National Security Network

counter-terrorism

counter-terrorism

Terrorism & National Security

A Comprehensive Approach to Terrorism

Report 28 June 2010
Yesterday CIA Director Leon Panetta appeared on ABC's This Week, reviewing the Administration's comprehensive counter-terrorism approach:  refocusing on the threat and applying all the tools of government - military, intelligence, law enforcement, court system - to prevent attacks and bring terrorists to justice.  This approach has had concrete results. al Qaeda's international operations have been  greatly reduced, and a multilayered interagency approach has proven to be effective at disrupting plots at home.  As Majority Leader  Steny Hoyer (D-MD),  said today at the Center for Strategic and International Studies,  "Under President Obama the US has killed or captured hundreds of terrorist leaders including much of the top leadership of al Qaeda and the Taliban."  Yet success at weakening extremists abroad is itself causing such groups to refocus on hurting us at home, through domestic radicalization.  In response, America must remain resilient - able to withstand the increased likelihood of unsophisticated and even failed plots without succumbing to fear or overreactions - the exact purpose of terrorism. 
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Terrorism & National Security

What Success Looks Like

Report 21 June 2010
Today, in a courtroom in New York Faisal Shahzad, the failed Times Square bomber, will enter pleas for 10 criminal charges, six of which face a life sentence.  This is what successful counter-terrorism looks like:  international cooperation helped produce the indictment; law enforcement and intelligence partnered to produce a court case and actionable intelligence from the suspect; alert citizens and the government together kept our people safe.  As Assistant Attorney General David Kris said at a recent Brookings event, the criminal justice system "can disrupt terrorist plots through arrest... incapacitate terrorists through incarceration ... and ... can gather intelligence..."
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Pakistan

Prioritizing Pakistan for American Security

Report 17 February 2010
The joint-operation between the U.S. and Pakistan to capture the Afghan Taliban’s number two leader and military commander Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar highlights efforts by the Obama administration to prioritize Pakistan as part of an effective regional security approach global counterterrorism strategy.  Since taking office, the Obama administration has embarked on a steady campaign of military, diplomatic, and development measures to improve the tenor of U.S. – Pakistan relations, with broader regional and global counter terrorism goals driving this approach. 
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Terrorism & National Security

Conservatives Following Right Wing Leadership of Dick Cheney

Report 16 February 2010
Yesterday, it was revealed that Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar -- the number two in the Afghan Taliban and the de facto leader of the insurgency -- was captured in Pakistan.  This is the most recent in a trend of success in the Administration's counterterrorism efforts at home and abroad that utilizes diplomacy, intelligence, law enforcement and armed force to disrupt and dismantle terrorist organizations and plots.  Yet simultaneously, conservatives have gone to Dick Cheney for leadership and actually heightened their criticism, opting for an ideological, not reality-based approach to America's security. 
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Diplomacy

A 21st Century Approach to Foreign Policy

Report 28 January 2010

With renewed focus on the nation's economic agenda, many commentators have concluded that last night's State of the Union signaled a downplaying of national security.  But the speech , as well as the actions of his administration, underscore the point that affairs abroad are intertwined with the issues confronting Americans at home. In sum, the President's words were an affirmation of his administration's strategy for the 21st century, one that brings together both foreign and domestic instruments to project American power.

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Afghanistan

Obama in the Midst of Clear-Eyed Review of Options for Afghanistan

Report 21 September 2009
As the uncertainty surrounding the flawed presidential elections demonstrates, getting Afghanistan policy right will require more than a purely military approach. Currently, a significant and important debate is taking place amongst credible military and foreign policy experts over whether a full-bore counter-insurgency strategy is the right course for America’s national security. Contrary to his predecessor, President Obama is weighing all the options on the way forward in Afghanistan and is focusing on getting the strategy right.  
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Terrorism & National Security

While Obama Offers Solutions, Cheney Gives More Tortured Defense of Failed Policies

Report 25 August 2009
Yesterday brought more clarity on the failed interrogation and detention policies of the Bush administration—including new insight into the torture and abuse that permeated their prosecution of the “War on Terror.” But it also brought forward important reforms from the Obama administration: looking at best practices from professional interrogators in the FBI, CIA and elsewhere to create policies that will make America more secure and prevent abuses.
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Terrorism & National Security

Hoekstra Acknowledges Reality: US Prisons Can Hold Gitmo Detainees

Report 27 July 2009
On Friday, one of the GOP’s top national security voices in the House of Representatives, Peter Hoekstra (R-MI), contradicted the leadership of his own party by acknowledging the reality that U.S. prisons are capable of holding Guantanamo detainees. Leading conservatives have launched numerous political attacks over the last few months arguing that closing Guantanamo would bring terrorists into our backyards. These arguments, as President Obama said in May, are not “rational.”
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Terrorism & National Security

Cheney's March Madness

Report 16 March 2009
Yesterday Dick Cheney claimed that we have succeeded in Iraq and that the Bush administration’s torture policies were “a great success story.” But the latest sally in the previous Administration’s attempt to spin its own failed legacy bumped up against revelations of a secret 2007 report by the International Red Cross that concluded that the Bush administration’s interrogation methods “constituted torture” and amounted to “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.”
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