WikiLeaks Secret CIA Review of HVT Operations
WikiLeaks Secret CIA Review of HVT Operations
WikiLeaks Secret CIA Review of HVT Operations
Keywords: CIA, counterinsurgency, HVT, HVD, Afghanistan, Algeria, Colombia, Iraq, Israel,
Peru, Northern Ireland, Sri Lanka, Chechnya, Libya, Pakistan, Thailand,HAMAS,
FARC, PULO, AQI, FLN, IRA, PLO, LTTE, al-Qaida, Taliban, drone, assassination
Restraint: SECRET//NOFORN (no foreign nationals)
Title: Best Practices in Counterinsurgency: Making High-Value
Targeting Operations an Effective Counterinsurgency Tool
Date: July 07, 2009
Organisation: Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
Author: CIA Office of Transnational Issues; Conflict, Governance, and Society Group
Link: http://wikileaks.org/cia-hvt-counterinsurgency
Pages: 21
Description
This is a secret CIA document assessing high-value targeting (HVT) programs world-wide for their impact
on insurgencies. The document is classified SECRET//NOFORN (no foreign nationals) and is for
internal use to review the positive and negative implications of targeted assassinations on these
groups for the strength of the group post the attack. The document assesses attacks on insurgent
groups by the United States and other countries within Afghanistan, Algeria, Colombia, Iraq, Israel,
Peru, Northern Ireland, Sri Lanka, Chechnya, Libya, Pakistan and Thailand. The document, which
is "pro-assassination", was completed in July 2009 and coincides with the first year of the Obama
administration and Leon Panetta's directorship of the CIA during which the United States very
significantly increased its CIA assassination program at the expense of capture operations. It produces a
chart for US officials to use in strategically assessing future operations and methods in HVT
assassinations.
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7 July 2009
CL BY: 3900238
CL REASON: 1.4 (a), (c), (d)
DECL ON: 25X1-human
DRV FROM: COL S-06, FOR
S-06, MIL S-06, HUM S-06
OTI IA 2009-037
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We studied as cases Afghanistan (2001-present), Algeria (1954-62), Colombia (2002-present), Iraq (2004-present),
Israel (1972 to mid-1990s, mid-1990s to present), Peru (1980-99), Northern Ireland (1969-98), and Sri Lanka (1983May 2009). We drew additional examples from Chechnya, Libya, Pakistan, and Thailand. (C//NF)
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This assessment was prepared by the Office of Transnational Issues. Comments and queries are
welcome and may be directed to the Conflict, Governance, and Society Group, OTI, on (703) 874-5140,
93-78867 secure, or SIPRNet email: carneyw@jdiss.cia.sgov.gov. (U)
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Impact on Insurgents
Eroding Insurgent Effectiveness. HVT operations
can cause greater disruption than a group can
absorb when strikes outpace a groups ability to
replace its leaders or when the strikes result in the
loss of individuals with critical skills such as
finance and logisticswho comprise a finite
quantity in any insurgency, according to our
review. HVT operations typically force remaining
leaders to increase their security discipline, which
may compromise a leaders effectiveness.
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Impact on Governments
Conducting HVT operations can positively or
negatively affect a governments
counterinsurgency effort, for example by
strengthening the morale of and support for the
government or by misdirecting government focus.
Because both insurgents and counterinsurgents
communicate with the wider audience as they
fight, a government may find that HVT successes
send a message to the governments supporters
that the state is taking serious steps to attack
the insurgency.
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The Talibans military structure blends a topdown command system with an egalitarian
Afghan tribal structure that rules by
consensus, making the group more able to
withstand HVT operations, according to
clandestine and US military reporting.34 35 36 37 38
39 40 41 42 43 44 45
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In Iraq, the June 2006 death of Abu Musab alZarqawi produced no initial drop in AQI attacks,
but the strikes impact on Sunni perceptions may
have helped the Awakening Movement become a
viable force in mid-2006, according to an
academic expert on counterinsurgency.63 AQI
had suppressed this movements earlier attempts
to organize in 2005, according to the same
academic expert.64 (C//NF)
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Appendix A
Selected High-Value Targeting Cases (U)
eroded French domestic and international support for
the effort, resulting in Algeria achieving
independence in 1962, according to the RAND
study.108 (C//NF)
AfghanistanTaliban, 2001-Present
The Coalition has led a sustained effort since 2001 to
target Taliban leaders, but the governments limited
influence outside of Kabul has impeded integration of
high-value targeting (HVT) efforts with other military
and nonmilitary counterinsurgency elements, such as
reconciliation programs. Afghan Government
corruption and lack of unity, insufficient strength of
Afghan and NATO security forces, and the countrys
endemic lawlessness have constrained the
effectiveness of these counterinsurgency elements.
Senior Taliban leaders use of sanctuary in Pakistan
has also complicated the HVT effort. Moreover, the
Taliban has a high overall ability to replace lost
leaders, a centralized but flexible command and
control overlaid with egalitarian Pashtun structures,
and good succession planning and bench strength,
especially at the middle levels, according to
clandestine and US military reporting.89 90 91 92 93 94 95
96 97 98 99 100
(S//NF)
ColombiaFARC, 2002-Presentb
For most of Colombias history, political transitions
have resulted from successful insurrections by the
party out of power, according to a research institute
study.109 The Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC), a Marxist-Leninist insurgent
organization, began waging a guerrilla war in 1964
and uses the drug trade to support its military and
political activities. President Alvaro Uribe, following
his 2001 inauguration, made targeting senior and
midlevel FARC leaders a major element of Bogotas
counterinsurgency campaign. After several years of
failures and near misses, Bogota began a series of
successful HVT strikes in 2007, following
improvements in intelligence, strike accuracy,
mission planning and deployment, operational
security, and interservice coordination, according to
US Embassy in Bogota reporting.110 Colombia has
effectively integrated the HVT effort into its broader
counterinsurgency strategy and has capitalized on the
psychological impact produced by the strikes to boost
the governments legitimacy and to erode insurgent
morale, according to a body of clandestine,
Colombian National Police, and US Embassy in
Bogota reporting.111 112 113 114 115 (C//NF)
AlgeriaFLN, 1954-62
The National Liberation Front (FLN) began a revolt
in 1954 against French rule in Algeria with the goal
of establishing an independent state. The groups
campaign of urban terrorism, intended to provoke a
French overreaction that targeted the general Algerian
population, succeeded, and the resulting loss of
civilians increased the FLNs popularity, according to
an academic study.101 French efforts to target FLN
leaders included intelligence-driven commando raids
on insurgent hideouts, according to a former
insurgent,102 and culminated in the 1956 capture of
FLN chief Ahmad Ben Bella and four other top
leaders during a flight from Rabat to Tunis.103 104 Ben
Bella was a relative moderate among the FLN
leadership, and his capture enhanced the influence of
radical Algeria-based leaders, according to academic
studies.105 106 French military gains from 1956 to
1958 shifted the conflict sharply against the
insurgents, according to a RAND study.107 However,
the draconian measures taken to quell the insurgency
IraqAQI, 2004-Present
Al-Qaida in Iraq (AQI)earlier known as the
Zarqawi networkbecame a primary focus of
Coalition HVT operations in early 2004 as the group
began to release public statements and jockey for
primacy in the Iraqi insurgency. AQI initially lost
several iterations of its senior leadership and
b
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Government Factors
Duration and Intensity of HVT Operations. Because the effects of HVT operations may not be visible for some time,
governments may need to sustain the operations as long as there is a strategic rationale. Extensive and protracted HVT
operations can substantially degrade an insurgency, but short or erratically conducted HVT campaigns may weed out only the
less security-conscious insurgents. (C//NF)
Choice of HVT Method. Governments can use variables such as culture and the likelihood of collateral damage to determine
whether capturing or using psychological operations to marginalize insurgent leaders is more likely to produce desired effects
than kinetic strikes. Targeting sources of insurgent strength, for example logistics and finances, may be more effective than
targeting the leadership of a decentralized group. (C//NF)
Visibility Into Group. A governments visibility into an insurgent groups inner workings, such as leadership dynamics and the
distribution of critical skills, can improve HVT outcomes. (C//NF)
Effectiveness of Other Military and Nonmilitary Counterinsurgency Instruments. How well a government conducts the
non-HVT elements of its counterinsurgency campaign and how integrated the HVT program is with other elements will shape
the impact of the HVT effort. (C//NF)
Capitalizing on Leadership Divisions. Exacerbating or exploiting leadership fissures, for example by co-opting disaffected
insurgent leaders, can be as effective as targeting a groups leadership militarily. (C//NF)
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62
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138
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