The Meaning of al Qaeda's Double Agent
By REUEL MARC GERECHT
The jihadists are showing impressive counterintelligence ability that the
CIA seems to have underestimated
The recent death in Afghanistan of seven American counterterrorist
officers, one Jordanian intelligence operative, and one exploding al Qaeda
double agent ought to give us cause to reflect on the real capabilities of
the Central Intelligence Agency and al Qaeda.
The report card isn't good. America's systemic intelligence problems were
partially on display in the bombing at the CIA's Forward Operating Base
Chapman in Khost province. Worse, al Qaeda showed skill that had been
lacking in many of its operations. In response, President Barack Obama will
likely be obliged to adopt counterterrorist methods that could make his
administration as tough as his predecessor's.
Professionally, one has to admire the skill of suicide bomber Humam Khalil
Abu-Mulal al-Balawi's handlers. This operation could well have been
months—if not longer—in the making, and neither the Jordanian intelligence
service (GID), which supplied the double agent to the CIA, nor Langley
apparently had any serious suspicion that al-Balawi still had the soul and
will of a jihadist.
That is an impressive feat. The Hashemite monarchy imprisons lots of
Islamic militants, and the GID has the responsibility to interrogate them.
The dead Jordanian official, Sharif Ali bin Zeid, reportedly a member of
the royal family, may not have been a down-and-dirty case officer with
considerable hands-on contact with militants, but al-Balawi surely passed
through some kind of intensive screening process with the GID. Yet the GID
and the CIA got played, and al Qaeda has revealed that it is capable of
running sophisticated clandestine operations with sustained deception.
Indeed, al Qaeda did to us exactly what we intended to do to them: use a
mole for a lethal strike against high-value targets. In the case of al-Balawi,
it appears the target was Ayman al Zawahiri, Osama bin Ladin's top deputy.
During the Cold War, the CIA completely dropped its guard in the pursuit of
much-desired Cuban and East German agents. The result? Most of our assets
were plants given to us by Cuban and East German intelligence. With al-Balawi
supposedly providing "good" information about al Zawahiri and al Qaeda's
terrorist planning, a salivating CIA and the GID proved inattentive to
counterintelligence concerns.
Whereas al Qaeda is showing increasing proficiency, the same cannot be said
for the CIA. Competent case officers can get duped by a good double. And
the GID, whose skill has been exaggerated in fiction and film and by
Hashemite-stroked American case officers, isn't a global service. Take it
far from its tribal society, where it operates with admirable efficiency,
and it is nothing to write home about.
The CIA uses the GID so often not because the Jordanians are brilliant but
because the Americans are so often, at best, mediocre. The GID's large
cadre of English-speaking officers makes liaison work easy with Langley,
which has never been blessed with a large number of Arabic-speaking
officers, particularly within the senior ranks.
Language issues aside, the now-deceased chief of Base Chapman should have
kept most of her personnel away from al-Balawi, and should never have
allowed seven officers to get that close to him at one time. Traditional
operational compartmentation clearly broke down.
It is also highly likely that all of the CIA officers at Chapman—and
especially the chief of base, who was a mother of three—were on short-term
assignments. According to active-duty CIA officers, the vast majority of
Langley's officers are on temporary-duty assignments in Afghanistan, which
usually means they depart in under one year. (The same is true for the
State Department.) Many CIA officers are married with children and they do
not care for long tours of duty in unpleasant spots—the type of service
that would give officers a chance of gaining some country expertise, if not
linguistic accomplishment.
Moreover, security concerns usually trap these officers into a limited
range of contacts. Truth be told, even the most elemental CIA
activity—meeting recruited agents or "developmentals" outside of
well-guarded compounds—often cannot be done without contractor-supplied
security. Without Blackwater, now renamed Xe, which handles security for
Langley in Afghanistan, CIA case officers would likely be paralyzed.
The officers at Chapman were probably young. This isn't necessarily bad. As
a general rule, younger case officers do better intelligence-collection
work than older colleagues, whose zeal for Third World field work declines
precipitously as their knowledge and expertise in CIA bureaucratic politics
increases. But experience does breed cynicism, which doesn't appear to have
been in abundance at the CIA base.
All of this reinforces the common U.S. military criticism of the Agency in
Afghanistan and Iraq: It does not often supply the hard tactical and
intimate personal and tribal portraits that military officers need to do
their work. Army officers are generally among the natives vastly more than
their CIA counterparts.
What does this all mean for President Obama? He did not come into office
pledging to reform the CIA, only restrain it from aggressively
interrogating al Qaeda terrorists. There is near zero chance that the
president will attempt to improve the Agency operationally in the field.
His counterterrorist adviser, John Brennan, is as institutional a case
officer as Langley has ever produced. If Attorney General Eric Holder is so
unwise as to bring any charges against a CIA officer for the rough
interrogation of an al Qaeda detainee during the Bush administration, the
president will likely find himself deluged with damaging CIA-authored
leaks. Mr. Obama would be a fool to confront the CIA on two fronts.
But the president is likely to compensate for systemic weakness in American
intelligence in substantial, effective ways. Mr. Obama has been much more
aggressive than President George W. Bush was in the use of drone attacks
and risky paramilitary operations. One can easily envision him expanding
such attacks in Pakistan, Yemen and elsewhere. Visa issuances, airport
security, and perhaps even FBI surveillance of American Muslim militants
are likely to become much tougher under Mr. Obama than under Mr. Bush.
President Obama will, no doubt, continue to say empirically bizarre things
about Guantanamo's imprisonment system creating jihadists, but his
administration will now likely find another location to jail militants
indefinitely. Too many of President Bush's released detainees have returned
to terrorism.
National Security Adviser James Jones has already described the 21st
century as the liaison century, where intelligence and security services
cooperate energetically. The CIA has often compensated for its internal
weaknesses through liaising with foreigners. President Bush and then
Central Intelligence Director George Tenet kicked these relationships into
hyper-drive after 9/11; President Obama is likely to kick them even
further. Mr. Obama may have foreclosed the possibility of the CIA again
aggressively questioning jihadists, but he's kept the door wide open for
the rendition of terrorists to countries like Jordan, where the GID does
not abide by the Marquess of Queensbury rules in its interrogations.
The deadly attack in Fort Hood, Texas, by Maj. Malik Hassan in November,
the close call in the air above Detroit on Christmas Day, and now the
double-agent suicide bombing in Khost have shocked America's
counterterrorist system. Mr. Obama surely knows that one large-scale
terrorist strike inside the U.S. could effectively end his presidency. He
may at some level still believe that his let's-just-all-be-friends speech
in Cairo last June made a big dent in the hatred that many faithful Muslims
have for the U.S., but his practices on the ground are likely to be a lot
less touchy-feely. This is all for the good. These three jihadist incidents
ought to tell us that America's war with Islamic militancy is far—far—from
being over.
Mr. Gerecht, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer, is a senior
fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.