Over the past two years, the Obama administration has been secretly developing a blueprint for pursuing terrorists, a next-generation targeting list called the “disposition matrix.”
The matrix contains the names of terrorism suspects arrayed against an accounting of the resources being marshaled to track them down, including sealed indictments and clandestine operations. U.S. officials said the database is designed to go beyond existing kill lists, mapping plans for the “disposition” of suspects beyond the reach of drones.
Although the matrix is a work in progress, the effort to create it reflects a reality setting in among the nation’s counterterrorism ranks: The United States’ conventional wars are winding down, but the government expects to continue adding names to kill or capture lists for years.
Among senior Obama administration officials, there is a broad consensus that such operations are likely to be extended at least another decade. Given the way al-Qaeda continues to metastasize, some officials said no clear end is in sight.
“We can’t possibly kill everyone who wants to harm us,” a senior administration official said. Generating lists and carrying out strikes is “a necessary part of what we do. … We’re not going to wind up in 10 years in a world of everybody holding hands and saying, ‘We love America.’ ”
That timeline suggests that the United States has reached only the midpoint of what was once known as the global war on terrorism. Targeting lists that were regarded as finite emergency measures after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, are now fixtures of the national security apparatus. The rosters expand and contract with the pace of drone strikes but never go to zero.
Meanwhile, a significant milestone looms: The number of militants and civilians killed in the drone campaign over the past 10 years will soon exceed 3,000 by certain estimates, surpassing the number of people al-Qaeda killed in the Sept. 11 attacks.
The Obama administration has touted its successes against the terrorist network, including the death of Osama bin Laden, as signature achievements that argue for President Obama’s reelection. The administration has taken tentative steps toward greater transparency, formally acknowledging for the first time the United States’ use of armed drones.
Less visible is the extent to which Obama has institutionalized the highly classified practice of targeted killing, transforming ad-hoc elements into a counterterrorism infrastructure capable of sustaining a seemingly permanent war. Spokesmen for the White House, the National Counterterrorism Center, the CIA and other agencies declined to comment on the matrix or other counterterrorism programs.
Privately, officials acknowledge that the development of the matrix is part of a series of moves, in Washington and overseas, to embed counterterrorism tools into U.S. policy for the long haul.
White House counterterrorism adviser John O. Brennan is seeking to codify the administration’s approach to generating capture/kill lists, part of a broader effort to guide future administrations through the counterterrorism processes Obama has embraced.
CIA Director David H. Petraeus is pushing to expand the agency’s fleet of armed drones, U.S. officials said. The proposal, which would need White House approval, reflects the agency’s transformation into a paramilitary force, and makes clear that it does not intend to dismantle its drone program and return to its pre-Sept. 11 focus on gathering intelligence.
The U.S. Joint Special Operations Command, which carried out the raid that killed bin Laden, has moved commando teams into suspected terrorist hotbeds in Africa. A rugged U.S. outpost in Djibouti has been transformed into a launching pad for counterterrorism operations across the Horn of Africa and the Middle East.
JSOC also established a secret targeting center across the Potomac River from Washington, U.S. officials said. The elite command’s targeting cells have traditionally been located near the front lines of its missions, including in Iraq and Afghanistan. But JSOC created a “national capital region” task force that is a 15-minute commute from the White House so it could be more directly involved in deliberations about al-Qaeda lists.
The developments were described by current and former officials from the White House and the Pentagon, as well as intelligence and counterterrorism agencies. Most spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.
These counterterrorism components have been affixed to a legal foundation for targeted killing that the Obama administration has discussed more openly over the past year. In a series of speeches, administration officials have cited legal bases, including the congressional authorization to use military force granted after the Sept. 11 attacks, as well as the nation’s right to defend itself.
Critics contend that those justifications have become more tenuous as the drone campaign has expanded far beyond the core group of al-Qaeda operatives behind the strikes on New York and Washington. Critics note that the administration still doesn’t confirm the CIA’s involvement or the identities of those killed. Certain strikes are now under legal challenge, including the killings last year in Yemen of U.S.-born al-Qaeda operative Anwar al-Awlaki and his 16-year-old son.
Counterterrorism experts said the reliance on targeted killing is self-perpetuating, yielding undeniable short-term results that may obscure long-term costs.
“The problem with the drone is it’s like your lawn mower,” said Bruce Riedel, a former CIA analyst and Obama counterterrorism adviser. “You’ve got to mow the lawn all the time. The minute you stop mowing, the grass is going to grow back.”
The United States now operates multiple drone programs, including acknowledged U.S. military patrols over conflict zones in Afghanistan and Libya, and classified CIA surveillance flights over Iran. Strikes against al-Qaeda, however, are carried out under secret lethal programs involving the CIA and JSOC. The matrix was developed by the NCTC, under former director Michael Leiter, to augment those organizations’ separate but overlapping kill lists, officials said.
The result is a single, continually evolving database in which biographies, locations, known associates and affiliated organizations are all catalogued. So are strategies for taking targets down, including extradition requests, capture operations and drone patrols.
Obama’s decision to shutter the CIA’s secret prisons ended a program that had become a source of international scorn, but it also complicated the pursuit of terrorists. Unless a suspect surfaced in the sights of a drone in Pakistan or Yemen, the United States had to scramble to figure out what to do.
“We had a disposition problem,” said a former U.S. counterterrorism official involved in developing the matrix.
The database is meant to map out contingencies, creating an operational menu that spells out each agency’s role in case a suspect surfaces in an unexpected spot. “If he’s in Saudi Arabia, pick up with the Saudis,” the former official said. “If traveling overseas to al-Shabaab [in Somalia] we can pick him up by ship. If in Yemen, kill or have the Yemenis pick him up.”
Officials declined to disclose the identities of suspects on the matrix. They pointed, however, to the capture last year of alleged al-Qaeda operative Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame off the coast of Yemen. Warsame was held for two months aboard a U.S. ship before being transferred to Justice Department custody and charged in federal court in New York.
“Warsame was a classic case of ‘What are we going to do with him?’ ” the former counterterrorism official said. In such cases, the matrix lays out plans, including which U.S. naval vessels are in the area and which charges the Justice Department should prepare.
“Clearly, there were people in Yemen that we had on the matrix, as well as others in Pakistan and Afghanistan,” the former counterterrorism official said. The matrix was a way to be ready if they moved. “How do we deal with these guys in transit? You weren’t going to fire a drone if they were moving through Turkey or Iran.”
Officials described the matrix as a database in development, although its status is unclear. Some said it has not been implemented because it is too cumbersome. Others, including officials from the White House, Congress and intelligence agencies, described it as a blueprint that could help the United States adapt to al-Qaeda’s morphing structure and its efforts to exploit turmoil across North Africa and the Middle East.
A year after Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta declared the core of al-Qaeda near strategic defeat, officials see an array of emerging threats beyond Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia — the three countries where almost all U.S. drone strikes have occurred.
The Arab spring has upended U.S. counterterrorism partnerships in countries including Egypt where U.S. officials fear al-Qaeda could establish new roots. The network’s affiliate in North Africa, al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, has seized territory in northern Mali and acquired weapons that were smuggled out of Libya.
“Egypt worries me to no end,” a high-ranking administration official said. “Look at Libya, Algeria and Mali and then across the Sahel. You’re talking about such wide expanses of territory, with open borders and military, security and intelligence capabilities that are basically nonexistent.”
The creation of the matrix and the institutionalization of kill/capture lists reflect a shift that is as psychological as it is strategic.
Before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the United States recoiled at the idea of targeted killing. The Sept. 11 commission recounted how the Clinton administration had passed on a series of opportunities to target bin Laden in the years before the attacks — before armed drones existed. President Bill Clinton approved a set of cruise-missile strikes in 1998 after al-Qaeda bombed embassies in East Africa, but after extensive deliberation, and the group’s leader escaped harm.
Targeted killing is now so routine that the Obama administration has spent much of the past year streamlining the processes that sustain it.
This year, the White House scrapped a system in which the Pentagon and the National Security Council had overlapping roles in scrutinizing the names being added to U.S. target lists.
Now the system functions like a funnel, starting with input from half a dozen agencies and narrowing through layers of review until proposed revisions are laid on Brennan’s desk, and subsequently presented to the president.
Video-conference calls that were previously convened by Adm. Mike Mullen, then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have been discontinued. Officials said Brennan thought the process shouldn’t be run by those who pull the trigger on strikes.
“What changed is rather than the chairman doing that, John chairs the meeting,” said Leiter, the former head of the NCTC.
The administration has also elevated the role of the NCTC, which was conceived as a clearinghouse for threat data and has no operational capability. Under Brennan, who served as its founding director, the center has emerged as a targeting hub.
Other entities have far more resources focused on al-Qaeda. The CIA, JSOC and U.S. Central Command have hundreds of analysts devoted to the terrorist network’s franchise in Yemen, while the NCTC has fewer than two dozen. But the center controls a key function.
“It is the keeper of the criteria,” a former U.S. counterterrorism official said, meaning that it is in charge of culling names from al-Qaeda databases for targeting lists based on criteria dictated by the White House.
The criteria are classified but center on obvious questions: Who are the operational leaders? Who are the key facilitators? A typical White House request will direct the NCTC to craft a list of al-Qaeda operatives in Yemen involved in carrying out or plotting attacks on U.S. personnel in Sanaa.
The lists are reviewed at regular three-month intervals during meetings at the NCTC headquarters that involve analysts from other organizations, including the CIA, the State Department and JSOC. Officials stress that these sessions don’t equate to approval for additions to kill lists, an authority that rests exclusively with the White House.
With no objections — and officials said those have been rare — names are submitted to a panel of National Security Council officials that is chaired by Brennan and includes the deputy directors of the CIA and the FBI, as well as top officials from the State Department, the Pentagon and the NCTC.
Obama approves the criteria for lists and signs off on drone strikes outside Pakistan, where the CIA director decides when to fire. But aside from Obama’s presence at “Terror Tuesday” meetings — which usually are devoted to discussing terrorism threats and trends rather than approving targets — the president’s involvement is more indirect.
“The president would never come to a deputies meeting,” a senior administration official said, although participants recalled cases in which Brennan stepped out of the situation room to get Obama’s direction on questions the group couldn’t resolve.
The review process is compressed but not skipped when the CIA or JSOC has compelling intelligence and a narrow window in which to strike, officials said. The approach also applies to the development of criteria for “signature strikes,” which allow the CIA and JSOC to hit targets based on patterns of activity — packing a vehicle with explosives, for example — even when the identities of those who would be killed is unclear.
For an administration that is the first to embrace targeted killing on a wide scale, officials seem confident that they have devised an approach that is so bureaucratically, legally and morally sound that future administrations will follow suit.
During Monday’s presidential debate, Republican nominee Mitt Romney made it clear that he would continue the drone campaign. “We can’t kill our way out of this,” he said, but added later that Obama was “right to up the usage” of drone strikes and that he would do the same.
As Obama nears the end of his term, officials said the kill list in Pakistan has slipped to fewer than 10 al-Qaeda targets, down from as many as two dozen. The agency now aims many of its Predator strikes at the Haqqani network, which has been blamed for attacks on U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
In Yemen, the number of militants on the list has ranged from 10 to 15, officials said, and is not likely to slip into the single digits soon, even though there have been 36 U.S. airstrikes this year.
The number of targets on the lists isn’t fixed, officials said, but fluctuates based on adjustments to criteria. Officials defended the arrangement even while acknowledging an erosion in the caliber of operatives placed in the drones’ cross hairs.
“Is the person currently Number 4 as good as the Number 4 seven years ago? Probably not,” said a former senior U.S. counterterrorism official involved in the process. “But it doesn’t mean he’s not dangerous.”
In focusing on bureaucratic refinements, the administration has largely avoided confronting more fundamental questions about the lists. Internal doubts about the effectiveness of the drone campaign are almost nonexistent. So are apparent alternatives.
“When you rely on a particular tactic, it starts to become the core of your strategy — you see the puff of smoke, and he’s gone,” said Paul Pillar, a former deputy director of the CIA’s counterterrorism center. “When we institutionalize certain things, including targeted killing, it does cross a threshold that makes it harder to cross back.”
For a decade, the dimensions of the drone campaign have been driven by short-term objectives: the degradation of al-Qaeda and the prevention of a follow-on large-scale attack on U.S. soil.
Side effects are more difficult to measure — including the extent to which strikes breed more enemies of the United States — but could be more consequential if the campaign continues for 10 more years.
“We are looking at something that is potentially indefinite,” Pillar said. “We have to pay particular attention, maybe more than we collectively have so far, to the longer-term pros and cons to the methods we use.”
Obama administration officials at times have sought to trigger debate over how long the nation might employ the kill lists. But officials said the discussions became dead ends.
In one instance, Mullen, the former Joint Chiefs chairman, returned from Pakistan and recounted a heated confrontation with his counterpart, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.
Mullen told White House and counterterrorism officials that the Pakistani military chief had demanded an answer to a seemingly reasonable question: After hundreds of drone strikes, how could the United States still be working its way through a “top 20” list?
The issue resurfaced after the U.S. raid that killed bin Laden. Seeking to repair a rift with Pakistan, Panetta, the CIA director, told Kayani and others that the United States had only a handful of targets left and would be able to wind down the drone campaign, former officials said.
A senior aide to Panetta disputed this account, and said Panetta mentioned the shrinking target list during his trip to Islamabad but didn’t raise the prospect that drone strikes would end. Two former U.S. officials said the White House told Panetta to avoid even hinting at commitments the United States could not keep.
“We didn’t want to get into the business of limitless lists,” said a former senior U.S. counterterrorism official who oversaw the lists. “There is this apparatus created to deal with counterterrorism. It’s still useful. The question is: When will it stop being useful? I don’t know.”
Washington Post staff writers Karen DeYoung, Craig Whitlock and Julie Tate contributed to this report.
Todd Benoit:
Byline: Greg Miller, The Washington Post



Nuke em all.
Let Allah sort em out.
Romney !!!!
Soooo….You want Romney’s name on the list? That’s going a little too far don’t ya think?
The White House knew of the terrorist attacks and did nothing but watch the scene from a drone fly over!! Obama and Hillary WATCHED as Americans were tortured and slaughtered !!
Truly amazing that one could even imagine the President, V.P. and Sec of Defense sitting in the Situation Room getting real-time calls, e-mails and pictures of the actual attack and doing nothing to respond or send help to those folks in Libya for several hours….tragic and inexcusable…..
No need to imagine it. There is documentation already being distributed. Hit up google and have a ball giving your imagination a rest while the facts overwhelm your senses.
George Bush read Childrens books while we where being attacked!
Just the thought of him as President is terrorfying!
Is it a terrorist list or is a list of those who have committed an act of terror? Because, oh my God, there is a major difference!
This sounds a lot like another leak from the White House trying to create a false image of Obama as a tough guy instead of an apologist. It won’t work. But it is rather funny that this president accused the US of torture while in other countries, but he has no problem killing people he decides are deserving of death.
“We don’t dictate, we liberate countries from dictators.”
Appears to be an effort going on to continue the fight against “people” who the President has been claiming we have “defeated and severely damaged”…..over and over again on the campaign trail the President & V.P. have energetically claimed that “Osama Bin Laden is dead” and given the impression that the job was pretty much done, the terrorists are on the run and the world was now mostly free from Al-Qaeda and these terrorists forever more….seems like an apparent complacency had come over the White House regarding the decimation caused by past terrorism…..maybe wearing the rose colored glasses, until Libya….and experts are stating that since our troop withdrawal from Afghanistan there is a resurgence of Al-Qaeda and safe-havens there and across the Arab world for training and arming the terrorist efforts…..the battle with terrorism continues but one clearly has to question whether this President has been and continues to be up to the challenge…..
He’s not.
He hasn’t been.
He never will be.
The great experiment with equal oportunity is over.
Hopefully we can recover.
I thought Obama defeated terrorism…..
No, Mr. Obama & Joe Biden are the only ones with that thought….
Bush did it, liberals cried foul. Obama does it, liberals dance in the street. How many more Americans will Obama assassinate in foreign soil without benefit of a trial?
The only guy to trust in giving the truth to the public is Rep. Peter King. Bill Clinton is the one who screwed up when he was president. the day of his famous golf match. CIA had OBL in satellite view and could have rid the world of him BUT Bill had to finish his golf game. after the last tee, it was too late as the satellite had lost OBL. That surely must disgust the families who are left to deal with the sorrow and grief after 911. And Obama did NOT kill bin laden. Our Navy Seals did the job. They are the ONLY ones to give credit to a job well done.
Rep. King’s use of the war on terror to justify his vile anti-Muslim hate is one of the most sickening developments in politics since 911. Last I checked OBL was dead by order of a Democratic president. Evidently that fact will continue to drive some people to goofy town.
Where on earth did you read or see anything to show Rep. King is ‘Anti-Muslim” ??? If you even suggest this was said on MSNBC or CNN or the Alphabet stations, then you were fed Pablum.
You are off base on your Assumption and need to either provide Facts, which back your accusation or cave in and admit you are wrong. It was the NAVY SEALS who got OBL. Your Dem. Pres. does not stand. And Goofy Town is where YOU live. Time to see Reality.
While a sad portion of the media do give Obama a pass in his continuation and escalation of some of the worst Bush national secuirty policies, there is a large liberal constituency that hates the drone war, the kill list, and the NDAA. Look up the ACLU website and find out for yourself.
Also, I do not recall this vocal segment of conservatives that were protesting the OLC memos which allowed for the same thing during the Bush administration. Thanks for finally showing up for civil rights.
I am undecided about the “drone” war. I don’t think we are being told about the “collateral” damage from drone strikes. I have no problem with targeting our enemies and killing them. I do have problems with killing civilians who just happen to be within so many feet of a drone strike. I am against assassinating American citizens on foreign soil without benefit of trial.
Where are the stories telling that Obama is right back out lying about his comment about Romney and GM? Even MSNBC had to admit he lied yet he is right back spouting what we already know is a lie. The libber media isn’t reporting a thing. Where is the outcry that Middle Class Joe lied about him and Obama not knowing of any request for additional security in Lybia? Where is the media reporting what time Obama and hopefully Biden KNEW about the attack in Lybia? It must have been at 3AM and all they heard on the other end of the line was …zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz. Where is the libber media and the Obama sheep when it comes to the incompetency and lack of leadership from this guy? The Ft Hood shooting is still called a workplace incident. WHAT A JOKE! When we waterboarded THREE
terrorists, one the master mind of 9/11, oh my what an outcry. But we now have a pres bragging how he got Bin Laden and we know he has a hit list yet the bleeding hearts are silent. As long as this guy gives out food stamps, obamaphones, apologizes everywhere, continues to try and be a clown on the campaign trail, continues to lie and his only defense is to try and smear Romney, the sheep will lap it up. Chrissy Mathews will scream racism and the useful idiots will fall in line with the war cry. Hurry up Nov…then we can end the “transforming of America”.
While there are of course issues to consider with the president playing judge, jury and executioner, it is by far the smarter and yes, the more conservative approach to try and take out individuals and cells (vs fighting massive wars.)
Scaling back defense spending on needless antiquated equipment, focusing on solid intelligence and understanding of cultures and motivations – and fighting smarter is 21st century thinking. Not only is the interventionist nation building (and spreading democracy via gunpoint) a failed experiment, but an obsolete model that needs to be discarded and replaced.
Using JSOC commando strikes is one thing. Drone strikes killing uncharged Americans and everyone nearby with only the OK from the President is definitely an “issue to consider”. With NDAA as written, it’s a real short philosophical leap from doing this in Yemen and doing it in the U.S.
It is. Obama’s complicity in the NDAA and perpetuation of most Bush policies, on top of his failure to close Gitmo (despite efforts) are among my biggest gripes. However, given that the NDAA is McCain’s pet, it’s absurd to think that this and much worse wouldn’t be going on today had McCain/Palin won. I suspect things would be much worse in the foreign policy department. Obama is no saint, though as far as damage control is concerned, he has done his job.
Presidents seem to forget – just because they would not use such and such power, does not mean their predecessors won’t. Executive power should be contracted, not expanded.
There probably never will be a president that would not use the power created by previous administrations and extend that power further, but executive overreach is out of control when this kill list is allowed to exist and be acted upon. I see no sign in either candidate of this not continuing.
Wow, I guess we’re on the same wavelength…I browsed the rest of the comments after replying to yours and I see that we’re thinking almost the same thing. Cheers!