CIA finds security lapse led to Afghan suicide attack that killed 7 agents
October 20th, 2010 - 12:24 pm ICT by ANI
London, Oct 20 (ANI): A Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officer was reportedly warned that the Jordanian double-agent who blew himself up at a remote US base in eastern Afghanistan in January, killing seven officers of the agency, might have been working for al-Qaeda, but he failed to pass on the information to his bosses.
According to the BBC, Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, a Jordanian al-Qaeda agent, blew himself up after promising to give crucial intelligence on top US targets.
In a letter to employees, CIA director Leon Panetta cited a range of failures that led to the worst attack against US intelligence officials since 1983.
Panetta said a classified internal inquiry into the attack had found al-Balawi had already provided intelligence that had been independently verified, and CIA officers believed he had more to offer.
“He had confirmed access within extremist circles, making a covert relationship with him, if he was acting in good faith, potentially very productive. But he had not rejected his terrorist roots,” Panetta wrote.
He further stated that the intelligence report identified a number of shortcomings within the CIA, including failing to share information, and insufficiency of security measures at Forward Operating Base Chapman.
Panetta also said that the zeal to disrupt al-Qaeda had contributed to al-Balawi being let into the base.
Thirty-six-year-old al-Balawi was a doctor in Jordan, and had been arrested by Jordanian intelligence a year before the deadly attack at Forward Operating Base Chapman. Following his arrest, he was reportedly recruited by the Jordanians and the CIA as their informant and gave him the task of finding al-Qaeda leaders. However, he managed to fool intelligence officers by secretly continuing his jihadi principles.
Right after the attack, al-Jazeera television aired a video showing al-Balawi with Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud, vowing revenge on the US for the killing of a previous Taliban leader, the report said. (ANI)
- CIA bomber says he lured targets in Afghanistan with doctored intelligence - Mar 01, 2010
- Killing of agents will not deter CIA's war against Al-Qaeda: Panetta - Jan 10, 2010
- Al Qaeda to avenge Taliban chief's death 'inside US': CIA bomber - Jan 09, 2010
- 'CIA ignored counterintelligence threat posed by Al-Qaeda' - Jan 10, 2010
- Chemical analysis links ISI to CIA killings in Khost - Jan 11, 2010
- Al Qaeda video shows bomber before strike at CIA men - Mar 01, 2010
- Suspect in bombing of CIA agents killed in Pakistan - Mar 18, 2010
- Suicide bomber who attacked CIA post in Afghanistan was trusted Jordanian informant - Jan 05, 2010
- Drone strikes in Pak tribal areas an effective part of the US ant-terrorism strategy: McCain - Jan 08, 2010
- Bombing at CIA 'revenge' against drone strike - Jan 07, 2010
- US blacklists Pak Taliban commander Qari Hussain for "wanton acts of violence" - Jan 21, 2011
- US sanctions 'deadliest' Pakistan Taliban leader - Jan 20, 2011
- TTP chief Hakimullah survived US drone attack: ISI official - Apr 29, 2010
- US airstrike kills 10 in Pakistan (Lead) - Jan 14, 2010
- US missile strike kills 15 militants in Pakistan - Jan 17, 2010
Tags: al jazeera, central intelligence agency, cia director, cia officer, cia officers, covert relationship, double agent, eastern afghanistan, good faith, informant, intelligence officers, intelligence officials, intelligence report, internal inquiry, jordanians, leon panetta, security lapse, security measures, suicide attack, taliban leader