“This
year, US Special Operations forces have already deployed to 135
nations, according to Ken McGraw, a spokesman for Special Operations
Command (SOCOM). That’s roughly 70 percent of the countries on the
planet. Every day, in fact, America’s most elite troops are
carrying out missions in 80 to 90 nations, practicing night raids or
sometimes conducting them for real, engaging in sniper training or
sometimes actually gunning down enemies from afar. As part of a
global engagement strategy of endless hush-hush operations conducted
on every continent but Antarctica, they have now eclipsed the number
and range of special ops missions undertaken at the height of the
conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
How
Many Wars Is the US Really Fighting?
Hint: the
answer is way more than you think.
By Nick
Turs
24 September, 2015
You
can find them in dusty, sunbaked badlands, moist tropical forests,
and the salty spray of third-world littorals. Standing in judgement,
buffeted by the rotor wash of a helicopter or sweltering beneath the
relentless desert sun, they instruct, yell, and cajole as skinnier
men play act under their watchful eyes. In many places, more than
their particular brand of camouflage, better boots, and designer gear
sets them apart. Their days are scented by stale sweat and gunpowder;
their nights are spent in rustic locales or third-world bars.
This
article originally appeared at TomDispatch.com. To stay on top of
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These
men—and they are mostly men—belong to an exclusive military
fraternity that traces its heritage back to the birth of the nation.
Typically, they’ve spent the better part of a decade as more
conventional soldiers, sailors, marines, or airmen before making the
cut. They’ve probably been deployed overseas four to 10 times. The
officers are generally approaching their mid-thirties; the enlisted
men, their late twenties. They’ve had more schooling than most in
the military. They’re likely to be married with a couple of kids.
And day after day, they carry out shadowy missions over much of the
planet: sometimes covert raids, more often hush-hush training
exercises from Chad to Uganda, Bahrain to Saudi Arabia, Albania to
Romania, Bangladesh to Sri Lanka, Belize to Uruguay. They belong to
the Special Operations forces (SOF), America’s most elite
troops—Army Green Berets and Navy SEALs, among others—and odds
are, if you throw a dart at a world map or stop a spinning globe with
your index finger and don’t hit water, they’ve been there
sometime in 2015.
THE
WIDE WORLD OF SPECIAL OPS
This
year, US Special Operations forces have already deployed to 135
nations, according to Ken McGraw, a spokesman for Special Operations
Command (SOCOM). That’s roughly 70 percent of the countries on the
planet. Every day, in fact, America’s most elite troops are
carrying out missions in 80 to 90 nations, practicing night raids or
sometimes conducting them for real, engaging in sniper training or
sometimes actually gunning down enemies from afar. As part of a
global engagement strategy of endless hush-hush operations conducted
on every continent but Antarctica, they have now eclipsed the number
and range of special ops missions undertaken at the height of the
conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In
the waning days of the Bush administration, Special Operations forces
(SOF) were reportedly deployed in only about 60 nations around the
world. By 2010, according to the Washington Post, that number had
swelled to 75. Three years later, it had jumped to 134 nations,
“slipping” to 133 last year, before reaching a new record of 135
this summer. This 80 percent increase over the last five years is
indicative of SOCOM’s exponential expansion which first shifted
into high gear following the 9/11 attacks.
Special
Operations Command’s funding, for example, has more than tripled
from about $3 billion in 2001 to nearly $10 billion in 2014 “constant
dollars,” according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO).
And this doesn’t include funding from the various service branches,
which SOCOM estimates at around another $8 billion annually, or other
undisclosed sums that the GAO was unable to track. The average number
of Special Operations forces deployed overseas has nearly tripled
during these same years, while SOCOM more than doubled its personnel
from about 33,000 in 2001 to nearly 70,000 now.
Each
day, according to SOCOM commander General Joseph Votel, approximately
11,000 special operators are deployed or stationed outside the United
States with many more on standby, ready to respond in the event of an
overseas crisis. “I think a lot of our resources are focused in
Iraq and in the Middle East, in Syria for right now. That’s really
where our head has been,” Votel told the Aspen Security Forum in
July. Still, he insisted his troops were not “doing anything on the
ground in Syria”—even if they had carried out a night raid there
a couple of months before and it was later revealed that they are
involved in a covert campaign of drone strikes in that country.
“I
think we are increasing our focus on Eastern Europe at this time,”
he added. “At the same time we continue to provide some level of
support on South America for Colombia and the other interests that we
have down there. And then of course we’re engaged out in the
Pacific with a lot of our partners, reassuring them and working those
relationships and maintaining our presence out there.”
In
reality, the average percentage of Special Operations forces deployed
to the Greater Middle East has decreased in recent years. Back in
2006, 85 percent of special operators were deployed in support of
Central Command or CENTCOM, the geographic combatant command (GCC)
that oversees operations in the region. By last year, that number had
dropped to 69 percent, according to GAO figures. Over that same span,
Northern Command—devoted to homeland defense—held steady at 1
percent, European Command (EUCOM) doubled its percentage, from 3
percent to 6 percent, Pacific Command (PACOM) increased from 7
percent to 10 percent, and Southern Command, which overseas Central
and South America as well as the Caribbean, inched up from 3 percent
to 4 percent. The largest increase, however, was in a region
conspicuously absent from Votel’s rundown of special ops
deployments. In 2006, just 1 percent of the special operators
deployed abroad were sent to Africa Command’s area of operations.
Last year, it was 10 percent.
Globetrotting
is SOCOM’s stock in trade and, not coincidentally, it’s divided
into a collection of planet-girding “sub-unified commands”: the
self-explanatory SOCAFRICA; SOCEUR, the European contingent; SOCCENT,
the sub-unified command of CENTCOM; SOCKOR, which is devoted strictly
to Korea; SOCPAC, which covers the rest of the Asia-Pacific region;
SOCSOUTH, which conducts missions in Central America, South America,
and the Caribbean; SOCNORTH, which is devoted to “homeland
defense”; and the ever-itinerant Joint Special Operations Command
or JSOC, a clandestine sub-command (formerly headed by Votel) made up
of personnel from each service branch, including SEALs, Air Force
special tactics airmen, and the Army’s Delta Force that specializes
in tracking and killing suspected terrorists.
The
elite of the elite in the special ops community, JSOC takes on
covert, clandestine, and low-visibility operations in the hottest of
hot spots. Some covert ops that have come to light in recent years
include a host of Delta Force missions: among them, an operation in
May in which members of the elite force killed an Islamic State
commander known as Abu Sayyaf during a night raid in Syria; the 2014
release of long-time Taliban prisoner Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl;
the capture of Ahmed Abu Khattala, a suspect in 2012 terror attacks
in Benghazi, Libya; and the 2013 abduction of Anas al-Libi, an
al-Qaeda militant, off a street in that same country. Similarly, Navy
SEALs have, among other operations, carried out successful hostage
rescue missions in Afghanistan and Somalia in 2012; a disastrous one
in Yemen in 2014; a 2013 kidnap raid in Somalia that went awry;
and—that same year—a failed evacuation mission in South Sudan in
which three SEALs were wounded when their aircraft was hit by small
arms fire.
SOCOM’S
SOF ALPHABET SOUP
Most
deployments have, however, been training missions designed to tutor
proxies and forge stronger ties with allies. “Special Operations
forces provide individual-level training, unit-level training, and
formal classroom training,” explains SOCOM’s Ken McGraw.
“Individual training can be in subjects like basic rifle
marksmanship, land navigation, airborne operations, and first aid.
They provide unit-level training in subjects like small unit tactics,
counterterrorism operations and maritime operations. SOF can also
provide formal classroom training in subjects like the military
decision-making process or staff planning.”
From
2012 to 2014, for instance, Special Operations forces carried out 500
Joint Combined Exchange Training (JCET) missions in as many as 67
countries each year. JCETs are officially devoted to training US
forces, but they nonetheless serve as a key facet of SOCOM’s global
engagement strategy. The missions “foster key military partnerships
with foreign militaries, enhance partner-nations’ capability to
provide for their own defense, and build interoperability between US
SOF and partner-nation forces,” according to SOCOM’s McGraw.
And
JCETs are just a fraction of the story. SOCOM carries out many other
multinational overseas training operations. According to data from
the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), for
example, Special Operations forces conducted 75 training exercises in
30 countries in 2014. The numbers were projected to jump to 98
exercises in 34 countries by the end of this year.
“SOCOM
places a premium on international partnerships and building their
capacity. Today, SOCOM has persistent partnerships with about 60
countries through our Special Operations Forces Liaison Elements and
Joint Planning and Advisory Teams,” said SOCOM’s Votel at a
conference earlier this year, drawing attention to two of the many
types of shadowy Special Ops entities that operate overseas. These
SOFLEs and JPATs belong to a mind-bending alphabet soup of special
ops entities operating around the globe, a jumble of opaque acronyms
and stilted abbreviations masking a secret world of clandestine
efforts often conducted in the shadows in impoverished lands ruled by
problematic regimes. The proliferation of this bewildering SOCOM
shorthand—SOJTFs and CJSOTFs, SOCCEs and SOLEs—mirrors the
relentless expansion of the command, with its signature brand of
military speak or milspeak proving as indecipherable to most
Americans as its missions are secret from them.
Around
the world, you can find Special Operations Joint Task Forces
(SOJTFs), Combined Joint Special Operations Task Forces (CJSOTFs),
and Joint Special Operations Task Forces (JSOTFs), Theater Special
Operations Commands (TSOCs), as well as Special Operations Command
and Control Elements (SOCCEs) and Special Operations Liaison Elements
(SOLEs). And that list doesn’t even include Special Operations
Command Forward (SOC FWD) elements—small teams which, according to
the military, “shape and coordinate special operations forces
security cooperation and engagement in support of theater special
operations command, geographic combatant command, and country team
goals and objectives.”
Special
Operations Command will not divulge the locations or even a simple
count of its SOC FWDs for “security reasons.” When asked how
releasing only the number could imperil security, SOCOM’s Ken
McGraw was typically opaque. “The information is classified,” he
responded. “I am not the classification authority for that
information so I do not know the specifics of why the information is
classified.” Open source data suggests, however, that they are
clustered in favored black ops stomping grounds, including SOC FWD
Pakistan, SOC FWD Yemen, and SOC FWD Lebanon, as well as SOC FWD East
Africa, SOC FWD Central Africa, and SOC FWD West Africa.
What’s
clear is that SOCOM prefers to operate in the shadows while its
personnel and missions expand globally to little notice or attention.
“The key thing that SOCOM brings to the table is that we are—we
think of ourselves—as a global force. We support the geographic
combatant commanders, but we are not bound by the artificial
boundaries that normally define the regional areas in which they
operate. So what we try to do is we try to operate across those
boundaries,” SOCOM’s Votel told the Aspen Security Forum.
In
one particular blurring of boundaries, Special Operations liaison
officers (SOLOs) are embedded in at least 14 key US embassies to
assist in advising the special forces of various allied nations.
Already operating in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, El
Salvador, France, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Poland, Peru, Turkey,
and the United Kingdom, the SOLO program is poised, according to
Votel, to expand to 40 countries by 2019. The command, and especially
JSOC, has also forged close ties with the Central Intelligence
Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the National
Security Agency, among other outfits, through the use of liaison
officers and Special Operations Support Teams (SOSTs).
“In
today’s environment, our effectiveness is directly tied to our
ability to operate with domestic and international partners. We, as a
joint force, must continue to institutionalize interoperability,
integration, and interdependence between conventional forces and
special operations forces through doctrine, training, and operational
deployments,” Votel told the Senate Armed Services Committee this
spring. “From working with indigenous forces and local governments
to improve local security, to high-risk counterterrorism
operations—SOF are in vital roles performing essential tasks.”
SOCOM
will not name the 135 countries in which America’s most elite
forces were deployed this year, let alone disclose the nature of
those operations. Most were, undoubtedly, training efforts. Documents
obtained from the Pentagon via the Freedom of Information Act
outlining Joint Combined Exchange Training in 2013 offer an
indication of what Special Operations forces do on a daily basis and
also what skills are deemed necessary for their real-world missions:
combat marksmanship, patrolling, weapons training, small unit
tactics, special operations in urban terrain, close quarters combat,
advanced marksmanship, sniper employment, long-range shooting,
deliberate attack, and heavy weapons employment, in addition to
combat casualty care, human rights awareness, land navigation, and
mission planning, among others.
From
Joint Special Operations Task Force-Juniper Shield, which operates in
Africa’s Trans-Sahara region, and Special Operations Command and
Control Element-Horn of Africa, to Army Special Operations Forces
Liaison Element-Korea and Combined Joint Special Operations Task
Force-Arabian Peninsula, the global growth of SOF missions has been
breathtaking. SEALs or Green Berets, Delta Force operators or Air
Commandos, they are constantly taking on what Votel likes to call the
“nation’s most complex, demanding, and high-risk challenges.”
These
forces carry out operations almost entirely unknown to the American
taxpayers who fund them, operations conducted far from the scrutiny
of the media or meaningful outside oversight of any kind. Everyday,
in around 80 or more countries that Special Operations Command will
not name, they undertake missions the command refuses to talk about.
They exist in a secret world of obtuse acronyms and shadowy efforts,
of mystery missions kept secret from the American public, not to
mention most of the citizens of the 135 nations where they’ve been
deployed this year.
This
summer, when Votel commented that more special ops troops are
deployed to more locations and are conducting more operations than at
the height of the Afghan and Iraq wars, he drew attention to two
conflicts in which those forces played major roles that have not
turned out well for the United States. Consider that symbolic of what
the bulking up of his command has meant in these years.
“Ultimately,
the best indicator of our success will be the success of the
[geographic combatant commands],” says the special ops chief, but
with US setbacks in Africa Command’s area of operations from Mali
and Nigeria to Burkina Faso and Cameroon; in Central Command’s
bailiwick from Iraq and Afghanistan to Yemen and Syria; in the PACOM
region vis-à-vis China; and perhaps even in the EUCOM area of
operations due to Russia, it’s far from clear what successes can be
attributed to the ever-expanding secret operations of America’s
secret military. The special ops commander seems resigned to the very
real limitations of what his secretive but much-ballyhooed,
highly-trained, well-funded, heavily-armed operators can do.
“We
can buy space, we can buy time,” says Votel, stressing that SOCOM
can “play a very, very key role” in countering “violent
extremism,” but only up to a point — and that point seems to fall
strikingly short of anything resembling victory or even significant
foreign policy success. “Ultimately, you know, problems like we see
in Iraq and Syria,” he says, “aren’t going to be resolved by
us.”
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