AP/ January 26, 2012, 10:48 AM

SEALs becoming face of Obama's defense strategy

This combination photo made from undated images provided by the Danish Refugee Council shows Dane Poul Hagen Thisted, left, and American Jessica Buchanan.

This combination photo made from undated images provided by the Danish Refugee Council shows Dane Poul Hagen Thisted, left, and American Jessica Buchanan. / AP Photo/Danish Refugee Council

WASHINGTON - The Navy SEAL operation that freed two Western hostages in Somalia is representative of the Obama administration's pledge to build a smaller, more agile military force that can carry out surgical counterterrorist strikes to cripple an enemy.

That's a strategy much preferred to the land invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan that have cost so much American blood and treasure over the past decade. The contrast to a full-bore invasion is stark: A small, daring team storms a pirate encampment on a near-moonless night, kills nine kidnappers and whisks the hostages to safety.

Special operations forces, trained for such clandestine missions, have become a more prominent tool in the military's kit since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks that led to the ongoing war in Afghanistan. The administration is expected to announce Thursday that it will invest even more heavily in that capability in coming years.

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The SEAL Team 6 raid in Somalia, which followed last May's operation that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, has political dimensions in an election year.

It gave an added punch to the five-state tour President Barack Obama began the day after he delivered his State of the Union speech. Obama did not mention the raid that was unfolding during his Tuesday night address, but he dropped a hint upon arriving in the House chamber by telling Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, "Good job tonight."

The SEAL mission also helps soften the blow of defense cuts the White House is seeking in spite of a chorus of criticism by hawkish lawmakers. Not to be discounted is the feel-good moment such missions give the American public, a counterbalance to the continued casualties in Afghanistan.

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SEAL Team Six spotlighted again in Somalia raid

After planning and rehearsal, the Somalia rescue was carried out by SEAL Team 6, officially known as the Naval Special Warfare Development Group, according to two U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a secret mission. It was not clear whether any team members participated in both the raid in Somalia and the bin Laden mission in Pakistan.

The SEALs parachuted from U.S. Air Force special operations aircraft before moving on foot, apparently undetected, to the outdoor encampment, two officials said. They found American Jessica Buchanan, 32, and Poul Hagen Thisted, a 60-year-old Dane, who had been kidnapped in Somalia last fall.

The SEALs encountered little resistance from the kidnappers during the operation, which lasted about an hour to an hour and a half, two U.S. officials said. Only one of the attackers fired back and was quickly subdued, one official said. The rest were believed killed, though officials did not rule out the possibility of an escape, as aerial surveillance of the scene was hampered on the cloudy, dark night.

Army special operations MH-60 Black Hawk helicopters then swooped in to the subdued encampment near the town of Adado to carry away the SEALs and hostages.

The captors were heavily armed and had explosives nearby when the rescuers arrived on the scene, Pentagon press secretary George Little said, but he was not more specific. Little declined to say whether there was an exchange of gunfire and would not provide further details about the rescue beyond saying that all of the captors were killed by the Americans.

The American raiders caught the kidnappers as they were sleeping after having chewed the narcotic leaf qat for much of the evening, a pirate who gave his name as Bile Hussein told The Associated Press by phone. Hussein said he was not present at the site but had spoken with other pirates who were. They told him that nine pirates had been killed in the raid and three were taken away, he said. However, two U.S. officials said no Somalis were captured.

Little said the decision to go ahead with the rescue was prompted in part by rising concern about the medical condition of Buchanan. He said he could not be specific without violating her privacy but did say U.S. officials had reason to believe her condition could be life-threatening.

Mary Ann Olsen, an official with the Danish Refugee Council, which employed Buchanan and Thisted in de-mining efforts in Somalia, said Buchanan was "not that ill" but needed medicine.

In the last week or so U.S. officials had collected enough information to "connect the dots" that led Obama to authorize the mission on Monday, Little said.

A Western official said the rescuers and the freed hostages flew by helicopter to Camp Lemonnier in the nearby Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the information had not been released publicly. A key U.S. ally in the region, Djibouti hosts the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, a U.S.-led group organized under U.S. Africa Command.

A U.S. defense official said Thursday that Buchanan and Thisted had been flown to Naval Air Station Sigonella, on the Italian island of Sicily, for medical screenings and other evaluations before heading home. Buchanan's family is meeting her at NAS Sigonella, which is the hub of U.S. Navy air operations in the Mediterranean and hosts an Italian air force base.

The mission was directed by Army Gen. Carter Ham, head of Africa Command, from his headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany. Panetta and other members of Mr. Obama's national security team monitored the mission from the White House before traveling to the Capitol to attend Mr. Obama's speech.

Minutes after Mr. Obama completed his State of the Union address he was on the phone with Buchanan's father to tell him that his daughter was safe.

Several hostages were still being held in Somalia, including a British tourist, two Spanish doctors seized from neighboring Kenya and an American journalist kidnapped on Saturday.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
33 Comments Add a Comment
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colonialmarine says:
To each of you that, along with our CINC & SECDEF share the naive predispositions that SPECOPS and UAV's are a "silver bullet" panacea heralding a new age of cheap and quixotically politically correct National Defense,


Take heart, it will not be your blood spilled when the next inevitable tide of history washes violence over the couch of your entitlement. As it has been for millennia, the tears will have to wait when a generation of our children need be laid to rest after being hastily conscripted, inadequately trained, poorly equipped and finally shoved into the breach in the chaotic hapless defense of a Nation too lazy, selfish and stupid to heed the most fundamental of historical precedents.


Naval Special Warfare, Army Special Forces, Marine Force Recon and Air Force Combat Controllers (and many others you are blessed never to know of) are, along with the latest gen of Advanced Technological Capabilities components (albeit highly specialized components) in a fully integrated combined arms arsenal that stands aegis over your liberty to be morons.


Since you have neither the inclination or fortitude to offer yourself in service I would suggest that as you pay heed to experience, expertise and efficiencies of your betters that do.
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inketolstoy says:
by inverse137 January 26, 2012 12:12 PM EST
So,you're saying we should have left U.S. citizens as hostages?

If you read the article,inv, we did leave a US citizen hostage ( the reporter). The publicity of this rescue is probably not helping the unrescued hostages right now.
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peevee2 says:
Weak. If we had a Republican in the White House, we would crush Nigeria with full force of US Army, Navy, Air Force and Military-Industrial Complex.
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AOCGUY replies:
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Nigeria?
peevee2 replies:
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Nigeria.
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noloyalisti says:
Obama is trying to learn the primitive, violent, reactionary right wingers that this is the strategy we should have had all along in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere.

Instead of using the failed Republicon terrorism strategy of killing millions of women and children and thousands of US troops to get a few terrorist criminals.

Of course that goes against the American multi-national corporations age old scam of using taxpayer money to seize other countries' assets.
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legstheunicorn replies:
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I agree the terrorism strat should have been handled by Special Ops in the 1st place then we should have had the other troops step in to help rebuild the moral of the people. But that's just what I think.
AOCGUY replies:
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In fact Special Operations were the first units to go into Afghanistan back in 2001. I have several friends who were on the ground those first months. And though I never felt going into Iraq was the right thing to do, Iraq was never and should have never been a special ops mission. When waging military operations one has to select the appropriate force for the mission and desired result. Spec Ops would have been ineffective and probably would resulted in many US Spec Ops types killed had they been our force on the ground in Iraq.
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AOCGUY says:
I mentioned this yesterday but it bears repeating. US Special Forces units have been as good as they are today long before this or our previous CinC took office. All that has ever been required was adequate intelligence and a decision to execute on that intelligence by a committed CinC. That said, it appears that it has only been over the last 3 years that a CinC has been willing to use this highly capable force.
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peevee2 replies:
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Using small forces efficiently does not pay Lockheed Martin's bills.
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nottblu says:
just another arse kissing story brought to you by the good folks at CBS/Leftwing central. People should know the seals have been around and used by presidents for decades, just another load of cheerleading crapp for sheep.
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AOCGUY replies:
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first of all the unit was called SEALs not seals (an aquatic mammal) and please list the Special Forces missions used between 2001-08.
legstheunicorn replies:
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Are you kidding me? SEALs have been doing missions since the 60's not all of their missions are brought to the publics attention... It shouldn't be brought up in the 1st place. The news has ruined OPSEC. Please don't act like you know what missions have or have not been carried out.
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wag33 says:
This sends the wrong message. If you want to freelance internationally, wherever, for whatever political ideal, however flimsy, feel free, but don't count on brave young men in uniform to rescue you from thugs. This is how you get our best young men killed. Next time, the rescue team should be composed of Obama and his WH staff.
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legstheunicorn replies:
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The SEALs are for missions like this. This is what they have been trained to do. Was it stupid on the hostages part for putting themselves in danger... yes. But the guys (Seals) who signed up, trained so hard, want missions it's their job. I would love to see Obama try and do what they do but it's not the greatest idea he would probably get himself and others killed...
peevee2 replies:
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Right, because US military is not supposed to protect US citizens, it should only enrich Lockheed Martin.
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riptide213 says:
President Obama is looking more like a person of action than most of his contemporaries.

Every American should be proud of their Armed Forces.

Full steadfast credit to this CINC for conscientious support of and giving final go codes allowing Special Operation forces to do what they do best.

America needs pragmatic leaders with real guts to make hard calls to actually deploy well trained and equipped Special Operations forces with clear objectives.

US military must change tactics and strategy because of hard economic times; politicians are either part of cost effective successful solutions using Special Forces or same old costly hardware program pork barrel problems.

Special Operations and Remotely Piloted Aircraft must be at forefront of a long overdue solution to refocus a leaner, more lethal military strategy.

Expand each services modern Special Operations capacity; retire lethargic Cold War mindsets and armaments.

News reporting restrictions must be enforced and covert operations must remain the genuine gold standard for smaller, fast and focused US military operation successes to continue.

Quiet professionals; keep up the good work of keeping America and our allies safe from pirates, thugs, criminals, warlords, and tyrants anywhere, anytime.

Good return from well invested US tax dollars; US Special Operations forces from each militay service.

Please expand, train, and equip these for smaller, but tougher 21st century military operations challenges yet to come!
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dave08836 says:
I think Obama is "spot-on" with this strategy, the changes in America's enemies requires changes in the strategies we use to combat them. We can't continue to afford and fund a "cold-war" military strategy when we are no longer in a cold war. This tactical approach is both cheaper and more effective. I think Obama should run in 2012 on this strategy and discuss shrinking most military bases around the world, what the heck are we doing with troops in Europe?
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legstheunicorn says:
SEALs becoming face of Obama's defense strategy... Obama's strategy? I think not. How about the Secretary of Defense... No way does Obama know a thing about military strategy. He is asked for the ok and he gives it.. What is he going to say .. no? I am sick of Obama getting the credit. Maybe if he was a SEAL he could get credit.. But there's no way in hell that would ever happen, he wouldnt make it a day in BUDs!
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AOCGUY replies:
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What are BUDs?
legstheunicorn replies:
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BUDs is the training program the guys must go through to become SEALs.
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