
Contents
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The Founding of the Counterterrorism Center The Founding of the Counterterrorism Center
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The CTC’s First Challenges: Libya and Gaddafi The CTC’s First Challenges: Libya and Gaddafi
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The CTC’s First Challenges: The Lebanon Hostage Crisis The CTC’s First Challenges: The Lebanon Hostage Crisis
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Origins of the Predator Drone Origins of the Predator Drone
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Abraham Karem’s Amber and GNAT-750 Abraham Karem’s Amber and GNAT-750
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The Blue Brothers, General Atomics, and the Balkans The Blue Brothers, General Atomics, and the Balkans
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Big Safari and WILD Predators Big Safari and WILD Predators
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Osama bin Laden, Afghan Eyes, and 9/11 Osama bin Laden, Afghan Eyes, and 9/11
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Conclusion Conclusion
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3 “We Have to Find a Better Way to Send a Message”: The CIA’s Counterterrorism Center, from the Eagle Program to the Predator Drone, 1986–2001
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Published:April 2017
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Abstract
This chapter explores how the CIA's Counterterrorist Center (CTC) was established to function as a war room against terrorists, under the leadership of its first director, Duane Clarridge. Though the consequences of the Iran-Contra affair initially tempered the CTC's aggression, the foundations of the agency's post-9/11 role in the War on Terror were laid during this time, and its aggressive pursuit of al-Qaeda today owes much to the approach Clarridge sought to instill in his new department. The origins of the agency's involvement with drones as tools of counterterrorism are also traced back to this period—as early as 1986. Through its classified Eagle program, the CIA first explored the concept of using unmanned aircraft for both intelligence gathering and to conduct lethal precision strikes against targets such as the Libyan dictator and state sponsor of terror, Mu'ammar Gaddafi.
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