The Commercial Appeal

Where’s list of our enemies?

- DOYLE MCMANUS Contact Los Angeles Times columnist Doyle McManus at doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com.

Who, exactly, is the enemy in the continuing U.S. war against terrorism?

In some cases, the answer is: It’s a secret

hen the United States began its war against al-Qaida after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the identity of the enemy was clear: Osama bin Laden and his followers, and the Taliban who protected them in Afghanista­n. Congress quickly passed a resolution authorizin­g President George W. Bush to use “all necessary and appropriat­e force” against anyone who “planned, authorized, committed or aided” the 9/11 attacks, plus anyone who harbored them.

That resolution, called the Authorizat­ion for the Use of Military Force, remains the legal underpinni­ng for most counterter­rorist operations today.

Since 2001, however, the target list has grown. Al-Qaida offshoots have sprung up in Yemen, Somalia, Libya, Mali and, now, Syria. Many of their members had nothing to do with 9/11. Most appear more interested in seizing power in their own countries than in striking the United States.

Neverthele­ss, both the Bush and Obama administra­tions decided the 2001 authorizat­ion (the AUMF, for short) covered any group affiliated with al-Qaida that plans operations against the United States or U.S. interests abroad.

In many cases, that’s a reasonably clear standard. When al-Qaida’s Yemen affiliate put a terrorist with explosives in his underwear on a flight to Detroit, the target was plainly the United States.

But other cases are more ambiguous. Does the Shabab militia in Somalia qualify? They are Islamic terrorists and a danger to East Africa, but they pose little threat to the United States. Does Ansar al-Sharia, the group that attacked a U.S. mission in Libya last year but has loose ties to al-Qaida, fit in? What about AlNusra Front in Syria, a group born as part of the uprising against Bashar Assad?

All are violent extremists who might gladly kill Americans given the opportunit­y. But Congress certainly didn’t have them in mind when it approved the AUMF.

“None of us, not one who voted for it, could have envisioned we were voting for the longest war in American history, or that we were about to give future presidents the authority to fight terrorism as far-flung as Yemen and Somalia,” Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said recently.

So Congress is, belatedly, pondering whether the 12-year-old law needs to be revised. For some, like Durbin, the problem is that the resolution has turned into a blank check. For others, such as Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., the problem is that the AUMF doesn’t authorize action against terrorists who aren’t affiliated with al-Qaida. But both parties agree Congress ought to take a more explicit role in writing the rules for a war that appears likely to drag on for another decade or more.

At a stormy hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee last month, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the panel’s chairman, asked if he could see a list of organizati­ons the administra­tion considers al-Qaida affiliates.

Pentagon counterter­rorism chief Michael Sheehan sounded unenthusia­stic. “A lot of these groups … have very murky membership,” Sheehan said. “They change their name and they lie and obfuscate their activities. So I think it would be difficult for the Congress to get involved in trying to track the designatio­n of which are the affiliate forces. We know when we evaluate these forces what they’re up to.”

That answer — “trust us,” in effect — didn’t mollify Levin. He asked again for a list.

“I’m not sure there is a list per se,” Sheehan replied. But he promised to put one together.

I asked the committee and the Pentagon last week whether the list could be released. Neither gave a clear reply. If there is an enemies list, it is still secret.

If Congress does revise the AUMF, it’s unlikely to make much of a practical difference in the way the U.S. fights terrorists. Most members of Congress still support drone strikes against known terrorists, even U.S. citizens like Anwar Awlaki, who was killed by a drone strike in Yemen in 2011. They’d just like to be asked for permission before the war expands to new countries, such as Mali, where the U.S. aided French forces earlier this year.

The Constituti­on and internatio­nal law give the president the power to act in self-defense against any imminent threat, even without an AUMF.

So when President Obama endorsed the idea of revising the AUMF in his speech on counterter­rorism last month, he wasn’t giving up much. Congress was already looking at the issue. The effect, if any, will mostly be to limit the freedom of Obama’s successor to use force.

But the incumbent president can tell his Pentagon to be less secretive about the criteria it uses to decide which terrorists merit applicatio­n of U.S. military force. If there’s an enemies list, Congress and the public have a right to see it.

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