The Obama administration has sent teams of CIA operatives into Libya in a  rush to gather intelligence on the identities and capabilities of rebel  forces opposed to Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi, according to U.S.  officials.
The information has become more crucial as the administration and its  coalition partners move closer to providing direct military aid or  guidance to the disorganized and beleaguered rebel army.
Although the administration has pledged that no U.S. ground troops will be deployed to Libya, officials said Wednesday that President Obama  has issued a secret finding that would authorize the CIA to carry out a  clandestine effort to provide arms and other support to Libyan  opposition groups.
The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, insisted that no decision has been made.
In the face of a new onslaught by government troops,  rebel forces fled eastward Wednesday from cities and towns they had  captured just days ago. But Gaddafi suffered a political defeat with the  defection to Britain of his foreign minister, Musa Kusa, the most  senior official to break ranks since the coalition bombing campaign  began nearly two weeks ago.
House and Senate lawmakers briefed in a closed-door session by top administration officials, including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, said they received a picture of mixed progress on the ground in Libya.
The  headlong rebel retreat through the oil hubs of Ras Lanuf and Brega, en  route to the strategic city of Ajdabiya, demonstrated the limits of  their fighting ability against the superior firepower and military  organization of Gaddafi loyalists. It also underscored how dependent the  anti-Gaddafi forces have become on airstrikes and missile attacks by  the Western-led coalition.
“Our volunteer forces in the front have  only got light weapons and are facing a very large military might,”  said a rebel spokesman, Col. Ahmad Bani. The largely untrained and  poorly organized force lacks anti-tank and other heavy weapons.
Bani  called on NATO forces to intervene more forcefully, although a U.S.  military official said coalition airstrikes, including attacks by U.S.  AC-130 gunships, had continued apace in combat areas along the Libyan  coast, with 32 U.S. and 23 coalition airstrikes in the 12-hour period  through midday in Libya.
Administration officials said U.S.  participation in the strikes would subside rapidly once NATO formally  takes overall command this week of all aspects of the operation.
Officials  said they saw Libyan government gains during the day as temporary and  part of the “fluid” back and forth of the ground combat. But they did  not dispute the likelihood that the rebels will need more equipment and  training to prevail, increasing the pressure to find out more about the  opposition.
Several lawmakers briefed by Clinton, Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen,  chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said they were told that the  United States is still trying to put together a full picture of the  Libyan rebellion but believes that it does not contain large numbers of  radical Islamic militants.
“Nobody had detected any significant presence, although they knew there were some people,” said Rep. Gary L. Ackerman (D-N.Y.). But “nobody’s vouching for resumes” at the moment, Ackerman said.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers  (R-Mich.), said he heard nothing in the briefing that turned him in  favor of arming the rebels. Calling it a “horrible idea,” Rogers said:  “We know what they’re against. We don’t really know what they’re for.”
A  senior administration official said that “we know well” some of the  more prominent members of the Transitional National Council, the group  that has been the public face of the rebellion and that includes  lawyers, intellectuals and former members of the Gaddafi government.
But  “in terms of participants on the ground, that’s a deeper dive,  obviously,” said the official, one of several interviewed who were not  authorized to publicly discuss the administration’s efforts. “You have  the leadership and the formal structure, and then the ground truth in  various parts of the country where you have strong opposition” to  Gaddafi, but little is known about who is leading those efforts.
British  Foreign Secretary William Hague said Wednesday that his government has  made no decision about arming the rebels and that “we want to know about  any links with al-Qaeda.”  But, he said, “given what we have seen” of the opposition political  leaders, “I think it would be right to put the emphasis on the positive  side.”
The CIA’s efforts represent a belated attempt to acquire  basic information about rebel forces that had barely surfaced on the  radar of U.S. spy agencies before the uprisings in North Africa.
Among  the CIA’s tasks is to assess whether rebel leaders could be reliable  partners if the administration opts to begin funneling in money or arms.
Obama  took a key step in that direction by issuing a secret authorization  known as a presidential “finding,” designed to pave the way for the flow  of money or weapons. News of the finding, signed several weeks ago, was  first reported Wednesday by Reuters.
Under law, the CIA requires  special permission from the president to carry out activities designed  to influence foreign events. A finding establishes a framework of legal  authorities for specific covert activities, and in some cases for future  actions that can be taken only after specific permission is given.
Such  operations are fraught with risks. The CIA’s history is replete with  efforts that backfired against U.S. interests in unexpected ways. In  perhaps the most fateful example, the CIA’s backing of Islamic fighters  in Afghanistan succeeded in driving out the Soviets in the 1980s, but it  also presaged the emergence of militant groups, including al-Qaeda,  that the United States is now struggling to contain.
Giving the  CIA an expanded role in Libya would enable the administration to bridge  the gap between the restrictions on coalition airstrikes and Obama’s  stated goal of bringing Gaddafi’s four-decade rule to an end.
The  CIA’s Special Activities Division includes paramilitary operatives who  could help guide rebel operations as well as allied airstrikes.
Even  amid an escalating campaign of coalition airstrikes, opposition forces  have repeatedly mounted ill-advised assaults on Gaddafi positions and  have been forced to retreat from territory they had gained.
If CIA  paramilitary operatives were linked up with rebel leaders, “we’d be  providing the intelligence on the location of the bad guys and saying,  ‘Don’t you realize they’re just down the road here, and you’re going to  get whacked if you go too far?’ ” said a U.S. official with access to  intelligence on the fighting in Libya. “These guys don’t seem to be  following any common-sense military advice.”
White House press secretary Jay Carney refused  to comment on “intelligence matters” and reiterated Obama’s public  statements that while no decision has been made about arming the rebels,  “we’re not ruling it out or ruling it in.”
Officials emphasized  that the U.S. military will have no role on the ground in assisting the  rebels. “There is no planning for putting any U.S. boots on the ground”  for any purpose, a U.S. military official said. “We have no mandate, no  authority, no planning going on to that effect. . . . Nobody’s told us  to be prepared to do that.”
by Karen DeYoung and Greg Miller taken from http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/in-libya-cia-is-gathering-intelligence-on-rebels/2011/03/30/AFLyb25B_story.html
 
 
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