More

2 Blackwater Guards Among Dead At Afghan CIA Base

PAMELA HESS and ADAM GOLDMAN   01/ 6/10 11:43 PM ET   AP

Blackwater

WASHINGTON — The deaths of seven CIA employees in Afghanistan probably will not be the last. The U.S. isn't pulling back on covert operations to hunt terrorists there and in Pakistan and will go on taking chances on human tipsters to help.

In fact, the United States struck back at militant targets in Pakistan on Wednesday with explosives apparently launched from an airborne drone – the fifth such attack since the bombing that killed several top CIA operatives at a secretive eastern Afghan base reportedly used as a key outpost in the effort to identify and target terror leaders.

The latest attack was a lethal message that the Obama administration views its airstrikes as too effective to abandon, even though they are unpopular with civilians and the U.S.-backed governments in both Afghanistan and Pakistan. The apparent strike killed 13 people in an area of Pakistan's volatile northwest teeming with militants suspected of directing the suicide attack last week across the border in Afghanistan.

The U.S. deaths were a reminder that while the use of drones may lessen the risk to American pilots, the CIA-run operation has its own human Achilles' heel: the intelligence agents who practice old-fashioned spycraft to pinpoint the targets.

The attack came as a severe blow to the expertise and talent pool of the CIA in a little-understood country where its spies are now most at risk.

Charles Faddis, a former agency case officer, said it was a major strike to agency operations in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

"CIA is a small outfit," said Faddis, who recently published "Beyond Repair," a scathing assessment of the agency. "You don't lose this many people in one strike and not feel it acutely."

A message posted by a top al-Qaida leader Wednesday on jihadist Internet forums praised the bombing and said it was to avenge the deaths of a Pakistani Taliban leader and two al-Qaida figures: Baitullah Mehsud, Abu Saleh al-Somali and Abdullah Saeed al-Liby, respectively. Terrorist watchdog groups disagreed over whether the message, signed by Al-Qaida's No. 3, Sheikh Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, was claiming responsibility for the attack.

Al-Somali was a senior al-Qaida operations planner who was killed in an American missile strike last month in western Pakistan, a U.S. counterterrorism official said. Mehsud was a Pakistani Taliban leader killed Aug. 5 in a CIA missile strike in northwest Pakistan. He was suspected of being involved in plotting attacks against the United States and Europe, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss covert operations.

The role of al-Liby could not be immediately determined.

The CIA outpost bomber, a Jordanian doctor identified as Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, was apparently a double agent – perhaps even a triple-agent – who had been considered a key asset. Al-Balawi was invited inside the facility bearing a promise of information about al-Qaida's second in command, presumed to be hiding in Pakistan.

A federal law enforcement official said Wednesday that the bomber entered the base by car and detonated a powerful explosive just outside the base's gym where CIA operatives and others had gathered. It was unclear whether the explosives were hidden in a suicide vest or belt, but they set off a "significant blast," said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the investigation.

A small team of FBI agents, including bomb and evidence technicians, flew to the remote Afghan base soon after the blast, the official said. The team, which is working closely with the CIA, has since returned and is still trying to identify the components of the explosives and whether they included shrapnel.

Several current and former intelligence and defense officials said the deaths of the CIA agents and the others were a foreseeable cost of doing business with unsavory people in dangerous places.

"The attacks confirm what has been the CIA's view all along: that undertaking intelligence operations requires taking risks, and while those risks can be diminished by excellent tradecraft, hard work, and smart people, they can never be eliminated," said former CIA officer Steven Cash.

The CIA is taking heat from some of its own former employees, however, for apparently taking unnecessary risks in this case by failing to search the bomber before he penetrated the base's security perimeter. They also raised questions about why more than a dozen U.S. personnel were close by when al-Balawai detonated explosives strapped to his body.

Two CIA operatives might have been plenty, former CIA officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss what they called tradecraft, or agency procedures.

Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution Saban Center and a former CIA officer, said the agency would now likely be scrubbing its other sources in the region to ensure they are legitimate.

"If the other side was running this one person against us, how confident are we of everyone else?" Riedel asked. "You have to take a period to assess where you are."

However, Riedel said the CIA is aware, especially after the Dec. 25 attempted bombing of an airliner in Detroit, that it doesn't have the luxury of time.

Riedel said the bait that al-Balawi was offering – the location of al-Qaida No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahri, was too tempting to resist.

"We haven't had real location on either him or bin Laden in years," he said.

Bad as the suicide attack was, several current and former intelligence officials said the CIA has a deep bench of operatives with experience in Afghanistan, after eight years of active warfare and the Cold War decades in which Afghanistan was considered strategic.

There are no immediate plans to close the once-secret military base where the bomber killed the CIA base chief for Khost province and wounded the Kabul deputy station chief, and the CIA is expected to quickly rebuild its operations there.

A U.S. intelligence official said the agency has increased the size and scope of its operations in Afghanistan and is continuing its counterterrorism mission as before.

Military officials said there may be additional security precautions for people entering the kind of forward operating base that houses the CIA operation. But the CIA controls many of the decisions about whom to meet and where, and how thoroughly to search a presumed informant.

Informants are sometimes invited to secure bases because of the security risk involved in sending undercover employees or other operatives outside the base, current and former intelligence and military officials said.

NATO's top intelligence officer has ordered significant changes in the way information is collected and shared in Afghanistan, saying that without reform the U.S. intelligence community will continue to be only "marginally relevant" to the counterinsurgency mission.

In a stinging assessment of the U.S. intelligence effort after eight years of war, U.S. Maj. Gen. Michael Flynn directed intelligence workers to focus less on the enemy and more on civilian life.

Field agents are not providing the kind of intelligence that analysts need to respond to inquiries from President Barack Obama and the top commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal.

"These analysts are starved for information from the field – so starved, in fact, that many say their jobs feel more like fortune telling than serious detective work," said the report released this week.

The report was compiled before the suicide attack at Forward Operating Base Chapman in eastern Afghanistan. The CIA is not mentioned in Flynn's report, which focuses more on the thousands of uniformed and civilian intelligence personnel serving with the Defense Department and joint interagency operations in the country.

Intelligence officials said al-Balawi had provided a stream of useful information in what may have been an artful ruse to build trust with his Jordanian and U.S. contacts.

___

AP National Security Writer Anne Gearan contributed from Washington.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

WASHINGTON — The deaths of seven CIA employees in Afghanistan probably will not be the last. The U.S. isn't pulling back on covert operations to hunt terrorists there and in Pakistan and will go...
WASHINGTON — The deaths of seven CIA employees in Afghanistan probably will not be the last. The U.S. isn't pulling back on covert operations to hunt terrorists there and in Pakistan and will go...
Filed by Nicholas Sabloff  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 359
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (6 total)
02:07 AM on 01/24/2010
No tears for those two Blackwater cowboys who were killed it's just bad Karma .They are and embarrassment to us former Marines and soliders.They are just animals that think they have a license to kill.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Art Jaquez
"The wise speak only of what they know.”
06:28 AM on 01/07/2010
These drone attacks against innocent civilians are nothing short of war crimes, especially these latest "revenge" attacks. How long will we allow these CIA and Blackwater death squads to indiscriminately murder innocent people based on little more than there is a tall man with a turban, so he must be Osama Bin Laden? This expanded drone war is absolute proof that we have completely lost our moral compass.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProfessorDuh
08:42 AM on 01/07/2010
It's already happened, when Blackwater gunned down more than a dozen unarmed civilians on the street in Iraq.
"He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze too long into the abyss, the abyss gazes also into you."
- Nietzsche
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Halter
02:23 AM on 01/07/2010
Is Blackwater the CIA's retirement plan?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:36 AM on 01/07/2010
The US needs to give up on describing CIA agents employed in in a war zone providing targetting data for predator attacks as 'civilians'. These are combattants engaged in waging war, with a legal status no different from that of many of the folks the US labels 'unlawful enemy combattants'.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
06:42 PM on 01/06/2010
Would it be so outlandish now to write a screen play wherein an American right wing extremist group (Like......I don't know...say......Blackwater?) is targeted by Drones and they are taken out without warning here in the USA?

How many years will pass before this tactic of political suppression is begun to be used domestically?

First it will just be remote attacks against the barricaded, save the swat teams lives......then sudden destruction from above.....say hello to our little friends....
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProfessorDuh
06:44 PM on 01/06/2010
How long until Blackwater is gunning down unarmed civilians here on Main Street? And what were they doing in New Orleans, anyway?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
06:47 PM on 01/06/2010
And a Federal Judge has already ruled recently (precedent) that as private citizens, the results of their interrogations (admissions of guilt) cannot be used as evidence against them. They are not military or subject to UCMJ,
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
07:39 AM on 01/07/2010
No. No. Do NOT tell me that Blackwater was in New Orleans. Are you serious?! K, well, obv. now I have to go read. I am so creeped out...maybe cause I am old...and I read Fahrenheit 451 when I was too young...but I think of America as a Police State more and more.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProfessorDuh
05:56 PM on 01/06/2010
Let's see now. The U.S. intelligence community gets some $50 billion annually that we know of, and employs several hundred thousand people. And it's outwitted and outmaneuvered by Al Qaeda, an organization that the U.S. intelligence community itself claims now consists of only about 120 people. Just how incompetent are these "intelligence" people, anyway?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:36 PM on 01/06/2010
Blackwater is CIA. Who are they trying to kid?
03:55 PM on 01/06/2010
This is wonderful news, however the title should have read, " Two less crusading murderous mercenaries robbing our treasury."
photo
somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
04:13 PM on 01/06/2010
I must say, I cannot disagree. These folks are simply paid ki llers
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
06:49 PM on 01/06/2010
Doing God's work.
photo
somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
10:12 PM on 01/06/2010
Which god? Osiris? Mathra? Spaggettigod? Apollo? Zeus? My left testicle?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProfessorDuh
03:50 PM on 01/06/2010
Well looky looky. All the Blackwater-XE paid trolls have come out to play.
03:31 PM on 01/06/2010
Blackwater inside the CIA. That's reassuring.
03:43 PM on 01/06/2010
it`s the American version of the not-z SS.
03:05 PM on 01/06/2010
In Afghan-istan, hundreds have taken to the streets of Kab-ul and elsewhere to protest U.S. killing of civilians.

The incident that has sparked the most outrage took place in eastern Ku-nar on December 27th when ten Afghans, eight of them schoolchildren, were killed.

According to The Times of London, US-led troops dragged innocent children from their beds and shot them during a nighttime raid.

Afghan government investigators said the eight students were aged from 11 to 17, all but one of the from the same family.

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/01/06-4
03:12 PM on 01/06/2010
Do you believe everything you read? I dont even trust US news let alone the times of london. I served in the Military and believe me this did not happen and will never happen in Afghanistan or any other conflict in todays military.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProfessorDuh
03:48 PM on 01/06/2010
Why do you capitalize "military" and not "the Times of London?" Is there something wrong with you?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
07:49 AM on 01/07/2010
Huh.
I had the bad misfortune of signing up for a youtube account over a year ago and watching some videos posted by American soldiers in the mideast. They were not up for long...the accounts that posted them were suspended.

But the videos were not suspended from my brain. The videos showed soldiers 'interacting' with children.

The only word I have for them is Sadistic.

I know, I know, this does not represent all soldiers...but ahem...I kinda think it represents a certain group...the rightwing xtian soldier. Born and raised an Amuuuurican...that type of soldier.
03:13 PM on 01/06/2010
Find another news source or take what you read with a grain of salt.
photo
TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
03:23 PM on 01/06/2010
With all due respect, I suggest you do a bit of research. Remember Mai Lai, Vietnam?

You can start with this:

http://modern-us-history.suite101.com/article.cfm/mai_lai_and_its_legacy
photo
somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
04:16 PM on 01/06/2010
I suggest you either had limited front line combat duty or that you had blinders on son.
03:01 PM on 01/06/2010
Thought the CIA denied Blackwater was involved with their activities. Privatization has gone too far. Government workers, subject to the rule of law, for government jobs.
photo
somsoc
All humans are atheists at birth.
04:16 PM on 01/06/2010
Thank Bonzo Reagan and the rethugs.
02:48 PM on 01/06/2010
What goes around, comes around. Everyone must pay for kiIIing.
photo
imusintheevening
With,without,who'll deny it's whatthe fights about
02:58 PM on 01/06/2010
This all traces back to 1978 assistance to the Mujahadeen. Blowback
03:08 PM on 01/06/2010
Lol during the ultra left Carter years........
photo
TAIsabel
Suffer no fools.
03:25 PM on 01/06/2010
Af we say in Spanish: "cria cuervos y te sacaran los hojos". Translation: "Raise crows and they will pluck out your eyes".

We created this monster, we keep feeding it and it keeps growing. Just another Frankestein in our midst.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:47 PM on 01/06/2010
Is CIA lying to Congress about Khost bombing? Of course, but there will be an investigation.

http://rebelreports.com/
photo
imusintheevening
With,without,who'll deny it's whatthe fights about
02:45 PM on 01/06/2010
needintell I'm a Fan of needintell I'm a fan of this user 9 fans permalink

are you a petafile?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Not to pass judgment but that was a humorous post, considering you just said your are Pro-Peta, which would make you a "Petaphile", the correct spelling for what you meant is pedophile. ;-))