The Columbus Dispatch

Recently assertive CIA expands Taliban hunt

- By Thomas Gibbons-Neff, Eric Schmitt and Adam Goldman

WASHINGTON — 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 U. S. officials, the latest sign of the agency’s increasing­ly integral role in President Donald Trump’s counterter­rorism strategy.

The assignment marks a shift for the CIA in the country, where it had primarily been focused on defeating al- Qaida and helping the Afghan intelligen­ce service. The CIA has traditiona­lly been resistant to an openended 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. The agency is already poised to broaden its program of covert drone strikes into Afghanista­n; it had largely been centered on the tribal regions of Pakistan, with occasional strikes in Syria and Yemen.

“We can’t perform our mission if we’re not aggressive,” Pompeo said at a security conference this month at the University of Texas. “This is unforgivin­g, relentless. You pick the word. Every minute, we have to be focused on crushing our enemies.”

The CIA declined to comment on its expanded role in Afghanista­n, which will

put more lower-level Taliban militants in its cross hairs. But the mission is a tacit acknowledg­ment that to bring the Taliban to the negotiatin­g table — a key component of Trump’s strategy for the country — the United States will need to aggressive­ly fight the insurgents.

In outlining his security policies for Afghanista­n and the rest of South Asia this summer, Trump vowed to loosen restrictio­ns on hunting terrorists.

“The killers need to know they have nowhere to hide, that no place is beyond the reach of American might and American arms,” Trump said. “Retributio­n will be fast and powerful.”

The CIA’s expanded role will augment missions carried out by military units, meaning more of the United States’ combat role in Afghanista­n will be hidden from public view. At the height of the conflict, U.S. Special Operations troops hunted Taliban bomb makers, including with night raids. Now, with Afghan commando forces and their Western partners focused primarily on retaking territory from the Taliban and the Islamic State, the agency’s teams will concentrat­e on hunting these types of threats, according to the officials.

The new effort will be led by small units known as counterter­rorism pursuit teams. They are managed by CIA paramilita­ry officers from the agency’s Special Activities Division and operatives from the National Directorat­e of Security, Afghanista­n’s intelligen­ce arm, and include elite U.S. troops from the Joint Special Operations Command. The majority of the forces, however, are Afghan militia members.

For years, the primary job of the CIA’s paramilita­ry officers in the country has been training the Afghan militias. The CIA has also used members of these indigenous militias to develop informant networks and collect intelligen­ce.

The U.S. commandos — part of the Pentagon’s Omega program, which lends Special Operations forces to the CIA — allow the Afghan militias to work together with convention­al troops by calling in airstrikes and medical evacuation­s.

In the past, the counterter­rorism pursuit teams have operated in Afghanista­n’s southern provinces and near its mountainou­s border with Pakistan in the northeast, sometimes even undertakin­g raids to go after militants across the border.

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