A new report finds that DOD uses ‘security
cooperation’ programs for ‘secret wars,’
recommends that Congress rein them in.
By Jim Lobe
November 13, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- U.S. military
forces have been engaged in unauthorized
hostilities in many more countries than the
Pentagon has disclosed to Congress, let
alone the public, according to a
major new report released late last week
by New York University School of Law’s
Brennan Center for Justice.
“Afghanistan, Iraq, maybe Libya. If you
asked the average American where the United
States has been at war in the past two
decades, you would likely get this short
list,” according to the report, Secret War:
How the U.S. Uses Partnerships and Proxy
Forces to Wage War Under the Radar. “But
this list is wrong – off by at least 17
countries in which the United States has
engaged in armed conflict through ground
forces, proxy forces, or air strikes.”
“This proliferation of secret war is a
relatively recent phenomenon, and it is
undemocratic and dangerous,” the report’s
author, Katherine Yon Ebright, wrote in the
introduction. “The conduct of undisclosed
hostilities in unreported countries
contravenes our constitutional design. It
invites military escalation that is
unforeseeable to the public, to Congress,
and even to the diplomats charged with
managing U.S. foreign relations.”
The 39-page report focuses on so-called
“security cooperation” programs authorized
by Congress pursuant to the 2001
Authorization for Use of Military Force, or
AUMF, against certain terrorist groups. One
such program, known as Section 127e,
authorized the Defense Department to
“provide support to foreign forces,
irregular forces, groups or individuals
engaged in supporting or facilitating
authorized ongoing military operations by
United States special operations forces to
combat terrorism.”
According to the report, that “support”
has been broadly — or, more accurately, too
broadly — interpreted by the Pentagon. In
practice, it has enabled the U.S. military
to “develop and control proxy forces that
fight on behalf of and sometimes alongside
U.S. forces” and to use armed force to
defend its local partners against
adversaries (in what the Pentagon calls
“collective self-defense”) regardless of
whether those adversaries pose any threat to
U.S. territory or persons, and, in some
cases, whether or not the adversaries have
been officially designated as legitimate
targets under the 2001 AUMF.
In Somalia in 2016, for example, U.S.
forces invoked “collective self-defense” to
launch a strike against a rival militia of
the Puntland Security Force, an elite
brigade that had originally been recruited,
trained, and equipped by the CIA and
subsequently taken over by the Pentagon in
2011.
Moreover, the Pentagon deployed the PSF,
which was largely independent of the Somali
government, to fight al-Shabab and the
Islamic State of Somalia, sometimes
alongside U.S. forces, for several years
before the executive branch designated
al-Shabab as legitimate targets. It has
never so designated the ISS.
Similarly, in Cameroon, U.S. forces
accompanying a partner force on an “advise
and assist” mission ended up shooting and
killing an adversary. The Pentagon has used
a Section 127 program there to pursue
leaders of Boko Haram, a terrorist group
that has “never been publicly identified as
an associated force of Al-Qaeda, and thus a
lawful target, under the 2001 AUMF,”
according to the report.
Congress rarely hears of these incidents
because, according to the report, DOD
insists they are too minor or “episodic” to
rise to the level of “hostilities” that
would trigger reporting requirements under
the 1973 War Powers Resolution.
An exception, however, came in October
2017 when four U.S. soldiers, who were
deployed to Niger under a related “security
cooperation” program known as Section 333,
which authorizes the Pentagon to “train and
equip” foreign forces anywhere in the world.
Their presence in the field, however, was
authorized under a standing executive order,
or EXORD, that permits U.S. forces to engage
in combat under particular circumstances, a
parallel authority of which Congress had not
been previously informed. The incident
shocked lawmakers who were unaware that U.S.
troops were operating in the field in
Niger.
“I’ve got guys in Kenya, Chad, Cameroon,
Niger [and] Tunisia who are doing the same
kind of things as the guys in Somalia,
exposing themselves to the same kind of
danger and not just on 127 echoes,”
bragged Brigadier Gen. Donald Bolduc
(ret.), who commanded U.S. special forces in
Africa until 2017 and is currently running
as a Republican for the U.S. Senate in New
Hampshire. “We’ve had guys wounded in all
the types of missions that we do.”
The report, which relies on published
work by investigative reporters, interviews
with knowledgeable officials and
congressional staff, official documents and
records, as well as the author’s legal
analysis, identifies 13 countries with
Section 127e programs in addition to Somalia
and Cameroon. They include Afghanistan,
Egypt, Iraq, Kenya, Lebanon, Libya, Mali,
Mauritania, Niger, Niger, Nigeria, Syria,
Tunisia, and Yemen. But it stressed that the
list is almost certainly not exhaustive.
Fifty countries, from Mexico to Peru in
the west to Indonesia and the Philippines
(where U.S. forces are known to have taken
part in combat operation) in the east, and
covering 22 countries in North and
sub-Saharan Africa alone (not to mention
Ukraine) had Section 333 programs in place
as of mid-2018, according to the report.
Perhaps even more dangerous than the
Section 127e counterterrorism programs,
according to the report, are security
cooperation programs undertaken pursuant to
Section 1202 of the National Defense
Authorization Act of 2018. Using language
that mirrors Section 127e, that provision
goes beyond the counterterrorism purposes of
Section 1273e by authorizing “support” to
partner forces “engaged in supporting or
facilitating irregular warfare operations by
the United States Special Operations
Forces.”
“Irregular warfare” is defined by DOD as
“competition …short of traditional armed
conflict” or “all-out war.” Pentagon
officials have described Section 1202 as “a
highly useful tool for enabling irregular
warfare operations…to deter and defeat
…revisionist powers and rogue regimes.” They
have also insisted that “irregular warfare
is likely to be increasingly relied on as
DOD begins to “prioritize great power
competition.”
“Broadly speaking, the purpose of the
[Section] 1202 authority is to take the
department’s [Section] 127e approach of
creating and controlling partner forces and
wield it against countries like China,
Russia, Iran, and North Korea,” according to
the report. “Section 1202, in short, raises
the same potential as § 127e for hostilities
that Congress has not authorized, but with
far graver consequences because the enemy
could be a powerful, nuclear-armed state.”
Given the increased risks, simply
repealing or reforming “outdated and
overstretched AUMFs …[is] insufficient,” the
report concludes. “Congress should repeal or
reform the Department of Defense’s security
cooperation authorities. Until it does so,
the nation will continue to be at war –
without, in some cases, the consent or even
knowledge of its people.”