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STRATFOR GLOBAL INTELLIGENCE UPDATE
False leads foil hunt for bin Laden, Omar
Pentagon frustrated with CIA's performance in Afghanistan

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A jury-rigged and underdeveloped intelligence system in Afghanistan is
providing little solid information in the hunt for Taliban and al-Qaida
leaders. Inexperienced field agents and poor analysis of raw intelligence are
slowing the U.S. military's progress in the search while creating tension
between the Pentagon and the intelligence community.

Although this divide largely has been kept under wraps, the internal argument
broke into the open during a Jan. 7 Pentagon briefing. Rear Adm. John
Stufflebeem, a Pentagon spokesman and deputy director for operations,
suggested a shift in U.S. military operations when he remarked, "We're going
to stop chasing the shadows of where we thought (Osama bin Laden) was and
focus more on the entire picture of the country,'' according to the
Associated Press.

Stufflebeem's not-so-subtle public lambasting of U.S. intelligence agencies –
including the CIA – comes after numerous widely reported but so-far fruitless
searches for bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar. Constant
media reports predicting the imminent capture of top Taliban or al-Qaida
leaders are unduly raising the expectations of the American public, putting
the White House and Pentagon at risk of losing credibility if further
publicized operations achieve few concrete results.

The Pentagon essentially is admitting it doesn't know the locations of bin
Laden or Omar. Even worse, it now apparently has little confidence that U.S.
intelligence will find them anytime soon. Complaints about "chasing shadows"
are a swipe at all intelligence operatives who have been flooding the
Pentagon with unconfirmed reports straight from the mouths of Afghan sources
who often have their own agendas and limitations.

The Pentagon's patience may have finally reached its limit after the most
recent operation to apprehend Omar. U.S. military forces spent the weekend
doing house-to-house searches in the southern Afghan city of Baghran, looking
for the Taliban leader or some of the reported 1,000 loyalist fighters
protecting him.

But Omar was nowhere to be found, and the latest reports now approach the
ridiculous, suggesting that he escaped the area on a motorcycle and took
along $1 million for gas money. In the past month, U.S. intelligence had Omar
hiding in several locations throughout the Helmand and Oruzgan provinces. But
each time after focusing its efforts on a specific location, the U.S.
military came away empty-handed.

The Pentagon has a legitimate gripe. The CIA and other agencies had very few
assets – especially human sources – in Afghanistan before Sept. 11 and had
to slap together a working intelligence network as fast as possible in the
aftermath. Relationships and procedures that normally take months to
establish were thrown together in days.

What resulted was a quick rise in the quantity of information flowing back to
Washington. The Pentagon's point is that this pipeline has produced an awful
lot of sludge and very few gems.

There is a strong possibility that much of the bad intelligence is coming
from individual Afghans who are manipulating inexperienced U.S. field agents
for their own gain. Right now the CIA has dozens of 30-something, earnest
field agents running around Afghanistan, keeping one hand on a satellite
phone and the other on a case full of hundred dollar bills.

Most of these agents were shifted to Afghan duty within the past few months
and plan to use hard work to make up for inexperience. Few speak the local
dialects, and even fewer have long-term relationships with any of their
sources.

On the other side of the payoff are cagey and ruthless Afghan clan leaders or
warlords, who trade purported knowledge of the whereabouts of Omar or bin
Laden for cash, weapons or food. They know how to exploit the inability of
many field agents to distinguish between credible and obviously false
reports. If he is particularly skillful, a good tribal leader also can
convince an operative that a local rival actually is harboring Omar and
should be bombed.

The result is that the CIA is confronted with a deluge of reports of
indeterminate credibility, a complicated but not necessarily unusual
situation. The problem is not only in the reporting but also in the analyzing
of information.

The CIA does not seem to have an efficient, centralized analytic apparatus,
one that can distinguish credible intelligence from fantasy. Instead, it
appears that most of the raw intelligence simply is being forwarded to the
Pentagon, where it is causing a great deal of consternation.

It is unclear whether Stufflebeem's comments are a signal of a shift in
military tactics in Afghanistan or simply a public warning to the
intelligence community to shape up. In either case the Pentagon still cannot
afford to ignore much of the intelligence it is getting, but it may take more
consideration before sending troops to search for merely another potential
"shadow."



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