July 13 2016, 3:00 p.m.
AT 9:30 A.M. on a gray winter Monday, the State Department
officials began certifying the names at a rate of one every two minutes and 23
seconds.
In rapid succession, they confirmed that 204 police
officers, soldiers, sailors, and airmen from 11 countries had committed no
gross human rights violations and cleared them to attend one of more than 50
training efforts sponsored by the U.S. government. The programs were taking
place at a wide variety of locations, from Italy, Albania, and Jordan to the
states of Louisiana and Minnesota.
Thirty-two Egyptians were approved for instruction in,
among other things, Apache helicopter gunship maintenance and flight simulators
for the Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk. Azerbaijanis were cleared for a U.S. Army
course on identifying bio-warfare agents in Maryland and underwater demolition
training with Navy SEALs in San Diego. Thirty-three Iraqis were certified to
attend a State Department training session for bodyguards, held in Jordan.
Bosnians were bound for Macedonia to prepare for deployment to Afghanistan.
Ukrainian police were selected for peacekeeping training in Italy. Romanians
would study naval operations in Rhode Island and counterterrorism in Skopje.
This was only the beginning of one day’s work of
vetting security personnel for U.S. training. A joint investigation by The
Intercept and 100Reporters reveals the chaotic and largely unknown details
of a vast constellation of global training exercises, operations, facilities,
and schools — a shadowy network of U.S. programs that every year provides
instruction and assistance to approximately 200,000 foreign soldiers, police,
and other personnel. The investigation exposes the geographic and political
contours of a U.S. training system that has, until now, largely defied thorough
description.
Visualization shows partial data where training
locations were available. Source: WikiLeaks Cablegate, 2003-2010.
The data show training at no fewer than 471 locations
in 120 countries — on every continent but Antarctica — involving, on the U.S.
side, 150 defense agencies, civilian agencies, armed forces colleges, defense
training centers, military units, private companies, and NGOs, as well as the
National Guard forces of five states. Despite the fact that the Department of
Defense alone has poured some $122 billion into such programs since 9/11, the
breadth and content of this training network remain virtually unknown to most
Americans.
The contours of this sprawling system were discovered
by analyzing 6,176 diplomatic cables that were released by WikiLeaks in 2010
and 2011. While the scope of the training network may come as a surprise, the
most astounding fact may be that it is even larger than the available data
show, because the WikiLeaks cables are not comprehensive. They contain, for
example, little information on training efforts in Colombia, the single-largestrecipient
of U.S. training covered by the human rights vetting process that produced
these records. Other large recipients of U.S. security assistance, such as
Pakistan, are vastly underrepresented in the cables for reasons that remain
unclear.
“What you have stumbled across is a systematic lack of
strategic thinking, a systematic lack of evaluation, but a massive commitment
of people and money and time in a growing number of countries,” said Gordon
Adams, formerly a senior White House official for national security and foreign
policy budgets. “I think the word ‘system’ is a misnomer. This is a headless
system,” he said.
The investigation raises serious questions about U.S.
government oversight, safeguards, and accountability. The investigation found:
• A global training network without any coherent
strategy, carried out by scores of agencies and offices with no effective
oversight, centralized planning, or a clear statement of objectives.
• The lack of any means of testing and evaluation, let alone a comprehensive
way to count or track foreign trainees.
• Vetting procedures designed to weed out human rights abusers that examine
trainees so rapidly that experts question their worth.
U.S. Special Forces members advise and assist soldiers
assigned to the Belize Special Assignment Group during a marksmanship range
exercise near Belize City, Belize, April 12, 2010.
Photo: U.S. Department of Defense
ARAND CORP. ANALYSIS from 2013 found that the Pentagon alone has 71 different
authorities under which it provides foreign aid as a means of “building partner
capacity,” or BPC — part of a system that the report criticized as akin to “a
tangled web, with holes, overlaps, and confusions.” The Pentagon, for example,
maintains no master list of the people it trains nor does it keep aggregate figures.
“The way we do security cooperation has been a
patchwork that we’ve added to over and over,” said Rachel Kleinfeld, a senior
associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and former member
of the State Department’s Foreign Affairs Policy Board. “There are more than
180 authorities and scores of agencies working in these areas, and the way it
has evolved over time has made it absolutely impossible for anyone to know
what’s going on. … There really is no oversight.”
Details on the U.S. government’s training programs
have long been lacking. In 2012, the Obama administration submitted a one-time
report to Congress on foreign police training that covered just two fiscal
years — and it was never made public. Annual disclosures by the State Department
about foreign military training programs cover many volumes but are often vague and difficult to analyze,
with information frequently missing or reported inconsistently.
The diplomatic cables that were mined for this
investigation were written between December 1999 and February 2010 and were
among a far larger batch of documents leaked by Army Pfc. Chelsea Manning; a
military court subsequently sentenced Manning to 35 years in prison. The cables provide
the identities of nearly 60,000 trainees and units from 129 countries (today,
the number stands at more than 150 countries) who were selected by U.S.
government entities as varied as the FBI, the Defense Department Fire Academy,
the Patent and Trademark Office, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency,
and the National Park Service. Only some of the cables contained enough
information to appear on the accompanying map, which depicts the planned
movements of just under 39,300 people and units between 2003 and 2010.
The cables also reveal that more than two-thirds of
the State Department’s vetting approvals were granted for training programs
carried out overseas rather than in the United States. Domestically, training
was conducted in 39 U.S. states as well as Puerto Rico, Guam, and the District
of Columbia. At least 57 domestic Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps bases
were involved in these domestic training efforts. Additional research by The
Intercept and 100Reporters indicates that little has
changed in the years since the cables were released; the global U.S. training
system remains sprawling, opaque, and in disarray.
William Hartung, a senior adviser to the Security
Assistance Monitor, which tracks American military aid around the globe, said
the scale of the training efforts was “just mind boggling.”
“It’s sort of a question of, ‘Where aren’t we training
people?’” he said. “It’s hard to imagine any other country in the world being
in a position to do all this and to do it with so little scrutiny.”
A soldier of the Iraqi army’s 16th Division kicks in a
door during a training exercise at Besmaya Range Complex, Iraq, March 21, 2015.
Photo: U.S. Army Central
THE WIKILEAKS CABLES examined in this investigation were written to
comply with the so-called Leahy Law — a vetting process meant to weed out
foreign trainees or units implicated in “gross human rights violations.” While
the Leahy Law has prevented some aid from reaching units in countries like
Pakistan and Indonesia, it has been routinely criticized as ineffective and
filled with loopholes that are used to circumvent the law’s intent. Its implementation has also
been hobbled by a lack of funding. As Lora Lumpe, a senior policy analyst at
the Open Society Foundations, has observed, the State Department office that controls the
Leahy vetting operated on a budget of just $2.75 million in 2014, while the
security projects it oversaw were worth as much as $15 billion. The number of
cases it vetted in 2015 was astounding — 191,899. The total number of individuals
trained is certainly higher: According to the State Department, a single case
can comprise thousands of individuals.
“When you say we have to look at every individual and
every unit and you actually have to do the vetting, you get far too many people
who are technically vetted, but who we actually know very little about,” said
Kleinfeld of the Carnegie Endowment. “So you build a haystack where you’re
looking for a needle. And as you build that haystack, the vetting necessarily
becomes worse.”
Questions about the vetting process are accompanied by
concerns about the effectiveness of the training programs. Last year, a $500
million Pentagon effort to train and equip Syrian rebels, slated to produce 15,000 fighters over three years,
yielded just a few dozen before being scrapped by the Obama administration. A 13-year effort in
Afghanistan has resulted in an army filled with “ghost” soldiers, wracked by
desertions and continuing to suffer setbacks and lose territory to a relatively unpopular insurgency. And then
there was the spectacular collapse of the Iraqi army in 2014 to the much
smaller forces of the Islamic State (though the territory lost at the time is
beginning to be won back).
These failures call into question whether these
far-flung programs “can ever achieve their desired effects,” according to a
2015 report by the Congressional Research Service. “Despite the increasing
emphasis on, and centrality of, BPC in national security strategy and
military operations, the assumption that building foreign security forces will
have tangible U.S. national security benefits remains a relatively untested
proposition.”
A 2015 report by the Center for a New American Security
similarly concluded that many “security assistance and cooperation
interventions fail to accomplish U.S. objectives as a result of both strategic
and structural deficiencies.” It found that training goals are often poorly
articulated and sometimes in conflict with each other. In 2013, a State Department advisory panel also found that American security aid had no
coherent system of planning or evaluation and no overall strategy. It compared
the “baffling” array of federal funding sources to “a philanthropic
grant-making process by an assemblage of different foundations with different
agendas.”
That year, the Obama administration attempted to bring
order to foreign security assistance through a directive that, according to the
Congressional Research Service, calls on national security agencies “to
improve, streamline, and better organize” all American international security
assistance and cooperation. According to the National Security Council, the
administration directed the State Department to “synchronize” foreign security
aid programs. The State Department, in response, has said it “continues to play
a leadership role” in carrying out the still-unpublished 2013 directive, but
the results have been murky and basic information from various agencies is
still lacking. The Department of Justice, for example, said it does not track
foreign training at the department-wide level.
The failure of the State and Justice departments to
meaningfully manage and track their training programs is mirrored by similar
deficiencies at the Department of Defense. Despite its claims that programs are
“closely overseen,” the Pentagon can’t even say how many foreign troops it
mentors. According to Lt. Col. Joe Sowers, a Department of Defense
spokesperson, “Because training is provided through multiple authorities,
appropriations accounts, and geographic combatant commands, there is currently
no single database that provides a total figure for the number of foreign
security forces trained.”
Kleinfeld, from the Carnegie Endowment, describes the
situation as a strategic failure. “No one knows how many people are being
trained because of the lack of centralization — because State does some
training, National Guard does some, the FBI, the DOD,” she said. “No one has
any idea what’s going on.”
This story was co-published with 100Reporters as part of its series investigating chronic
failures in the U.S. training of foreign police and military personnel.
Story by Douglas Gillison and Nick Turse. Data
visualization by Moiz Syed.
Research: Lewam Dejen, Aishvarya Kavi, Chloee Weiner,
and Drew Williams of 100Reporters.
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