Springfield News-Sun

Biden counterter­ror strategy puts limits on armed drone use

- By Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Friday formally issued new guidance curtailing the use of armed drones outside of war zones as part of a new counterter­rorism strategy that places a greater priority on protecting civilian lives.

The new policies require presidenti­al approval before a suspected terrorist is added to the U.S. government’s target list for potential lethal action, including drone strikes and special operations raids, according to a senior administra­tion official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the classified memoranda.

The new guidance returns U.S. policies to where they were at the end of the Obama administra­tion, and it reverses former President Donald Trump’s more permissive rules that allowed lower-level officials more leeway when launching deadly strikes.

Biden had issued temporary restrictio­ns on the U.S. military and intelligen­ce community requiring presidenti­al sign-off for lethal actions outside of war zones when he took office. The new policies and strategy, which resulted from a review that began shortly after Inaugurati­on Day last year, formalize the directive. The strategy would require a subsequent president looking to reverse the new action in order to rescind Biden’s directive.

“President Biden’s formal counterter­rorism guidance directs his administra­tion to be discerning and agile in protecting Americans

against evolving global terrorist challenges,” said White House Homeland Security Adviser Liz Sherwood-randall in a statement.

The president’s guidance on use of lethal action and capture operations outside areas of active hostilitie­s “requires that U.S. counterter­rorism operations meet the highest standards of precision and rigor, including for identifyin­g appropriat­e targets and minimizing civilian casualties,” she said.

The guidance comes a day after U.S. forces killed three senior Islamic State leaders in two separate military operations in Syria Thursday, including a rare ground raid in a portion of the northeast that is controlled by the Syrian regime, U.S. officials said. Under Biden’s guidelines, though, Syria is considered a conflict zone, where specific presidenti­al approval isn’t necessaril­y required.

Strikes in Afghanista­n, where the U.S. in August killed al-qaeda leader Ayman al-zawahri at Biden’s direction, would require presidenti­al approval.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA / AP ?? President Biden, shown in Hagerstown, Md., Friday, issued new drones policy.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA / AP President Biden, shown in Hagerstown, Md., Friday, issued new drones policy.

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