A
Secret Deal on Drones, Sealed in Blood
6
April, 2013
Nek
Muhammad knew he was being followed.
On
a hot day in June 2004, the Pashtun tribesman was lounging inside a
mud compound in South Waziristan, speaking by satellite phone to one
of the many reporters who regularly interviewed him on how he had
fought and humbled Pakistan’s army in the country’s western
mountains. He asked one of his followers about the strange, metallic
bird hovering above him.
Less
than 24 hours later, a missile tore through the compound, severing
Mr. Muhammad’s left leg and killing him and several others,
including two boys, ages 10 and 16. A Pakistani military spokesman
was quick to claim responsibility for the attack, saying that
Pakistani forces had fired at the compound.
That
was a lie.
Mr.
Muhammad and his followers had been killed by the C.I.A., the first
time it had deployed a Predator drone in Pakistan to carry out a
“targeted killing.” The target was not a top operative of Al
Qaeda, but a Pakistani ally of the Taliban who led a tribal rebellion
and was marked by Pakistan as an enemy of the state. In a secret
deal, the C.I.A. had agreed to kill him in exchange for access to
airspace it had long sought so it could use drones to hunt down its
own enemies.
That
back-room bargain, described in detail for the first time in
interviews with more than a dozen officials in Pakistan and the
United States, is critical to understanding the origins of a covert
drone war that began under the Bush administration, was embraced and
expanded by President Obama, and is now the subject of fierce debate.
The deal, a month after a blistering internal report about abuses in
the C.I.A.’s network of secret prisons, paved the way for the
C.I.A. to change its focus from capturing terrorists to killing them,
and helped transform an agency that began as a cold war espionage
service into a paramilitary organization.
The
C.I.A. has since conducted hundreds of drone strikes in Pakistan that
have killed thousands of people, Pakistanis and Arabs, militants and
civilians alike. While it was not the first country where the United
States used drones, it became the laboratory for the targeted killing
operations that have come to define a new American way of fighting,
blurring the line between soldiers and spies and short-circuiting the
normal mechanisms by which the United States as a nation goes to war.
Neither
American nor Pakistani officials have ever publicly acknowledged what
really happened to Mr. Muhammad — details of the strike that killed
him, along with those of other secret strikes, are still hidden in
classified government databases. But in recent months, calls for
transparency from members of Congress and critics on both the right
and left have put pressure on Mr. Obama and his new C.I.A. director,
John O. Brennan, to offer a fuller explanation of the goals and
operation of the drone program, and of the agency’s role.
Mr.
Brennan, who began his career at the C.I.A. and over the past four
years oversaw an escalation of drone strikes from his office at the
White House, has signaled that he hopes to return the agency to its
traditional role of intelligence collection and analysis. But with a
generation of C.I.A. officers now fully engaged in a new mission, it
is an effort that could take years.
Today,
even some of the people who were present at the creation of the drone
program think the agency should have long given up targeted killings.
Ross
Newland, who was a senior official at the C.I.A.’s headquarters in
Langley, Va., when the agency was given the authority to kill Qaeda
operatives, says he thinks that the agency had grown too comfortable
with remote-control killing, and that drones have turned the C.I.A.
into the villain in countries like Pakistan, where it should be
nurturing relationships in order to gather intelligence.
As
he puts it, “This is just not an intelligence mission.”
From
Car Thief to Militant
By
2004, Mr. Muhammad had become the undisputed star of the tribal
areas, the fierce mountain lands populated by the Wazirs, Mehsuds and
other Pashtun tribes who for decades had lived independent of the
writ of the central government in Islamabad. A brash member of the
Wazir tribe, Mr. Muhammad had raised an army to fight government
troops and had forced the government into negotiations. He saw no
cause for loyalty to the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence,
the Pakistani military spy service that had given an earlier
generation of Pashtuns support during the war against the Soviets.
Many
Pakistanis in the tribal areas viewed with disdain the alliance that
President Pervez Musharraf had forged with the United States after
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. They regarded the Pakistani military
that had entered the tribal areas as no different from the Americans
— who they believed had begun a war of aggression in Afghanistan,
just as the Soviets had years earlier.
Born
near Wana, the bustling market hub of South Waziristan, Mr. Muhammad
spent his adolescent years as a petty car thief and shopkeeper in the
city’s bazaar. He found his calling in 1993, around the age of 18,
when he was recruited to fight with the Taliban in Afghanistan, and
rose quickly through the group’s military hierarchy. He cut a
striking figure on the battlefield with his long face and flowing jet
black hair.
When
the Americans invaded Afghanistan in 2001, he seized an opportunity
to host the Arab and Chechen fighters from Al Qaeda who crossed into
Pakistan to escape the American bombing.
For
Mr. Muhammad, it was partly a way to make money, but he also saw
another use for the arriving fighters. With their help, over the next
two years he launched a string of attacks on Pakistani military
installations and on American firebases in Afghanistan.
C.I.A.
officers in Islamabad urged Pakistani spies to lean on the Waziri
tribesman to hand over the foreign fighters, but under Pashtun tribal
customs that would be treachery. Reluctantly, Mr. Musharraf ordered
his troops into the forbidding mountains to deliver rough justice to
Mr. Muhammad and his fighters, hoping the operation might put a stop
to the attacks on Pakistani soil, including two attempts on his life
in December 2003.
But
it was only the beginning. In March 2004, Pakistani helicopter
gunships and artillery pounded Wana and its surrounding villages.
Government troops shelled pickup trucks that were carrying civilians
away from the fighting and destroyed the compounds of tribesmen
suspected of harboring foreign fighters. The Pakistani commander
declared the operation an unqualified success, but for Islamabad, it
had not been worth the cost in casualties.
A
cease-fire was negotiated in April during a hastily arranged meeting
in South Waziristan, during which a senior Pakistani commander hung a
garland of bright flowers around Mr. Muhammad’s neck. The two men
sat together and sipped tea as photographers and television cameras
recorded the event.
Both
sides spoke of peace, but there was little doubt who was negotiating
from strength. Mr. Muhammad would later brag that the government had
agreed to meet inside a religious madrasa rather than in a public
location where tribal meetings are traditionally held. “I did not
go to them; they came to my place,” he said. “That should make it
clear who surrendered to whom.”
The
peace arrangement propelled Mr. Muhammad to new fame, and the truce
was soon exposed as a sham. He resumed attacks against Pakistani
troops, and Mr. Musharraf ordered his army back on the offensive in
South Waziristan.
Pakistani
officials had, for several years, balked at the idea of allowing
armed C.I.A. Predators to roam their skies. They considered drone
flights a violation of sovereignty, and worried that they would
invite further criticism of Mr. Musharraf as being Washington’s
lackey. But Mr. Muhammad’s rise to power forced them to reconsider.
The
C.I.A. had been monitoring the rise of Mr. Muhammad, but officials
considered him to be more Pakistan’s problem than America’s. In
Washington, officials were watching with growing alarm the gathering
of Qaeda operatives in the tribal areas, and George J. Tenet, the
C.I.A. director, authorized officers in the agency’s Islamabad
station to push Pakistani officials to allow armed drones.
Negotiations were handled primarily by the Islamabad station.
As
the battles raged in South Waziristan, the station chief in Islamabad
paid a visit to Gen. Ehsan ul Haq, the ISI chief, and made an offer:
If the C.I.A. killed Mr. Muhammad, would the ISI allow regular armed
drone flights over the tribal areas?
In
secret negotiations, the terms of the bargain were set. Pakistani
intelligence officials insisted that they be allowed to approve each
drone strike, giving them tight control over the list of targets. And
they insisted that drones fly only in narrow parts of the tribal
areas — ensuring that they would not venture where Islamabad did
not want the Americans going: Pakistan’s nuclear facilities, and
the mountain camps where Kashmiri militants were trained for attacks
in India.
The
ISI and the C.I.A. agreed that all drone flights in Pakistan would
operate under the C.I.A.’s covert action authority — meaning that
the United States would never acknowledge the missile strikes and
that Pakistan would either take credit for the individual killings or
remain silent.
"In
Pakistan, things fall out of the sky all the time." PERVEZ
MUSHARRAF, the Pakistani president whose government reached a deal
with the C.I.A., allowing it to carry out secret drone strikes in
Pakistan.
Mr.
Musharraf did not think that it would be difficult to keep up the
ruse. As he told one C.I.A. officer: “In Pakistan, things fall out
of the sky all the time.”
A
New Direction
As
the negotiations were taking place, the C.I.A.’s inspector general,
John L. Helgerson, had just finished a searing report about the abuse
of detainees in the C.I.A.’s secret prisons. The report kicked out
the foundation upon which the C.I.A. detention and interrogation
program had rested. It was perhaps the single most important reason
for the C.I.A.’s shift from capturing to killing terrorism
suspects.
The
greatest impact of Mr. Helgerson’s report was felt at the C.I.A.’s
Counterterrorism Center, or CTC, which was at the vanguard of the
agency’s global antiterrorism operation. The center had focused on
capturing Qaeda operatives; questioning them in C.I.A. jails or
outsourcing interrogations to the spy services of Pakistan, Jordan,
Egypt and other nations; and then using the information to hunt more
terrorism suspects.
Mr.
Helgerson raised questions about whether C.I.A. officers might face
criminal prosecution for the interrogations carried out in the secret
prisons, and he suggested that interrogation methods like
waterboarding, sleep deprivation and the exploiting of the phobias of
prisoners — like confining them in a small box with live bugs —
violated the United Nations Convention Against Torture.
“The
agency faces potentially serious long-term political and legal
challenges as a result of the CTC detention and interrogation
program,” the report concluded, given the brutality of the
interrogation techniques and the “inability of the U.S. government
to decide what it will ultimately do with the terrorists detained by
the agency.”
The
report was the beginning of the end for the program. The prisons
would stay open for several more years, and new detainees were
occasionally picked up and taken to secret sites, but at Langley,
senior C.I.A. officers began looking for an endgame to the prison
program. One C.I.A. operative told Mr. Helgerson’s team that
officers from the agency might one day wind up on a “wanted list”
and be tried for war crimes in an international court.
The
ground had shifted, and counterterrorism officials began to rethink
the strategy for the secret war. Armed drones, and targeted killings
in general, offered a new direction. Killing by remote control was
the antithesis of the dirty, intimate work of interrogation. Targeted
killings were cheered by Republicans and Democrats alike, and using
drones flown by pilots who were stationed thousands of miles away
made the whole strategy seem risk-free.
Before
long the C.I.A. would go from being the long-term jailer of America’s
enemies to a military organization that erased them.
Not
long before, the agency had been deeply ambivalent about drone
warfare.
The
Predator had been considered a blunt and unsophisticated killing
tool, and many at the C.I.A. were glad that the agency had gotten out
of the assassination business long ago. Three years before Mr.
Muhammad’s death, and one year before the C.I.A. carried out its
first targeted killing outside a war zone — in Yemen in 2002 — a
debate raged over the legality and morality of using drones to kill
suspected terrorists.
A
new generation of C.I.A. officers had ascended to leadership
positions, having joined the agency after the 1975 Congressional
committee led by Senator Frank Church, Democrat of Idaho, which
revealed extensive C.I.A. plots to kill foreign leaders, and
President Gerald Ford’s subsequent ban on assassinations. The rise
to power of this post-Church generation had a direct impact on the
type of clandestine operations the C.I.A. chose to conduct.
The
debate pitted a group of senior officers at the Counterterrorism
Center against James L. Pavitt, the head of the C.I.A.’s
clandestine service, and others who worried about the repercussions
of the agency’s getting back into assassinations. Mr. Tenet told
the 9/11 commission that he was not sure that a spy agency should be
flying armed drones.
John
E. McLaughlin, then the C.I.A.’s deputy director, who the 9/11
commission reported had raised concerns about the C.I.A.’s being in
charge of the Predator, said: “You can’t underestimate the
cultural change that comes with gaining lethal authority.
“When
people say to me, ‘It’s not a big deal,’ ” he said, “I say
to them, ‘Have you ever killed anyone?’
“It
is a big deal. You start thinking about things differently,” he
added. But after the Sept. 11 attacks, these concerns about the use
of the C.I.A. to kill were quickly swept side.
The
Account at the Time
After
Mr. Muhammad was killed, his dirt grave in South Waziristan became a
site of pilgrimage. A Pakistani journalist, Zahid Hussain, visited it
days after the drone strike and saw a makeshift sign displayed on the
grave: “He lived and died like a true Pashtun.”
Maj.
Gen. Shaukat Sultan, Pakistan’s top military spokesman, told
reporters at the time that “Al Qaeda facilitator” Nek Muhammad
and four other “militants” had been killed in a rocket attack by
Pakistani troops.
Any
suggestion that Mr. Muhammad was killed by the Americans, or with
American assistance, he said, was “absolutely absurd.”

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