More than a decade after the tragedy of 9/11, it appears that some of the most fundamental aspects of how we combat al-Qa’ida are poised to change.
One of those changes might involve drones. The Obama administration reportedly plans to move responsibility for operating lethal drones from the CIA to the Pentagon. The move will lead to important changes, but critics of drone policy may be disappointed.
The CIA operates covertly—meaning that its operations can be denied by government officials. But the Joint Special Operations Command within the Department of Defense operates clandestinely, which means its operations are also secret and not openly acknowledged. Thus, even if the reported change occurs, the public shouldn’t expect to see Pentagon press conferences about drone operations.
Nor will the shift to the Defense Department produce vast differences in congressional oversight. In fact, since Watergate and the Iran-Contra Affair, CIA covert action has required explicit congressional notification and briefings. Congress conducts intensive oversight of Defense Department operations, but in many ways these are less intrusive than that of covert action. Congress can of course require additional information on these operations, but it is doubtful that any oversight will be significantly greater than that of covert action today.
The reported shift would have real effects on three points: (1) making clear the legal restrictions on drone usage; (2) returning to a more traditional balance between the CIA and Pentagon; (3) and providing an opportunity for more open operations where necessary.
Although the CIA has said that it conducts strikes consistent with the laws of armed conflict, a shift to the Pentagon will make far more clear, domestically and internationally, that such strikes are legally bound by international laws of armed conflict. This is a good thing, as it should bring greater legitimacy to U.S. efforts—a critical element in maintaining strong counterterrorism partnerships.
Such a shift will also move the United States to a more traditional balance between the CIA and Defense. The spy agency has always been responsible for covert action, but the past 10 years have been a historical anomaly in terms of the size and scope of its lethal targeting. And while the CIA carried out this mission brilliantly, and undoubtedly saved American lives in the process, it arguable came at a cost to the agency’s more traditional role of strategic intelligence collection and analysis. Moreover, the rather comical openness with which the drone program has recently operated has run the risk of cheapening the covertness of truly sensitive covert action programs that must be kept very much in the shadows. A shift of the program to the Department of Defense—assuming Defense can apply the same rigorous targeting process (something I am quite confident it can)—will, over time, address both of these issues.









