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Parker added that Americans may accept the idea of a military team going after an enemy general, but when it's reduced to a hit list of individuals' names, it becomes less palatable. "Personalization makes people uncomfortable," said Parker. Still, trying to kill or capture enemy leaders "is precisely what countries do when they are at war," argued Juan Zarate, former senior counterterrorism official in the Bush administration. As the war in Afghanistan has dragged on, public support in the U.S. and abroad has begun to waver. And the counterinsurgency
-- which pits U.S. forces against bands of militants rather than another nation's army
-- blurs the classic battle lines. There also may be public confusion about the U.S. government's secret hit lists targeting militants. The military's target list is different from a separate list run by the CIA. The two lists may contain some of the same names
-- Osama bin Laden, for instance -- but they differ because the military and CIA operate under different rules. While the military can only operate in a war zone, the CIA is allowed to carry out covert actions in countries where the U.S. is not at war. The CIA's target list came under scrutiny recently when it was revealed that it now includes radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, an American citizen believed to be hiding in Yemen. Al-Awlaki, who has emerged as a prominent al-Qaida recruiter, was added to the list after U.S. officials determined that he had shifted from encouraging attacks on the U.S. to planning and participating in them. Also, the CIA uses unmanned aircraft to hunt down and kill terrorists in Pakistan's lawless border regions where the U.S. military does not operate. The issue becomes murkier when elite military members participate in joint operations with CIA units. In those cases, the military members are assigned to the civilian paramilitary units and operate under the CIA rules, which allow them to take on missions outside of a war zone. Last December, Gen. David Petraeus, now the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, made it clear the military was going to increase its efforts to kill or capture enemy combatants considered irreconcilable. Petraeus, who was then the head of U.S. Central Command, said more "national mission force elements" would be sent to Afghanistan this spring. He appeared to be referring to such elite clandestine units as the Delta Force. "There's no question you've got to kill or capture those bad guys that are not reconcilable," he told Congress.
[Associated
Press;
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