Bin Laden’s Inner Circle Eludes CIA

WaPo – Bin Laden’s Inner Circle Eludes CIA

The CIA has intelligence agents inside Osama bin Laden’s al Qaeda network — as it did before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks — but they are not within the terrorist leader’s inner circle where key information about any future attack would be discussed, a senior intelligence official said yesterday. “They are beyond foot soldiers but not in the inner circle,” the official said. The agents — Afghans, Pakistanis, Uzbeks and others recruited and run by CIA case officers — “are more senior than the agents [the U.S. had] three years ago who were on the periphery,” the official said. Aided by these agents, electronic intercepts, satellite imagery, and extensive help from foreign intelligence services, the United States over the past two years has captured or killed two-thirds of bin Laden’s top aides and broken up plots against U.S. embassies, U.S. and foreign aircraft, and ships and other targets worldwide.

Although the U.S. intelligence community believes that al Qaeda today is far less capable than the team that put together the Sept. 11 attacks, bin Laden “looks to the United States still as the brass ring,” another senior intelligence official said. “They still want to continue to attack us in the ways they did three years ago,” he said during a Wednesday briefing, which was held on the condition that reporters not disclose his name or the identity of two other senior intelligence officials who spoke.

This is the first time that CIA officials have publicly described with such specificity the placing of agents and other steps aimed at cracking al Qaeda — the sort of information that the agency generally guards very closely. They made the revelations as part of a response to the stern criticism of the agency this week by the Sept. 11 commission. It portrayed U.S. intelligence as having failed dramatically before the 2001 attacks, largely because it lacked significant sources of human intelligence about bin Laden’s organization. The comments came at the briefing, held the day before the commission report was released, and in interviews yesterday that elaborated on some points. “We have busted plots repeatedly” that were undertaken by “serious al Qaeda players” involving both aircraft and ships — some in Northeast and Southeast Asia — one official at the briefing said. He said intelligence on the possibility of other attacks has recently been strong. “I wouldn’t characterize what we have now as chatter,” he said. “I think we have some fairly specific information that al Qaeda wants to come after us.”

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The three senior intelligence officials at Wednesday’s briefing said they recognize some of the failures pointed out by the commission, but feel that new approaches already in place are addressing the problems.

Interesting.

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James Joyner
About James Joyner
James Joyner is Professor and Department Head of Security Studies at Marine Corps University's Command and Staff College. He's a former Army officer and Desert Storm veteran. Views expressed here are his own. Follow James on Twitter @DrJJoyner.

Comments

  1. kenny says:

    “Although the U.S. intelligence community believes that al Qaeda today is far less capable than the team that put together the Sept. 11 attacks … ”

    The part of you that fears for your family and country wants to immediately find this true and enjoy a measure of success. However, given all we’ve heard of our intelligence community lately how credible is this presumably well-intentioned comment?

  2. Attila Girl says:

    I honestly think 9/11 lit a fire under these guys. If ever there was a chance to reform, it was in the aftermath of that event. I find it very encouraging that (apparently) the intelligence community is getting back to basics and understands the importance of human intel.

  3. Joseph Marshall says:

    This appears to be a good positive sign. Keep up the good work guys.