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New Plans Foresee Fighting Terrorism Beyond War Zones
Pentagon to Rely on Special Operations

By Ann Scott Tyson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 23, 2006; A01

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has approved the military's most
ambitious plan yet to fight terrorism around the world and retaliate more
rapidly and decisively in the case of another major terrorist attack on
the United States, according to defense officials.

The long-awaited campaign plan for the global war on terrorism, as well as
two subordinate plans also approved within the past month by Rumsfeld, are
considered the Pentagon's highest priority, according to officials
familiar with the three documents who spoke on the condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to speak about them publicly.

Details of the plans are secret, but in general they envision a
significantly expanded role for the military -- and, in particular, a
growing force of elite Special Operations troops -- in continuous
operations to combat terrorism outside of war zones such as Iraq and
Afghanistan. Developed over about three years by the Special Operations
Command (SOCOM) in Tampa, the plans reflect a beefing up of the Pentagon's
involvement in domains traditionally handled by the Central Intelligence
Agency and the State Department.

For example, SOCOM has dispatched small teams of Army Green Berets and
other Special Operations troops to U.S. embassies in about 20 countries in
the Middle East, Asia, Africa and Latin America, where they do operational
planning and intelligence gathering to enhance the ability to conduct
military operations where the United States is not at war.

And in a subtle but important shift contained in a classified order last
year, the Pentagon gained the leeway to inform -- rather than gain the
approval of -- the U.S. ambassador before conducting military operations
in a foreign country, according to several administration officials. "We
do not need ambassador-level approval," said one defense official familiar
with the order.

Overall, the plans underscore Rumsfeld's conviction since the September
2001 terrorist attacks that the U.S. military must expand its mission
beyond 20th-century conventional warfare by infantry, tanks, ships and
fighter jets to fighting non-state groups that are, above all, difficult
to find.

The plans each run more than 100 pages and cover a wide range of overt and
clandestine military activities -- such as man-hunting and intelligence
gathering on terrorist networks; attacks on terrorist training camps and
recruiting efforts; and partnering with foreign militaries to eliminate
terrorist sanctuaries. Together, they amount to an assignment of
responsibilities to different military commands to conduct what the
Pentagon envisions as a "long war" against terrorism.

The main campaign plan sets priorities, allocates resources such as
manpower and funding, and coordinates operations among regional military
commands to implement the Pentagon's broader National Military Strategic
Plan for the War on Terrorism, published in unclassified form in February.
It lays out nine key goals, such as targeting terrorist leaders, safe
havens, communications and other logistical support, and countering
extremist ideology.

A second detailed plan is focused specifically on al-Qaeda and associated
movements, including more than a dozen groups spread across the Middle
East, Central Asia, Southeast Asia and Africa. Such groups include the
Egyptian Islamic Jihad and Ansar al-Islam in the Middle East, Jemaah
Islamiya in Indonesia, and the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat in
Saharan Africa.

A third plan sets out how the military can both disrupt and respond to
another major terrorist strike on the United States. It includes lengthy
annexes that offer a menu of options for the military to retaliate quickly
against specific terrorist groups, individuals or state sponsors depending
on who is believed to be behind an attack. Another attack could create
both a justification and an opportunity that is lacking today to retaliate
against some known targets, according to current and former defense
officials familiar with the plan.

This plan details "what terrorists or bad guys we would hit if the gloves
came off. The gloves are not off," said one official, who asked not to be
identified because of the sensitivity of the subject.

The Pentagon declined to comment on the counterterrorism plans or their
approval, citing longstanding policy. "We do not discuss contingency plans
or future operations," said Cmdr. Greg Hicks, a Defense Department
spokesman. SOCOM's deputy commander, Vice Adm. Eric T. Olson, said earlier
this month in Senate testimony that the plans had been approved.

Special Operations Command, led by Gen. Doug Brown, has been building up
its headquarters and writing the plans since 2003, when Rumsfeld first
designated it as the lead command for the war on terrorism. Its budget has
grown 60 percent since 2003 to $8 billion in fiscal 2007. President Bush
empowered the 53,000-strong command with coordinating the entire
military's efforts in counterterrorism in 2004.

"SOCOM is, in fact, in charge of the global war on terror," Brown said in
testimony before the House last month. In this role, SOCOM directs and
coordinates actions by the military's regional combatant commands. SOCOM,
if directed, can also command its own counterterrorist operations -- such
as when a threat spans regional boundaries or the mission is highly
sensitive -- but it has not done so yet, according to Olson, and other
officials say that is likely to be the exception to the rule.

To extend its reach to more countries, SOCOM is increasing by 13,000 the
number of Special Operations troops, including Special Forces soldiers
skilled in language and working with indigenous militaries, and Delta
Force operatives and Navy SEAL teams that form clandestine "special
mission units" engaged in reconnaissance, intelligence gathering and
man-hunting. Already, SOCOM is seeing its biggest deployments in history,
with 7,000 troops overseas today, but the majority have been concentrated
in Iraq and Afghanistan, with 85 percent last year in the Middle East,
Central Asia or the Horn of Africa.

But SOCOM's more robust role -- while adding manpower, specialized skills
and organization to the fight against terrorism -- has also led to some
bureaucratic tensions, both inside the military with the joint staff and
regional commands, as well as with the CIA and State Department. Such
tensions are one reason SOCOM's plan took years.

When SOCOM first dispatched military liaison teams abroad starting in
2003, they were called "Operational Control Elements," a term changed last
year because "it raised the hackles of regional commanders and
ambassadors. It was a bad choice of language," said one defense official,
adding: "Who can pick on Military Liaison Elements?"

State Department officials, meanwhile, said that although, for the most
part, cooperation with the military teams has been good, they remain
concerned over continued "gray areas" regarding their status. "Special Ops
wants the flexibility and speed to go in there. . . . but there's
understandably questions of how you do that and how you have clear lines
of authority," one U.S. official said. There remains "continuing
discussion, to put it politely, in terms of how this is going to work,"
the official said. SOCOM says the teams work for the regional commanders.

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