second, the scholarly and counterterrorism communities have narrowly approached the history of al-Qaeda through the lens of Peshawar and Arab precursor organizations, such as Maktab al-Khidamat (Afghan Services Bureau). Less credence and attention has been given to areas like Loya Paktia and Miram Shah, which functioned (and continue to function) as other centers of gravity for the mobilization and operational development of foreign war volunteers and future members of al-Qaeda. These areas, and the Haqqani Network's role in them, were not only more central to the operational development of al-Qaeda than Peshawar, but have also proved to be more enduring over time.

Third, the history of al-Qaeda has been narrowly approached through Arabic sources, as if the development of al-Qaeda was solely an Arab phenomenon. Less attention has been paid to Pashto and Urdu language material produced by Afghan and Pakistani insurgent groups, much of which provides insights into the local context of al-Qaeda's trajectory and is ripe for study.

http://afpak.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/07/19/the_haqqani_network_and_...

Oops.

Er, would anyone at CNAS like

Er, would anyone at CNAS like to comment on this sort of thing? Very State Department-y:

"State versus DOD" strikes me as a completely bureaucratic and insular argument. To be fair, that is not quite the argument the author is making.

Yet our diplomacy, via State, sometimes encourages military adventurism, or contributes to conditions to which we respond militarily.
.
The following is about the World Bank, but the State Department's curious blocking-and-tackling for favored client states recreates the following dynamic:
.
"It was at this point, in early summer 1968, that McNamara announced to the senior managers that in the future, the World Bank would have only one sheet of music from which everyone would play. Ensuring the necessary consistency would be a key role of the programming and budgeting department. The game plan was not a narrative but rather a set of standard tables—a bunch of numbers—through which McNamara managed the organization for the next thirteen years.
.
Some elements of the World Bank’s activities, however, weren’t captured by McNamara’s standard tables. One occasion in particular brought this home to me. This was in the late 1970s when McNamara had agreed to come to one of the staff meetings of the Western Africa region, where I was working. He offered to answer any question.
.
Any question?
.
Being an incautious kind of person, I spoke first and asked him the question that was on everyone’s lips at the time: was there any tension between his policy of pushing out an ever-increasing volume of development loans and improving the development impact of the projects that were being financed by the loans? In effect, was there a tension between quantity and quality?
.
His reply was chilling. He said that people who asked that kind of question didn’t understand our obligation to do both: we had to lend more money and we had to have high quality. There was no conflict. People who couldn’t see that didn’t belong in the World Bank".

Read More: http://tinyurl.com/3cl6bwe

From a comment I left at SWJ.

Take care all.

Finally, does anyone at CNAS,

Finally, does anyone at CNAS, anyone at all, understand why Iran is designated a state sponsor of terror but regimes that make up about a third of State funding (I mean, funding directed at certain regimes, democracy promotion and all that jazz) are not?

Anyone? Bueller? Bueller?

Just having fun. Again, take care.

One more and then I'll leave

One more and then I'll leave you poor dears be, for the time being

Update: Remember the time that a member of the Department of State wrote that designating Pakistan a state sponsor of terror was a “bunch of crap!!” and how the DOS tried to hide it? Well, just in case you have, I’m reposting.

From the National Security Archives blog.

As Carl Prine might say, "chortle chortle." Except, it's totally not funny....

http://nsarchive.wordpress.com/2011/05/13/document-friday-the-department...

Back on topic: book looks good and I plan to pick up a copy! Cool! Good work.

Mahdu: I would propably say

Mahdu: I would propably say that Iran is a sponsor of terro but Pakistan is not in the same way its totaly cool to support MEK (wich is a designated terror-organisation) for people in the Perry campaign but its anathema for any muslim person to have any links to Hamas.

Seriously, it would be an interesting use of money for the west to hire in some think-thanks from countries outside the anglo sphere. A joint Paki/Indian thinkthank funded by DoS? Does such a thing exist?

"A joint Paki/Indian

"A joint Paki/Indian thinkthank funded by DoS? Does such a thing exist?"

People are unemployed in the US, many are now living pay check to pay check, we're sick and tired of Muslim countries fleecing taxpayer money, as our gov't continues to dole out trillions more of our hard earned money to a lost cost. And you want us to fund this BS think tank, which surely will just line the pockets of pseudo-experts. Thank you, but no thanks.

If we're going to spend welfare money, I'd rather it be Mexico, because frankly I don't want any more drug crazed Mexicans coming over. Containment south of the border is money well spent.

Do you think if Pakistan did what South Africa did re: Nuclear weapons, we'd care about Pakistan? Hell no. Who cares about that place?

Spooks don't have resumes, do

Spooks don't have resumes, do they. You're not going to get a lot of comments out of the peanut gallery Exum.

Fnord on August 28, 2011 - 8:45am

Ambrose Jr.: No, Im saying that if the aim is to asess the efficiency of various approaches to CT work, a book interviewing the various forces outside the line of command available would sure prrovide a necessary correction to inevitable positive spin. Heck, i would like to hear Russian and others assessment as well. would think such a books value in any critical process would be obvious.

How do you normalize the information? Lot of variables that determine outcome. Methods, training, intelligence, luck ( what if UBL was not home? ),politics, and the end game of the terrorist group. You'll end up with a list of history, which a lot is already known, the application of the information is the challenge.

Tell you one thing, shooting them or UAVs does a good job. Tends to just break it off in the rest of them. Just makes them work harder together.

Has Obama changed the tenor? Not sure if Obama really has gained ground in the ME. Israel is not impressed with the Rain Man. After the early Egypt speech there was a lot of RA RA, but as time went on the Arabs decided that Obama spoke with fork tongue (Americans will agree). Then there was the Arab Spring, Obama really did not get on the bandwagon to force out leaders until the winds blew strong enough that it was obvious what was going to happen. Finally, US did not make friends on Pakistan over UBL. Really, Arab Spring had more to do with global economies faltering and tone than it did with Obama. Guess I have to put a plug in for social media, it does speed communication up, it is not a prerequisite. Without the speed of communication, the momentum was an enabler. Libya, I am a little confused about. Press and the political left is giving Obama thumbs up and high fives. The confusing part is for Libya to be justified as humanitarian mission it sure is a blood letting. There is sort of a Bosnian/ Rwanda thing going on. People shot with flex-cuffs on? Manhunts for Gadhadfi and relatives. That would make Gitmo and Abu Ghraib look like practice, yet no one is chirping about it in either the Arab Countries or US political left. Amazing, Bush would be apologizing by now. It is way too early to tell what is going to happen in Libya. Have to revisit that one when Tripoli has food, water, trash service, and electricity. Sure sign that government is working.

If anything, the Arab spring has the people arguing pretty good with themselves. At least out side of Israel. Figure that as long as they are arguing with themselves, it will keep them busy. That is the good news. The bad news is what is going to happen when they decide what they want to do. I do no think anyone can predict that right now. Their economies are going to have to grow for them to be happy campers.

Dude, what is up with you and

Dude, what is up with you and Pat Tillman, it's over, get on with your life, man!!!

Guy Montag on August 29, 2011

Guy Montag on August 29, 2011 - 12:57am

ZZZzzzzzz. What's your point?

Surge: US rolled into town with trucks of $100 bills. Sons of Iraq found a new Moolah.

Intelligence: US changed the strategy like most change their underwear, someone gets the credit. Just have to be present, why not McChrystal. Evolution or revolution?

"Finally, US did not make

"Finally, US did not make friends on Pakistan over UBL."

Screw that. Even giving them the benefit of the doubt and assuming the Paks did not know he was there, any country that whines when America kills a mass murderer of Americans on their soil is an ENEMY country and should be treated as such.

I was wondering why Americans

I was wondering why Americans were giving Pakistan all that foreign aid money.

Crap we where all over Laos and Cambodia. Friend was in Thailand and a guy asked him if he wanted to take some aerial photos (friend was a shutter bug not a journalist). They were in a single engine flying along enjoying the view. They flew over a village and it vaporized behind them. They were calling it in for the guys above.

Don't really care.

Point is, if Obama is this great hero of foreign relations in Islamic countries, he sure has a funny way of doing it.

There were many reasons to

There were many reasons to dump aid into the region. Unfortunately every dc agency wanted in on the action and until we got fed up and went it alone a la the obl raid we created networks as we disrupted them. The world now knows how to kill americans and get paid for it. Go pakistan not iran and you two can sponsor taliban and sell nukesand be a key ally. The world laughs but atleast usaid gets a big client.

Part I: "Stenographers in

Part I: "Stenographers in Residence"

“I spent part of my vacation reading the new book by Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt, Counterstrike: The Untold Story of America's Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda. Thom and Eric wrote the book while on a writing fellowship here at the Center for a New American Security … [it] has all the hallmarks of the great reporting you have come to expect from two of the NYT's finest … Buy Counterstrike here.”
. . .

I spent part of my vacation finishing reading “Counterstrike.”Finished up yesterday on the drive home. However, I thought AM’s praise to be a bit effusive; “great reporting … from two of the NYT's finest”? Their book is merely mediocre (perhaps AM was just doing his part to promote attendance at CNAS’s inaugural book release party for “Counterstrike” on September 8th).

However, “Counterstrike” does describe two of the “secret” intelligence coups that largely contributed to the "success" of the Iraq surge: “What was pulled out of the Taji trove was so valuable that one military officer compared it to the allies success in breaking the Nazis’ Enigma codes during WWII” and “General Petreaus said the overall Sinjar effort did more to halt the terror networks that flowed foreign fighters and suicide bombers into Iraq than any other operation.”

However, the authors didn’t describe the role of torture (“harsh interrogation” in Washingtonese) in the secret campaign. They only briefly allude to its use at Camp Nama by special forces under Gen. McChrystal’s JSOC command. But, apparently, the authors didn’t believe that torture contributed much to success against Al Qaeda: “The process of “massing intelligence” on an individual has proven to be a more valuable tool than harsh interrogation techniques…”

However, Gen. McChrystal was praised for changing the culture of handling intelligence (also noted by the author of “Operation Dark Heart”): “Across the military and intelligence community, General McChrystal was credited with commanding missions that captured and killed more of America’s adversaries than any other living officer. But his legacy in shifting the culture of handling intelligence is just as important.” McChrystal told the authors that “the secret to his counterterrorism efforts had been to break down walls that had divided the military and intelligence communities.”

As AM noted above, CNAS supported the authors’ during the writing of their book: “CNAS in Washington allowed each of us to spend 90 days [Fall 2009] as a “writer in residence” to work on Counterstrike … it is a place where many of the sharpest thinkers on national security hang their hat or pass through for coffee or lunch.”

I’m sure AM is among that elect (although, unlike Bob Woodward did in “Obama’s Wars”, Shanker & Schmitt neglected to mention him by name or acknowledge his blog).

[If interested, more on AM & CNAS & Shanker in "He Who Shall Not Be Fact-Checked" & "Lies Borne Out by Facts, If Not the Truth", etc. posted at http://www.feralfirefighter.blogspot.com

Note: Originally posted late SU 8-28-11. Deleted by moderator.

Cute joke on McCain AM. I'm

Cute joke on McCain AM. I'm sure he would think you're a twit for that comment.

As for counter-terrorism in the U.S., NYPD and Fairfax PD have a lot in common these days and are using the same techniques on U.S. citizens. Read the FBI's Unified Crime Report annual statistics for wire tapping / Title III warrants. The amount applied for and breakdown of the police agencies who apply for them / location is published annually. This will shows a much larger picture of what's going on within our own boarders concerning counter-terrorism.

Below is an editorial I read the other day.

http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/article/20110828/NEWS/110829780/1012?Title...

EDITORIAL: Accountability still necessary in police actions
Published: Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 3:30 a.m.

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