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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, December 4, 2016
Obama Is Expanding Trump’s War-Making Powers on His Way Out the Door
From drone strikes to Navy SEALs, the next president will have more lethal options than ever.

The scope of war-making authorities and powers available to the Trump
administration depends on decisions made by the Obama administration.
Two recent news reports shed some troubling light on its approach to the
coming transition.
The Obama administration’s present mindset reflects a departure from its
approach in the fall of 2012. In anticipation of an election it
believed Republican challenger Mitt Romney might win, the Obama White
House accelerated the development and implementation of a “drone rule book”
that codified the procedures for drone strikes in non-battlefield
settings. As one official worried aloud in November 2012, “There was
concern that the levers might no longer be in our hands.”
The latest reporting suggests that, rather than restraining and limiting
Trump, the Obama administration, in its final weeks in office, is
further expanding the geographic scope of airstrikes, the nature of
combatants who can be targeted, and the legal justification underpinning
such strikes. The incoming president-elect, who has previously pledged
to “bomb the hell out of ISIS,” will have the capabilities and authorities to do just that — for the Islamic State and other terrorist and militant armies.
On Friday, Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Dan Lamothe revealed the
creation of a new unit within the military’s highly secretive Joint
Special Operations Command (JSOC). According to the reporting, this new
entity, known as the “Counter-External Operations Task Force,” is
authorized to conduct clandestine operations outside of the battlefields
of Iraq, Syria, and Libya, without the approval of regional combatant
commanders, such as Gen. Joseph Votel, commander of U.S. Central
Command, who himself once led JSOC.
This essentially elevates U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) —
within which JSOC resides — to a truly global combatant command, with
the resources and authority to strike targets seemingly anywhere, rather
than only after being placed under the authority of a regional
combatant command. Obama administration lawyers and officials have
always contended that
there are no geographic limits to where U.S. forces may conduct
operations against terrorism, with the battlefield being anywhere “from Boston to the FATA.”
Now, it appears that it has set up an organizational command structure
to support such limitless targeting. As Gibbons-Neff and Lamothe quote a
defense official: “Layers have been stripped away for the purposes of
stopping external networks. There has never been an ex-ops command team
that works trans-regionally to stop attacks.”
There have been previously reported changes
to the relationship between SOCOM and regional combatant commanders,
each with the objective of integrating them with one another, and
speeding up the decision-making cycle for approving strikes. It is
unclear, however, if these changes have increased the volume of
clandestine military operations. In a rare interviewlast
year, the current SOCOM commander, Gen. Raymond “Tony” Thomas (who also
once led JSOC — you might be sensing a pattern) stated that when it
came to such operations: “I’m told ‘no’ more than ‘go’ on a magnitude of
about ten to one on a daily basis.” But the most recently announced
changes seem precisely designed to make it easier for JSOC to be told
“go” in the last weeks of Obama’s leadership — and when it is under the
ultimate command of Donald Trump.
Meanwhile, in today’s New York Times, Charlie Savage, Eric Schmitt, and Mark Mazzetti reported a
puzzling new legal and policy interpretation for U.S. airstrikes in
Somalia. The article, appropriately titled “Obama Expands War With Al
Qaeda to Include Shabab in Somalia,” has revealed that the U.S. military
can now undertake “collective self-defense” strikes in support of
foreign partners, even where there are no Americans service members or
contractors at direct risk. In other words, U.S. military assets are now
permitted to provide close air support against the enemies of foreign
ground forces, even if those enemies pose no threat to Americans. Though
this mission draws its legal justification from the post-9/11
Authorization for the Use of Military Force, the designers of that law
could never have imagined it being used to such ends.
The Obama administration’s new legal interpretation, expected to be
disclosed next month, will further entrench its counterterrorism
strategy in Somalia. But the Times story would not surprise anybody who reads U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) press releases. On September 28, for example, a drone strike was
conducted in Galcayo, Somalia, against what were believed to be
al-Shabab attackers on behalf of the local Puntland Security Forces
(PSF). AFRICOM labeled this a “self-defense strike,” even though, as Kevin Sieff reported,
the U.S. advisors were not alongside the PSF while they began taking
fire. A subsequent, brief AFRICOM press release stated that the strike
killed no al-Shabaab members, but rather ten members of “local militia
forces,” who themselves had worked with U.S. advisers to fight
al-Shabaab in the past.
Under this broad concept of “collective self-defense,” it seems that
U.S. military close air support airstrikes may be called upon anywhere
U.S.-partner forces are threatened, whether or not that threat extends
to American personnel on the ground. To give some sense of what that
could potentially entail, in 2015, a spokesman from the command acknowledged that
SOCOM forces had deployed to 147 countries. Undoubtedly, these
deployments primarily consist of short-term military-to-military
engagements, like training and education programs, with few
direct-action operations. However, the Obama administration’s claim that
certain foreign partner forces can be incorporated into the U.S.
military’s inherent right to self-defense could open up the scope and
intensity of airstrikes even further.
The Times piece concludes with a quote from yours truly: “this
administration leaves the Trump administration with tremendously
expanded capabilities and authorities.” Indeed, it has, and with far
greater capabilities and authorities then they would have handed over to
a President Mitt Romney. After Obama leaves the White House in January,
let us hope that his successor faces far more rigorous scrutiny from
congressional members, journalists, and research organizations over
these military operations. Lethal drone strikes and special operations
raids that were exceptional under President George W. Bush became
semi-routine under President Obama. Under President Trump they may
further define U.S. counterterrorism strategy and how the world
perceives U.S. foreign policy more generally for years to come.
Photo credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

