Newsweek

Fighting From Afar

Can Joe Biden’s ‘over-the-horizon’ strategy in Afghanista­n keep America safe? Defense experts are skeptical

- BY BILL POWELL @Billasia20­10

Can the U.S. Battle Terrorism “Over the Horizon”?

Within the Biden White house, and in corners of the U.S. military and intelligen­ce bureaucrac­y, it is the phrase of the moment: “over the horizon.”

The expression refers to efforts to counter terrorism from afar, without troops on the ground, and it has been in the defense lexicon dating back to the Cold War. The appeal is obvious: When dealing with threats like Al-qaeda or like-minded terrorist groups, why bother with dangerous, forward deployed missions in unstable places like Afghanista­n, Iraq, Syria or North Africa, when you can launch a Tomahawk missile from somewhere in the Arabian Sea and be done with it? “Over the horizon,” to Joe Biden, means the end of “endless wars.” You can hit the enemy from above, and from far away. Thus, we can bug out of Afghanista­n and not worry about it.

Biden has used the phrase before in reference to Afghanista­n; so have Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and chairman of the Joint Chiefs Mark Milley. The latest iteration came during the president’s August 16 speech following the fall of the Afghan capital of Kabul to the Taliban. Trying to reassure the nation that pulling U.S. forces out of the country would not interfere with the critical objective of preventing a terrorist attack on American soil, Biden said, “We’ve developed counterter­rorism over-the-horizon capability that will allow us to keep our eyes firmly fixed on the direct threats to the United States in the region, and act quickly and decisively if needed.”

The problem: While the strategy is politicall­y popular among a war-weary public, in defense and intelligen­ce circles in Washington, and among U.S. allies, “over the horizon” is a deeply controvers­ial— and mostly unpopular—concept.

To understand why, think back to the 1990s. After Al-qaeda’s twin attacks on U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998, then-president Bill Clinton ordered the launch of Tomahawk missile strikes into Afghanista­n and Sudan, trying to hit the terrorist group’s training bases and take out Osama Bin Laden. The target was missed, taking out a pharmaceut­ical factory in the process. Back then, points out Bradley Bowman, a veteran of the war in Afghanista­n and now senior director of the Cen

ter on Military and Political Power at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracie­s, a nonpartisa­n Washington think tank, “over the horizon” became a pejorative. It was the definition of what smart counterter­rorism wasn’t.

Effective counterter­rorism, defense strategist­s believe, requires the ability to act on accurate and timely informatio­n. David Kilcullen, a former soldier and Australian intelligen­ce officer who advised General David Petraeus during the 2007 “surge” in Iraq that sharply increased ground forces there, says that is the central the flaw in any “over-the-horizon” counterter­rorism strategy. A missile fired from a submarine in the Arabian Sea takes about an hour to reach Afghanista­n, and it takes two hours to feed targeting informatio­n to the sub before launch. The intelligen­ce must be good enough to know where a target will be several hours in advance.

Contrast that with a special operations unit forward deployed at a base say 15 minutes or a half an hour helicopter ride from a target. The advantage of the ability to move more quickly on fresh intelligen­ce from a forward operating base is obvious. This was the core of General Stanley Mcchrystal’s famously lethal Task Force 714, which dismantled Al-qaeda’s secret network of operations in Iraq—“and was subsequent­ly replicated in Afghanista­n,” Kilcullen notes.

Earlier this summer, William Burns, Biden’s CIA director, said in an interview with National Public Radio, that the U.S. would retain “significan­t capabiliti­es both in and around Afghanista­n” to deter terrorist activities. But as of today there is not a functionin­g U.S. embassy in Kabul from which to run intelligen­ce gathering, and no neighborin­g country has agreed to house U.S. counterter­rorism forces.

Good Intelligen­ce Is Key

technology has, of course, improved considerab­ly since the first initial U.S. strikes against Al-qaeda in 1998. Satellites can not only see where a terrorist suspect is, it can pick up what he’s eating for breakfast. Drones, as Barack Obama showed during his time in office—the president ordered more than 500 strikes in the eight years of his administra­tion—have become a lethal delivery mechanism. With good intelligen­ce, a former counterter­rorism official during the Obama years, says “over the horizon’’ can work, but over time, “the effectiven­ess goes down and the risk goes up.” And without good intelligen­ce, over the horizon “becomes close to impossible.”

The reason: Intelligen­ce analysts usually spend significan­t amounts of time verifying where a potential target will be and for how long. They must also assess the potential for “collateral damage,” or innocents who might be in the line of fire should a strike occur. In the vast majority of cases, this is done with informatio­n provided by

“The internatio­nal terrorist threats in Afghanista­n and neighborin­g Pakistan will not disappear after America leaves.”

human intelligen­ce—sources on the ground. Without forward operating bases or an embassy in a country such as Afghanista­n, that task becomes more difficult.

Even with an on-the-ground presence, intelligen­ce is often hit-andmiss, as the Taliban’s swift takeover of the country indicates. U.S. officials had apparently missed the extent to which the Taliban had cut deals with local and provincial officials outside of Kabul to have Afghan National Security Forces lay down their arms as the offensive gathered momentum.

Biden argued in his speech Monday that the U.S. has conducted effective strikes in countries where we don’t have a “permanent military presence.” This, his critics says, was rhetorical sleight of hand. The U.S. does not have “permanent bases” in, for example, Syria or Somalia, but it does have troops there, working with local partners. “A straw man,” says one current counterror­ism official who did not want to speak for the record.

The choice to abandon Afghanista­n entirely and rely on “OTH,” as the intelligen­ce official calls it, is thus causing heartburn among many at the Pentagon and the CIA. Though Secretary of State Antony Blinken recently said that Al-qaeda’s presence in Afghanista­n has been “degraded,” that doesn’t mean they are not there. Many of its fighters remain just across the border in Pakistan and, as of last year, there was at least one training camp in Afghanista­n.

One of the surprises, moreover, of the stunningly swift Taliban takeover of the country was how they were able to seize territory in the north—areas not traditiona­lly sympatheti­c to the ethnic Pashtuns who dominate the group. They were able to do so, in part, by working with Al-qaeda affiliates from neighborin­g Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

New Dangers Lurking

Pessimists now Worry that Al-qaeda and indeed the entire jihadi movement will be energized by the Taliban’s swift victory, and that new dangers will emerge. Al-qaeda leader Ayman al-zawahiri has portrayed the Taliban’s “Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n’’ as the cornerston­e of a new caliphate, telling his followers around the globe that they should emulate it as a model for Islamic governance.

“The internatio­nal terrorist threats in both Afghanista­n and neighborin­g Pakistan will not disappear after America leaves,” says Thomas Joscelyn, a senior editor at the FDD’S Long War Journal and a longtime student of Al-qaeda and the Taliban.

Worse, the fear is, that in the age of “over-the-horizon” counterter­rorism, those threats will intensify. The notion that Al-qaeda in Afghanista­n is eliminated is “dangerousl­y mistaken,” says Nathan Sales, a former ambassador at large for counterter­rorism at the State Department during the Trump administra­tion, who is now on the advisory board at the Counter Extremism Project, a nonpartisa­n New York-based think tank.

“The minute you take the pressure off, you give the networks space to reconstitu­te themselves,” Sales says. “They are not done. They are going to reconstitu­te themselves, if we give them the space.”

For now, though, that is precisely what Washington has done.

 ??  ?? WHAT’S NEXT? After the Taliban’s swift victory in Afghanista­n, defense experts are keeping a keen eye on terrorist threats to the U.S. in the region.
WHAT’S NEXT? After the Taliban’s swift victory in Afghanista­n, defense experts are keeping a keen eye on terrorist threats to the U.S. in the region.
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 ??  ?? LIKE-MINDED Both Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (left) and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley support an overthe-horizon approach to fight terrorism.
LIKE-MINDED Both Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin (left) and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley support an overthe-horizon approach to fight terrorism.
 ??  ?? BAD OUTCOME After attacks on two U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998 (here, rescue workers search the rubble), missile strikes against Al-qaeda in Afghanista­n and Sudan missed their targets.
BAD OUTCOME After attacks on two U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998 (here, rescue workers search the rubble), missile strikes against Al-qaeda in Afghanista­n and Sudan missed their targets.

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