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””WASHINGTON, May 29 (Xinhuanet) -- The US administration has launched a high-level internal review of its efforts to battle international terrorism, and the review might move a policy stressing efforts to capture and kill al Qaida leaders toward a broader "strategy against violent extremism,"
The Washington Post reported Sunday.
The shift is meant to recognize the transformation of
al Qaida over the past three years into a far more amorphous, diffuse and
difficult-to-target organization than the group that struck the United States in
2001, the report said.
President George W. Bush's top adviser on terrorism,
Frances Fragos Townsend, told the newspaper that the review is needed to take
into account the "ripple effect" from years of operations targeting al Qaida
leaders.
The review marks the first ambitious effort since the
immediateaftermath of the 2001 attacks to take stock of what the administration
has called the "global war on terrorism" but is nowconsidering changing to
recognize the evolution of its fight.
In many ways, the report said, the review is the
culmination ofa heated debate that has been taking place inside and outside the
government about how to target not only the remnants of al Qaida but also
broader support in the Muslim world for radical Islam, and another key aspect is
likely to be the addition of public diplomacy efforts aimed at winning over Arab
public sentiment.
The policy review was initiated this spring and is
being led byTownsend, and may lead to a new national security presidential
directive, superseding the October 2001 document signed by Bush that pledged the
"elimination of terrorism as a threat to our way of life," the report cited
several administration officials as saying. Enditem
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