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As New Drone Policy Is Weighed, Few Practical Effects Are Seen

CHICAGO — Under growing pressure to bring greater transparency and accountability to its use of targeted killing, the Obama administration is struggling to transform a program that was conceived under pressure, has operated in a secretive and often haphazard manner and has left the United States increasingly isolated even from its allies.

For months, President Obama and his aides have promised they will move to break down the wall of secrecy and work with Congress to create a more lasting legal framework for the drone strikes. But the only proposal to surface so far — an administration plan, not yet approved, to gradually move some drone operations that are now run by the C.I.A. to the military — may have little practical effect, at least in the short term.

That only underscores the problem the Obama administration faces in trying to institutionalize a program that national security officials believe will be at the center of American warfare for years to come, while placating a growing chorus of critics challenging the targeted killing program on legal, moral and practical grounds.

In recent months, the criticism from human rights activists, United Nations officials and some friendly foreign governments has been joined by a number of former senior American military and intelligence officials who argue that the costs of the drone program might exceed its benefits. In the latest example, Gen. James E. Cartwright, the former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and a favored adviser during Mr. Obama’s first term, expressed concern in a speech here on Thursday that America’s aggressive campaign of drone strikes could be undermining long-term efforts to battle extremism.

“We’re seeing that blowback,” General Cartwright, who is retired from the military, said at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. “If you’re trying to kill your way to a solution, no matter how precise you are, you’re going to upset people even if they’re not targeted.”

General Cartwright also expressed skepticism about the draft proposal to transfer some drone operations to the military, saying that he worried about a “blurring of the line” between soldiers and spies if the Pentagon was put in charge of drone operations in sovereign countries “outside a declared area of hostility.” He said that if there are problems with the drone program, moving it “from one part of the government to another” would not necessarily solve them.

Currently, the Pentagon has responsibility for drones in Afghanistan, Somalia and in Yemen, where the C.I.A. also runs a separate program. Because the proposal being examined by the National Security Council would most likely leave drone operations in Pakistan under the C.I.A., the practical impact of such a move in the short term would appear to be quite limited. To date, the vast majority of American drone strikes and other kinds of targeted counterterrorism strikes outside conventional wars have been carried out in Pakistan, where the C.I.A. operates on its own — 365 strikes, by the count of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism in London, compared with about 45 in Yemen and a handful in Somalia.

That would mean the greatest impact of a shift of strikes to military control would be in Yemen, where both the C.I.A. and the military’s Joint Special Operations Command have carried out strikes. Hence the move may be most important symbolically rather than practically, as a statement of the United States’ long-term intentions.

While many experts argue that the military should be better than the C.I.A. at carrying out precise lethal operations, the strikes have not always played out that way. In Yemen, for example, Mr. Obama brought the C.I.A. into the drone campaign in 2011 in part because several of the military’s strikes went awry, killing women and children and a popular deputy governor.

Some close observers of the drone program disputed the widely repeated notion that moving it entirely to the Defense Department would necessarily make it more open, particularly if it is to be operated by the Joint Special Operations Command, among the least transparent elements of the military.

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A man in Zinjbar, Yemen, rode past a building that was destroyed last month in a drone attack.Credit...Yahya Arhab/European Pressphoto Agency

“We know JSOC is far more secretive than the C.I.A., and that Congressional oversight is weaker,” said Naureen Shah, associate director of the Counterterrorism and Human Rights Project at Columbia Law School. She said that while units under the Joint Special Operations Command were accused of serious abuse of prisoners in Iraq, “it never had to face public scrutiny about it in the way the C.I.A. did.”

Ms. Shah said she was “concerned that this ‘C.I.A. out of drones’ story is a shortcut by the administration, an effort to deflect criticism of the drone program without directly answering that criticism.”

But Micah Zenko of the Council on Foreign Relations, who studies counterterrorism strikes, said that in the long run, a move away from the covert side of the C.I.A. might make sense, allowing Congress to discuss the strikes and their consequences far more fully in public.

“If it’s a priority of the president and the secretary of defense, the military can be far more open than the C.I.A.,” Mr. Zenko said.

For months, Mr. Obama has made vague promises about reshaping the targeted killings. In October, he said on “The Daily Show” that “one of the things we’ve got to do is put a legal architecture in place, and we need Congressional help in order to do that, to make sure that not only am I reined in, but any president’s reined in terms of some of the decisions that we’re making.”

The president promised in his State of the Union address in January to “engage with Congress” on the targeting of terrorists and to make sure “our efforts are even more transparent to the American people and to the world.”

Some officials have suggested that Mr. Obama is likely to unveil new proposals, possibly including legislation, in a major speech, but the White House has so far declined to confirm that or say what exactly is planned.

Last year, John O. Brennan, then Mr. Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, began work on a new set of rules to govern the strikes. Now that Mr. Brennan is C.I.A. director, he may oversee a diminution in his agency’s role in lethal operations.

Mr. Brennan has spoken publicly about how he is concerned that the C.I.A.’s intense focus on paramilitary operations over the past decade has crippled its traditional mission to carry out espionage operations in countries like China, Russia and North Korea.

“We need to make sure we have the best intelligence collection capabilities possible and the best analytical capabilities possible, and the C.I.A. should not be doing traditional military activities and operations,” he said at his Senate confirmation hearing in February.

He also said he believed that when the United States kills people abroad, it should find a way to acknowledge the lethal actions.

“We need to acknowledge it publicly,” Mr. Brennan said. “As far as I’m concerned, if there is this type of action that takes place, in the interests of transparency, I believe the United States government should acknowledge it.”

Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington.

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 11 of the New York edition with the headline: As New Drone Policy Is Weighed, Few Practical Effects Are Seen. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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