US spy effort in Afghanistan 'ignorant'- US report

by snuffysmith | January 5, 2010 at 07:18 pm
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The U.S. military's intelligence chief in Afghanistan sharply criticized the work of the CIA and other US spy agencies in Afghanistan, calling them ignorant and out of touch with the Afghan people.


In a report issued by the Center for New American Security think tank, Major General Michael Flynn, deputy chief of staff for intelligence in Afghanistan for the U.S. military and its NATO allies, offered a bleak assessment of the intelligence community's role in the 8-year-old war.

He described U.S. intelligence officials there as "ignorant of local economics and landowners, hazy about who the powerbrokers are and how they might be influenced ... and disengaged from people in the best position to find answers."

An operations officer was quoted in the report as calling the United States "clueless" because of a lack of needed intelligence about the country. The report, which highlighted tensions between military and intelligence agencies, urged changes such as a focus on gathering more information on a wider range of issues at a grassroots level.

Release of the report came less than a week after a suicide bomber killed seven CIA officers at a U.S. base in eastern Afghanistan, the second-most deadly attack in agency history.

The security breach was a major blow to the CIA, which has expanded operations hunting down and killing Taliban and al Qaeda militants in Afghanistan and tribal areas in neighboring Pakistan, partly through the use of unmanned drone aircraft. The drone strikes have fueled public anger and have been sharply criticized by human rights groups. "Eight years into the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. intelligence community is only marginally relevant to the overall strategy," Flynn wrote in the report with his chief adviser, Captain Matt Pottinger.

The report is quite damning of the CIA and other military intelligence efforts in Afghanistan especially the focus on insurgent groups rather than focusing on counterinsurgency tactics.


The report said U.S. intelligence had focused too much on gathering information on insurgent groups and was "unable to answer fundamental questions about the environment in which U.S. and allied forces operate and the people they seek to persuade," the report said.

A revised war strategy unveiled last month by U.S. President Barack Obama calls for sending 30,000 more American troops to Afghanistan and for expanding a counterinsurgency campaign aimed at garnering Afghan public support and sidelining a resurgent Taliban. Instead of mounting a counterinsurgency,

Flynn asserted that the intelligence community had "fallen into the trap" of waging an "anti-insurgency campaign" aimed at capturing or killing mid-to-high level militants.

An intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, defended the focus of U.S. spy agencies on insurgents, saying: "You can't be successful at counterinsurgency without a profound understanding of the enemy."

Flynn's report said the intelligence community had enough analysts in Afghanistan but "too many are simply in the wrong places and assigned to the wrong jobs."

 

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caj1

This seems to be an understated report of U.S. work done, in light of the recent death of seven CIA officers.  Was it not their successful intelligence efforts, and their use of the drone strikes that led to their unfortunate death at the hands of a double (or some would say, triple) agent in the suicide attack by the Jordanian at FOB Chapman in Afghanistan?

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snuffysmith

 Top Intelligence Official in Afghanistan Urges Changes to Intelligence Mission by Major General Michael T. Flynn, Captain Matt Pottinger, and Paul Batchelor; Center for a New American Security (CNAS).

Overhauling Intelligence Ops in the Afghan War - Tom Ricks, Best Defense

Pentagon Slams Publication of General's Think-Tank Report - Blake Hounshell, FP Passport

The Most Important Thing You'll Read on Afghanistan This Month - Andrew Exum, Abu Muqawama

Coalition Urged to Revamp Intelligence Gathering, Distribution in Afghanistan - Walter Pincus, Washington Post

U.S. Retools Military Intelligence - Jay Solomon and Yochi Dreazen, Wall Street Journal

Military Intelligence Chief Orders Reorganization - Anna Mulrine, US News & World Report

Intelligence Overhaul Ordered for Afghanistan - Julian E. Barnes and Laura King, Los Angeles Times

Pentagon Calls Spy Critique "Irregular" - Reuters

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snuffysmith


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snuffysmith


In Afghanistan, not-so-smart intelligence: As a recent deadly bombing and a critical Army report indicate, the U.S. is falling down on the intelligence-gathering front in the war there – Editorial, latimes.com: According to the damning report by Army Maj. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, director of military intelligence in Afghanistan, U.S. spy agencies there (with a few notable exceptions) are "ignorant" of local politics and economics, "hazy" about who the power brokers are and "disengaged" at the grass-roots level from those who might provide answers and help win the war. In short, they are providing intelligence "marginally relevant" to the counterinsurgency campaign that Army Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal is running now and for which President Obama ordered an additional 30,000 troops last month.

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snuffysmith

Gates Endorses Critique of Military Intelligence in Afghanistan



U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has endorsed a stinging critique of military intelligence efforts in Afghanistan written by the top U.S. and NATO military intelligence officer in the country. In a paper published this week, Major General Michael Flynn orders major changes to the way his operation works.

The 26-page publication called Fixing Intel: A Blueprint for Making Intelligence Relevant in Afghanistan says military intelligence efforts in the country over the past eight years have been "token and ineffectual," and have not provided commanders or senior leaders the information they need.  It says the current intelligence gathering and analysis processes "fail to advance the war strategy and, as a result, expose more troops to danger over the long run."
 
The paper's authors, led by Major General Michael Flynn, the chief of U.S. and NATO military intelligence in Afghanistan, say it should be considered a directive to his subordinates on how they should reform their operations.  Among the orders - send more analysts into the field and gather more information about the Afghan people, rather than focusing almost exclusively on insurgent groups.  The paper says until now, many military intelligence units have been "deaf" to the population-centered approach the new Afghanistan commander, General Stanley McChrystal, has ordered.

It was a surprise to many in Washington for a senior military intelligence officer to write such an extensive critique and directive for public consumption, and to have it published by a private organization, the Center for a New American Security.  One Pentagon official called the move "unusual," "irregular" and "a bit peculiar." 



Pentagon: Gates has 'reservations' about decision to have report published by private group, but finds analysis 'brilliant'

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snuffysmith

Let me share some news with you: Gates likes the CNAS report but does not like that it is a CNAS report - Matt Armstrong, MountainRunner.us: "According the the Voice of America, Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates endorses the recent report – Fixing Intel: A Blueprint for Making Intelligence Relevant in Afghanistan – authored by Major General Michael Flynn, Captain Matt Pottinger, and Paul D. Batchelor. However, according to VOA, the SecDef took issue with the report being published by CNAS. ... The title of this post is 'let me share some news with you' is to legally permit you to read the VOA story if you are inside the United States. By the intentional distortion of law, VOA materials are not to be available to the American public. As Senator Zorinsky said in 1985 while 'losing the loophole' on dissemination, allowing such material to be accessed by Americans would put the broadcaster on par with a Soviet propaganda agency. For a time, the VOA story you read – if you clicked on the link – was actually exempted from Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). However, the original and primary intent of the 79th and the 80th Congresses that wrote and passed the Smith-Mundt Act that made permanent VOA and other elements we now call public diplomacy, was to have the media , Congress, and academia  disseminate material intended for non-US audiences abroad in order to protect the US government from the Communists and socialists in the State Department, as well as to protect American commercial broadcast interests. So, in short, I’m glad to be of service and relay the information to you. Enjoy."

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Hugh Askew
First Flagged at 7:29 PM, Jan 5, 2010 by Hugh Askew

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