The
Obama administration is nearing completion of a detailed
counterterrorism manual that is designed to establish clear rules for
targeted-killing operations but leaves open a major exemption for the
CIA’s campaign of drone strikes in Pakistan, U.S. officials said.
The
carve-out would allow the CIA to continue pounding al-Qaeda and Taliban
targets for a year or more before the agency is forced to comply with
more stringent rules spelled out in a classified document that officials
have described as a counterterrorism “playbook.”
The document, which is expected to be submitted to President Obama for
final approval within weeks, marks the culmination of a year-long effort
by the White House to codify its counterterrorism policies and create a
guide for lethal operations through Obama’s second term.
A
senior U.S. official involved in drafting the document said that a few
issues remain unresolved but described them as minor. The senior U.S.
official said the playbook “will be done shortly.”
The
adoption of a formal guide to targeted killing marks a significant —
and to some uncomfortable — milestone: the institutionalization of a
practice that would have seemed anathema to many before the Sept. 11 ,
2001, terrorist attacks.
Among
the subjects covered in the playbook are the process for adding names
to kill lists, the legal principles that govern when U.S. citizens can
be targeted overseas and the sequence of approvals required when the CIA
or U.S. military conducts drone strikes outside war zones.
U.S.
officials said the effort to draft the playbook was nearly derailed
late last year by disagreements among the State Department, the CIA and
the Pentagon on the criteria for lethal strikes and other issues.
Granting the CIA a temporary exemption for its Pakistan operations was
described as a compromise that allowed officials to move forward with
other parts of the playbook.
The
decision to allow the CIA strikes to continue was driven in part by
concern that the window for weakening al-Qaeda and the Taliban in
Pakistan is beginning to close, with plans to pull most U.S. troops out
of neighboring Afghanistan over the next two years. CIA drones are flown
out of bases in Afghanistan. MORE
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