NSA deeply involved in US drone strikes: report

Published October 17, 2013
The drone bombing campaign, President Barack Obama's primary tactic against Al Qaeda, has been portrayed as a purely CIA undertaking.  — File Photo
The drone bombing campaign, President Barack Obama's primary tactic against Al Qaeda, has been portrayed as a purely CIA undertaking. — File Photo
The report was based on documents provided by Edward Snowden. As with previous leaks from Snowden, the NSA did not deny the report but issued a statement saying its spying was focused on suspected terrorists and other threats to the United States. — Photo by AP
The report was based on documents provided by Edward Snowden. As with previous leaks from Snowden, the NSA did not deny the report but issued a statement saying its spying was focused on suspected terrorists and other threats to the United States. — Photo by AP

WASHINGTON: The National Security Agency is deeply involved in US drone strikes against Al Qaeda militants, using electronic surveillance tools to track down terror suspects, The Washington Post reported Wednesday.

The report was based on documents provided by Edward Snowden, the US intelligence contractor turned leaker who has exposed the massive scale of the NSA's eavesdropping efforts.

NSA cyber spying helped pinpoint a senior Al Qaeda figure, Hassan Ghul, who was killed in a drone strike in Pakistan's tribal belt in 2012, the Post wrote.

The operation was made possible in part by an email from Ghul's wife that was scooped up by the National Security Agency's vast surveillance dragnet, it said.

The United States has never publicly confirmed that it took out Ghul.

But documents passed to the Post by Snowden made clear he was killed by the US government last year.

Ghul was captured in 2004 and under questioning helped reveal Osama bin Laden's courier network, information that eventually led to the US commando raid that killed the Al Qaeda mastermind.

Ghul spent two years at a secret CIA prison and in 2006, the United States transferred him back to his native Pakistan, where he was released and returned to Al Qaeda.

To help the CIA locate Ghul and other terror suspects, the NSA placed “a surveillance blanket over dozens of square miles of northwest Pakistan” to uncover communications and the whereabouts of Al Qaeda militants, the newspaper said.

The email from Ghul's wife “about her current living conditions” included enough details to confirm the coordinates of their home, according to a document leaked by Snowden.

“This information enabled a capture/kill operation against an individual believed to be Hassan Ghul on October 1,” said the document quoted by the Post.

The newspaper said it was withholding numerous details about the “targeted killing” missions at the request of intelligence officials who were concerned about possible damage to operations and national security.

As with previous leaks from Snowden, the NSA did not deny the report but issued a statement saying its spying was focused on suspected terrorists and other threats to the United States.

“We're focused on discovering and developing intelligence about valid foreign intelligence targets, such as terrorists, human traffickers and drug smugglers,” NSA spokesperson Vanee Vines said.

“Our activities are directed against valid foreign intelligence targets in response to requirements from US leaders in order to protect the nation and its interests from threats such as terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.”

The drone bombing campaign, President Barack Obama's primary tactic against Al Qaeda, has been portrayed as a purely CIA undertaking.

But the Post report showed the country's eavesdropping agency has played a crucial role in providing “signals intelligence” to the CIA for the controversial drone strikes.

The NSA also created a clandestine unit known as the Counter-Terrorism Mission Aligned Cell, or CT MAC, to focus spying resources on elusive terror suspects.

Snowden, who has portrayed himself as a whistleblower, is wanted by US authorities on espionage charge but he has secured asylum in Russia.

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