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UNCLASSIFIED
I. INTRODUCTION
A. The Policy Context
In discharging his constitutional responsibility for the conduct of foreign relations and for ensuring the
security of the United States, the President may find it necessary that activities conducted in support of
national foreign policy objectives abroad be planned and executed so that the role of the United States
Government is not apparent or acknowledged publicly. Such activities, the failure or exposure of which
may entail hiqh costs, must be conducted only after the President reaches an informed judqment regarding
their utility in particular circumstances. To the extent possible, they should be conducted only when we are
confident that, if they are revealed, the American public would find them sensible.
This Directive ... sets forth revised procedures for presidential approval and review, through the National
_ Security Council (NSC) process, of all "special activities" as defined by section 3.4(h) of Executive Order
No. 12333 (December 4, 1981).
These procedures are designed, inter alia, (1) to ensure that all special activities conducted by, or at the
direction of, the United States are consistent with national defense and foreign policies and applicable law;
(2) to provide standards ensuring the Secrecy of such activities even when the results become publicly
knownror the activities themselves are the subject of unauthorized disclosure; and (3) to implement section
501 of the National Security Act of T947, as amended (50 U.S.C. 413), concerning notification to Congress
of such activities.
B. The Role of the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs and the National Security
Council Staff
Within the framework and in accordance with the requirements set forth in NSDD 266, the Assistant to the
President for National Security Affairs (the "National Security Advisor") shall serve as manager of the
NSC process and as principal advisor on the President's staff with respect to all national security affairs
including special activities. The NSC staff, through the Executive Secretary of the NSC, shall assist the
National Security Advisor in discharging these responsibilities. The National Security Advisor and the
NSC staff themselves shall not undertake the conduct of special activities.
1. Presidential Findings
6 ,H '
In all cases, special activities of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in foreign countries require, under
the terms of section 662 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended (22 U.S.C. 2422), Findings by
Volume 25, Number 1 STANDING COMMITTEE ON LAW AND NATIONAL SECURITY May 2003
£)
On November 2 1-22, 2002, the Standing Committee on Law and National Security of the American Bar
Association; the Center foHtfational Security Law of the University of the Virginia School of Law; and the Center on
Law, Ethics and National Security of the Duke University School of Law; cosponsored the twelfth annual conference
devoted to the review of developments inthe field of national security law. This conference summary is our best
pt to summarize the conference proceedings without confirming the remarks with each speaker. This document
only a summary. This year also marked the 40th anniversary of the Standing Committee. One of the founding
members of the Standing Committee is R. Daniel McMichael. Although his schedule prevented him from being with
us, he sent a letter on the occasion of the Standing Committee's anniversary. In it, he described "the imperative upon
which the Committee was based: the absolute necessity of building consensus among people of varying political and
intellectual hues as to how our nation is to preserve its liberty under law in the face of those forces (and they never
seem to go away) that would have it otherwise. " In closing, Mr. McMichael noted that "there is no single site upon
which to erect a monument commemorating the founding of the Committee,~yet a monument does exist. It is the
Committee, itself, its members and what they do. The monument still stands unblemished - and long may it be so. "
I would extend the "monument" to include all of you who participate in the activities of the Committee through
attendance at our conferences, panels, breakfasts, and other programs, or just by reading this newsletter. Your com-
mitment to examining the important issues at the intersection of law and national security validates and sustains the
vision of the Committee's founders. It is with these thoughts in mind that we continue the tradition of hosting the
annual review of the field of national security law. -Suzanne E. Spaulding, Chair
Opening Remarks
Suzanne Spaulding, Chair, ABA Standing Committee on Law and National Security
Suzanne Spaulding welcomed everyone to this conference marking the 40th Anniversary of the establishment
of the Standing Committee on Law and National Security. She noted that the nation is still grappling with the
implications of the changes highlighted by the attacks of September 1 1, 2001. At the Annual Review Conference
at year, participants sought to define the relatively new term "homeland security." Yet, less than a year later, the
'.cision was made to establish an entirely new Department for Homeland Security in what many have character-
ized as the greatest government restructuring since 1947. Similarly, for years the Annual Review conferences have
included discussions on the relationship between law enforcement and intelligence. Shortly before the 2002 con-
ference, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review determined that the "wall" that had been erected
between these two communities within the FBI was never constitutionally required. The Court upheld a plan to
bring the two communities closer together. Yet, at the same time, the National Security Advisor had convened a
meetine to discuss erowint£ calls for pullin-cLxlomestic intelligence QUJ of FBI altogether and establishing a sepa-
Terrorism and U Page 1 of 23
Paul Pillar
Paul R. Pillar, Terrorism and U.S. Foreign Policy (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2001).
1: Introduction
-Clinton 1998 to UNO A: "terrorism is at the top of the of the American agenda—and should be at the
top of the world agenda." 1
-successes:
• frequency of attacks worldwide halved from mid-1980s to 1990s [but the attacks were deadlier];
• speed of solving big attacks such as Oklahoma City, WTC 1993, 1998 embassies;
• disrupted terrorist operations, such as FBI 1993 success in stopping Sudanese terrorists' plot to
blow up NYC landmarks
-Clinton read a novel about terror attack on NYC w. bioengineered virus and asked U.S. experts to
evaluate the real risk p. 4
-"If counterterrorism is conceived as a war, it is a small step to conclude that in this war there is no
substitute for victory and thus no room for compromise." p. 5
-esp. on state sponsors, engagement may be shrewder over long haul, however easy to slam as soft
• rising danger to U.S., so step up efforts, esp. in intell and law enf.
http://kinesis.swishmail.com/webmaiyimp/view.php?thisniailbox=INBOX&index=376&id=3... 6/6/03
Terrorism and U Page 1 of 13
Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon, The Age of Sacred Terror (New York: Random House, 2002).
6: A Paradigm Lost
-after WTC 1993, some White House, CIA, and other officials start learning curve
• fight terrorists to strengthen deterrence; let no one think U.S. will just take it
• no concessions, pay-offs, appeasement (unlike Europeans and the one deviation, Reagan's
calamitous arms sales to Iran)
-less likely than lightning strikes, bathtub drownings, or poisonous bites p. 220
-Jan. 25/93: Mir Aimal Kansi, lone Pakistani gunman, shoots AK-47 into cars outside CIA HQ in
McLean, killing two
-Feb. 26/93: Ramzi Yousef attacks WTC in worst foreign terror attack on U.S. soil
-June 26/93: U.S. launches 23 Tomahawks at Baghdad's mukhabarat HQ after April 1993 plot to kill
former President Bush with car bomb on Kuwait visit
-1994: 30+ killed in Israel by Hamas and PIJ in rage over Oslo
-July 1994: Hizballah bombs Buenos Aires Jewish center, killing almost 100
-after Pan Am 103, Bush tries U.N. sanctions and intl pressure to get out of cycle
http://kinesis.swishmail.com/webmaiyimp/view.php?thismailbox=INBOX&index=376&id=2... 6/6/03
y
l^-v^
WH 0300615
Interview of the President by Bob Woodward and Dan Balz of The Washington Post,
December 20, 2001. (2 hours)
(000242)
• President Bush says he'd asked the CIA (& NSC?) "to start thinking about how to get
"them"" in June, 2001, starting w/ UBL and al-Q. Says "I hadn't seen a report yet,
interesting enough," but that they'd been getting "some intelligence hits" throughout the
summer, mainly focused on overseas.
• Implies that at least one of the reasons he kept Tenet on as DCI was that he brought a lot of
knowledge on terrorism and on UBL and al-Q to the administration.
(000244)
• "I know there was a plan in the works" before 9-11, though doesn't cite when it was to be
presented (interviewers suggest 9-10), and "I don't know how mature the plan was."
Mentions how impressed he was with Tenet's local knowledge presented immediately after
9-11, however, ie. "My point is that they had in their mind a plan. There's no question about
it."
• Re-Question on whether Bush wanted to have UBL killed before 9-11: /*STell, I hadn't seen a
Jx v\o that. IknewJhalw^jgjtejjyo—^ word is bring him to '
\" j ^'/.justice." Statesjhat there was a significant diff^^^^ & after 9-TT. Pre-
STC]-? ?'"-w ^ w^q a pK>bl£?luJLJ![gf^^^ Rast^Afrirahnrnbings ,
ancfothers]. And[Ijwaspregaredjto look at ajlanJhat WQuJdJxj a thoughtfj^plan that would
Bring hirjiifijijui^ to do that." But didn't feel the —~^~
sense of urgency, angqr a
(000248)
» Immediately after the 9-11 attacks, looking toward a response: "I remember watching in
frustration as American tried to wage a conventional war against a guerilla force in Vietnam.
And I.. .just instinctively knew that we were going to have to think differently about how
we're going to fight."
• "The military strategy was going to take a while to unfold. I became frustrated—and let me
say this on this point. Early on, the history will show that I asked for all options on the table,
and knew that we were going to have to have what they call boots on the ground, knew we
were going to have to have troops deployed.. .{But] it took a lot longer for us to get the
appropriate air and rescue mission in place and the appropriate boots on the ground."
• Confirms that at the Camp David meetings immediately after 9-11, Rumsfeld really didn't
have any good instant options: "The whole focus was on the fact that there was limited—it
was not a target-rich environment.. .1 took from that discussion that we were not going to be
able to bomb our way to victory. That we were going to have to wage a different kind of war,
which included—I wanted all options discussed. We discussed Cruise missiles only; Cruise
missiles and bombers; Cruise missiles, bombers being B-2s, B-ls and B-52s; as well as
Special Forces troops.
Page 1 of4
Created by A. Albion
June 23, 2003
NSC 03000832
Interview of Dr. Condoleezza Rice by Bob Woodward (on deep background)
October 24, 2001 (70 mins.)
(368)
• Rice: "Wejhiad.jnjhg late summer [nfMOl^-beeftworking on r.nnnterferrnrisrn and working
onjal Qaeda, and working on trying to get serious about going after al Qaeda. And so, th6
principals and the President had abase of knowledge about this organization that probably
three months earlier we wouldn't have had, because we'd been through this drill of how were
we going to deal with al Qaeda. It was a major threat. We knew that they had done the
embassy bombings, suspected they had done the Cole. We'd been through a summer where
there was a lot of noise in the system."
• Rice comments that Tenet had been very concerned about chatter, and it looked like an attack
would occur abroad. "And, in fact, what we did was to button up abroad pretty effectively."
Eg. mentions the Genoa G8, where a lot of security precautions had been taken; a couple of
warnings about the President's security, one very serious. "And so we had done a lot abroad.
One of the things that struck me is that the protocols for what you do abroad are pretty
clear..."
• Rice: "So the only point I'm making is that everybody was kind of on the same page about al
Qaeda, having come out of this review that had been done."
(369)
• Woodward asks Rice if there was an action plan pending from this review—Rice responds
that there was. "There was an action plan that probably would have been dated September
10th." States that it was a directive that would have gone to the President if not for 9-11. "So
people were working the problem, and so there was a common basic knowledge about al
Qaeda."
(373)
• Rice says Bush was thinking of a military response to 9-11 from the start: ".. .the President, I
think, never even considered that he wouldn't at some point use military force." No
consideration of negotiation with the Taliban.
(378)
• Rice (on recognition early on that this was a worldwide problem): ".. .because we had a
database about al Qaeda, everybody knew it was worldwide. I think it wasn't until the
intelligence briefing the next morning [9-15] by George that we actually knew it was 60
countries. I mean, that was news to people. But that it was widespread—I mean, we'd been
dealing with it in the Philippines because of the kidnappings of those people. So we knew
that this organization was worldwide."
(379)
• Rice re. Discussion at 9-15 War cabinet meeting, Camp David: "The financial piece was
underway [—Rice says she thinks this had already been gotten underway at one of the earlier
meetings]. The diplomatic piece was underway. And everybody was starting to think what
Page 1 of 2
Created by A. Albion
June 26, 2003
Testimony before the
National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States
July 9, 2003
Introduction
The defeat of the "communist army" by the ideology of Islamism (and material support
from the West and the Middle East) reinforced the belief that the United States, the
remaining superpower too could be defeated through guerrilla warfare and terrorism.1 As
the proclaimed vanguard of the struggle, Al Qaeda attacked America's most outstanding
economic, military and political landmarks on September 1 1, 2001, to show the way to
the Islamic movements, that the US too could be attacked and destroyed.
After the gravity of terrorism shifted from the Syrian controlled Bekka Valley in Lebanon
to Afghanistan, the war-ravaged country evolved into a "terrorist Disneyland" hosting
training and operational infrastructure for three-dozen Islamist groups. Until US led
coalition intervention in Afghanistan on October 7, 2001, Afghanistan trained several
tens of thousands of terrorists and guerrillas.
• Third, the US policy of disengagement and at times isolation frnm wnrlH affairs
facilitating terrorist groups to grow in strength, size and influence worldwide qnH their
state sponsors a free reign.
CIPANTS
Enacting a National Security Agenda
CHAPTER V:
February 23, 2000
St. Regis Hotel ENACTING A
Washington, D.C.
KIM R. HOLMES
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENDA
Vice President and Director, The Kathryn and Shelby Cullom
Davis Institute for International Studies
"If there is going to be a new foreign policy by a new
Presenters administration, it will have to begin with a vision, and it
ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI will have to be sold to the American people. "
Former National Security Adviser to President Jimmy Carter
—Charles Krauthammer
CASPAR WEINBERGER
Former Secretary of Defense to President Ronald Reagan
From the founding of the American republic until the middle
Commentators of the 20th century, Presidents formulated and conducted the
nation's foreign, defense, and national security policies through
HELLE BERING the Secretaries of State and War. After World War II, with pas-
Editor of the Editorial Page, The Washington Times 1 sage of the National Security Act of 1947, the White House began
ROBERT KAGAN I to exert greater control over the nation's security policies. The
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace I legislation put the military services under a new umbrella, the
I Department of Defense, created the Central Intelligence Agency
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER "\) out of the wartime Office of Strategic Services, and estab-
Syndicated Columnist ' lished the National Security Council (NSC).
PETER RODMAN The NSC's intended purpose was to "advise the President with
Former Deputy Assistant to President Ronald Reagan | respect to the integration of domestic, foreign, and military poli-
for National Security Affairs cies related to the nation's security" and to compel the President
to consult regularly with military experts. In recent years, the
FAREED ZAKARIA term "security" has expanded to include economic and trade
Managing Editor, Foreign Affairs ; issues, energy dependence, globalization, and other matters.
President Harry S. Truman used the NSC as international situa-
tions warranted, Truman's successor, Dwight D. Eisenhower,
incorporated it fully into his decision-making apparatus, upgrad-
ing the position of Executive Director to Special Assistant for
National Security. Eisenhower also used the NSC as he did his
Cabinet; that is, as a deliberative body that assembled all parties
with an interest in a particular matter to air and resolve differ-
nces. In naming banker Robert Cutler to head this operation,
isenhower established a precedent: The NSC director func-
lloned as a coordinator rather than as a policymaker.
I Under President John F. Kennedy, NSC director McGeorge
lundy operated as an advocate and operative rather than as a
82
83
Campaign 2000 — Promoting the National Interest [Free Republic] Page 1 of 6
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The United States has found it exceedingly difficult to define its "national interest" in the absence of Soviet
power. That we do not know how to think about what follows the U.S.-Soviet confrontation is clear from
the continued references to the "post-Cold War period." Yet such periods of transition are important,
because they offer strategic opportunities. During these fluid times, one can affect the shape of the world
to come.
The enormity of the moment is obvious. The Soviet Union was more than just a traditional global
competitor; it strove to lead a universal socialist alternative to markets and democracy. The Soviet Union
quarantined itself and many often-unwitting captives and clients from the rigors of international
capitalism. In the end, it sowed the seeds of its own destruction, becoming in isolation an economic and
technological dinosaur.
^it this is only part of the story. The Soviet Union's collapse coincided with another great revolution.
Dramatic changes in information technology and the growth of "knowledge-based" industries altered the
very basis of economic dynamism, accelerating already noticeable trends in economic interaction that
often circumvented and ignored state boundaries. As competition for capital investment has intensified,
states have faced difficult choices about their internal economic, political, and social structures. As the
prototype of this "new economy," the United States has seen its economic influence grow — and with it,
its diplomatic influence. America has emerged as both the principal benefactor of these simultaneous
revolutions and their beneficiary.
The process of outlining a new foreign policy must begin by recognizing that the United States is in a
remarkable position. Powerful secular trends are moving the world toward economic openness and —
more unevenly — democracy and individual liberty. Some states have one foot on the train and the other
off. Some states still hope to find a way to decouple democracy and economic progress. Some hold on to
old hatreds as diversions from the modernizing task at hand. But the United States and its allies are on
the right side of history.
In such an environment, American policies must help further these favorable trends by maintaining a
disciplined and consistent foreign policy that separates the important from the trivial. The Clinton
administration has assiduously avoided implementing such an agenda. Instead, every issue has been
taken on its own terms ~ crisis by crisis, day by day. It takes courage to set priorities because doing so is
an admission that American foreign policy cannot be all things to all people ~ or rather, to all interest
groups. The Clinton administration's approach has its advantages: If priorities and intent are not clear,
they cannot be criticized. But there is a high price to pay for this approach. In a democracy as pluralistic
as ours, the absence of an articulated "national interest" either produces a fertile ground for those wishing
to withdraw from the world or creates a vacuum to be filled by parochial groups and transitory pressures.
THE ALTERNATIVE
American foreign policy in a Republican administration should refocus the United States on the national
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.omoting the National Interest (PART TWO) [Free Republic] Page 1 of 5
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— ..ted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
There is work to do with the Europeans, too, on defining what holds the transatlantic alliance together in
the absence of the Soviet threat. NATO is badly in need of attention in the wake of Kosovo and with the
looming question of its further enlargement in 2002 and beyond. The door to NATO for the remaining
states of eastern and central Europe should remain open, as many are actively preparing to meet the
criteria for membership. But the parallel track of NATO's own evolution, its attention to the definition of its
mission, and its ability to digest and then defend new members has been neglected. Moreover, the United
States has an interest in shaping the European defense identity — welcoming a greater European military
capability as long as it is within the context of NATO. NATO has a very full agenda. Membership in NATO
will mean nothing to anyone if the organization is no longer militarily capable and if it is unclear about its
mission.
America and our allies, the most daunting task is to find the right balance in our policy toward Russia
and China. Both are equally important to the future of international peace, but the challenges they pose
are very different. China is a rising power; in economic terms, that should be good news, because in order
to maintain its economic dynamism, China must be more integrated into the international economy. This
will require increased openness and transparency and the growth of private industry. The political struggle
in Beijing is over how to maintain the Communist Party's monopoly on power. Some see economic reform,
growth, and a better life for the Chinese people as the key. Others see the inherent contradiction in
loosening economic control and maintaining the party's political dominance. As China's economic problems
multiply due to slowing growth rates, failing banks, inert state enterprises, and rising unemployment, this
struggle will intensify.
It is in America's interest to strengthen the hands of those who seek economic integration because this
will probably lead to sustained and organized pressures for political liberalization. There are no
guarantees, but in scores of cases from Chile to Spain to Taiwan, the link between democracy and
economic liberalization has proven powerful over the long run. Trade and economic interaction are, in fact,
good — not only for America's economic growth but for its political aims as well. Human rights concerns
should not move to the sidelines in the meantime. Rather, the American president should press the
Chinese leadership for change. But it is wise to remember that our influence through moral arguments and
commitment is still limited in the face of Beijing's pervasive political control. The big trends toward the
spread of information, the access of young Chinese to American values through educational exchanges
and training, and the growth of an entrepreneurial class that does not owe its livelihood to the state are,
in the end, likely to have a more powerful effect on life in China.
Although some argue that the way to support human rights is to refuse trade with China, this punishes
isely those who are most likely to change the system. Put bluntly, Li Peng and the Chinese
nservatives want to continue to run the economy by state fiat. Of course, there should be tight export
controls on the transfer of militarily sensitive technology to China. But trade in general can open up the
Chinese economy and, ultimately, its politics too. This view requires faith in the power of markets and
economic freedom to drive political change, but it is a faith confirmed by experiences around the globe.
http://www.freerepublic.com/forum/a3a39673e073b.htm 7/24/03
UNCLASSIFIED BUT COMMISSION SENSITIVE
Team Number: 3
Participants - Commission: Mike Hurley, Scott Allan, Alexis Albion, Daniel Byman,
Bonnie D. Jenkins, Chris Kojm
Background on the interviewee: Mr. Hawley provides advice on current policy issues in the
executive branch including the NSC, State Department, and the US Joint Forces Command. Such
policy advice includes CT issues. From 1999-2001, he was the Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State for foreign policy engagement and political-military preparations regarding Kosovo, East
Timor, Sierra Leone, Eritrea-Ethiopa and the Congo. From 1997 - 1999 he was the Director of
Multilateral Affairs at the NSC. He has worked with Benjamin, Simon and Clarke. Below are the
highlights of his comments.
Summary:
Policy makers need options. They require options up to the last point before using the military.
Hawley supported getting the military more and more involved and becoming more intrusive.
However, this raises a lot of questions. On the policy level, a lot of judgement calls must be
made and there are many complex issues raised when there is intrusive action contemplated.
The DoD military complained that the civilian policy makers were unwilling to make decisions
regarding intrusive, quick operations. Policy makers did not want to make judgments because
they would be held accountable. There is a great deal of risk aversion. Many civilians had no
history with military planning and operations before and so did not feel comfortable in that
environment. They did not want to sign off to kill someone. The policy process must go through
so many hurdles and the quick timing needed to carry out operations often evaporates. The
lesson is that we can no longer retain a cold war mentality or early 90's structure at the top level.
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POLITICS
Brookjngs > Foreign Policy Studies
Counterterrorism
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A New Organizing Principle Summer 2002 Vo1 20 No;3 1
> News £ Events !j for American National pp' Advanced Search
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by James B. Steinberg
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Analysis &
• Business Commentary
• Cities and Suburbs
• Syed Qutb - John L
• Defense the Islamic World
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In his address to Congress nine days after the September 1 1 attacks,
President Bush declared war on global terrorism and announced his • Central Asia: Terro
• Economics, U.S. Religious Extremisi
• Education
intent to deploy "every resource at our command" to defeat terrorist Regional Stability
networks and to treat states that harbor and support terrorism as • Countering the Cal
• Governance
"hostile regimes." The speech appeared to presage a political U.S., Hizb-ut-Tahri
• Politics, Global
reorientation of U.S. foreign and security policy on a scale not seen Religious Extremisi
• Politics, U.S. Central Asia
since the early days of the Cold War, comparable in scope to the
• Science and
Technology Truman Doctrine and the adoption of the strategy of containment in the Policy Briefs
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• The New National !
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We helped reconstruct Europe and Japan and provided foreign aid States
/ Publications ;j based on those same criteria. We supported a defense-industrial • The New National '.
> Bookstore ! establishment to assure the wherewithal to sustain our technological Strategy and Preer
edge. We even sent a man to the moon to demonstrate the superiority • The Bush National
> Executive Education jj Security Strategy:
of Western democracy over Soviet totalitarianism and the command Evaluation
j> About Brookings :| economy.
Books & Journal
To the extent that counterterrorism becomes a comparable, new • America Unbound
organizing principle, it will have similarly widespread consequences for Events
a broad range of U.S. policies. Nearly nine months after the September
11 attacks, it is now possible to see the extent—and the limits—of • Balancing Civil Libe
and National Secur
counterterrorism as an organizing principle for U.S. foreign policy. the Post-9/11 Era:
Challenge of Inforr
New Friends Sharing
© your view
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After reading this opinion, Terrorism? Challen
The clearest impact of this strategic shift can Opportunities
tell us what you think.
be seen in the reorientation of U.S. relations We'll post the most • The United States ,
with key international partners, particularly in interesting comments. France After the W
connection with the military operations in Iraq
Afghanistan. Perhaps the most dramatic send YOUR VIEW
Related Researc
illustration is Pakistan. Just before September
11, U.S. relations with Pakistan had sunk to unprecedented lows. Projects
Pakistan's nuclear weapons program had led to strict sanctions; • Terrorism
formerly close military ties had been cut off; and further sanctions had • Homeland Security
been imposed when General Pervez Musharraf ousted the elected
Scholars
government of Nawaz Sharif in 1999. Pakistani support for Islamic
militants in Kashmir threatened to land Pakistan on the U.S. terrorism • James M. Lindsay
list, and persistent economic mismanagement imperiled Pakistan's • Kenneth M. Pollack
relationship with the International Monetary Fund. • Shibley Telhami
http://www.brookings.org/press/review/summer2002/steinberg.htni 8/11/03
Martha Crenshaw is tbe Colin and Nancy Campln tvofessor of
Global Issues and Democratic Thought in the Department ol Gov-
ernment. Wesleyan University.