Foreign network at front of CIA’s terror fight
Agency has joint operation centers in more than 2 dozen nations
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10091295/
By Dana Priest
Updated: 12:37 a.m. ET Nov. 18, 2005
The CIA has established joint operation centers in more than two
dozen countries where U.S. and foreign intelligence officers
work side by side to track and capture suspected terrorists and
to destroy or penetrate their networks, according to current and
former American and foreign intelligence officials.
The secret Counterterrorist Intelligence Centers are financed
mostly by the agency and employ some of the best espionage
technology the CIA has to offer, including secure communications
gear, computers linked to the CIA's central databases, and
access to highly classified intercepts once shared only with the
nation's closest Western allies.
The Americans and their counterparts at the centers, known as
CTICs, make daily decisions on when and how to apprehend
suspects, whether to whisk them off to other countries for
interrogation and detention, and how to disrupt al Qaeda's
logistical and financial support.
he network of centers reflects what has become the CIA's central
and most successful strategy in combating terrorism abroad:
persuading and empowering foreign security services to help.
Virtually every capture or killing of a suspected terrorist
outside Iraq since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks -- more than
3,000 in all -- was a result of foreign intelligence services'
work alongside the agency, the CIA deputy director of operations
told a congressional committee in a closed-door session earlier
this year.
The initial tip about where an al Qaeda figure is hiding may
come from the CIA, but the actual operation to pick him up is
usually organized by one of the joint centers and conducted by a
local security service, with the CIA nowhere in sight. "The vast
majority of successes involved our CTICs," one former
counterterrorism official said. "The boot that went through the
door was foreign."
The centers are also part of a fundamental, continuing shift in
the CIA's mission that began shortly after the 2001 attacks. No
longer is the agency's primary goal to recruit military
attaches, diplomats and intelligence operatives to steal secrets
from their own countries. Today's CIA is desperately seeking
ways to join forces with other governments it once reproached or
ignored to undo a common enemy.
Shift under Tenet
George J. Tenet orchestrated the shift during his tenure as CIA
director, working with the agency's station chiefs abroad and
officers in the Counterterrorist Center at headquarters to bring
about an exponential deepening of intelligence ties worldwide
after Sept. 11.
Beneath the surface of visible diplomacy, the cooperative
efforts, known as liaison relationships, are recasting U.S.
dealings abroad.
The White House has stepped up its criticism of Uzbek President
Islam Karimov in the past year for his authoritarian rule and
repression of dissidents. But joint counterterrorism efforts
with Tashkent continued until recently. In Indonesia, as the
State Department doled out tiny amounts of assistance to the
military when it made progress on corruption and human rights,
the CIA was pouring money into Jakarta and developing
intelligence ties there after years of tension. In Paris, as
U.S.-French acrimony peaked over the Iraq invasion in 2003, the
CIA and French intelligence services were creating the agency's
only multinational operations center and executing worldwide
sting operations.
The CIA has operated the joint intelligence centers in Europe,
the Middle East and Asia, according to current and former
intelligence officials. In addition, the multinational center in
Paris, codenamed Alliance Base, includes representatives from
Britain, France, Germany, Canada and Australia.
"CTICs were a step forward in codifying, organizing liaison
relationships that elsewhere would be more ad hoc," a former CIA
counterterrorism official said. "It's one tool in the liaison
tool kit."
The CIA declined to comment for this article. The Washington
Post interviewed more than two dozen current and former
intelligence officials and more than a dozen senior foreign
intelligence officials as well as diplomatic and congressional
sources. Most of them spoke on the condition that they not be
named because they are not authorized to speak publicly or
because of the sensitive nature of the subject.
The CTICs are entirely separate from the covert prisons, known
in classified documents as "black sites," that the CIA has run
at various times in eight countries. Legal experts and
intelligence officials have said that the prisons -- whose
existence was disclosed in a Washington Post report earlier this
month -- would be considered illegal under the laws of several
host countries. The CTICs, by contrast, are an expansion of the
hidden intelligence cooperation that has been a staple of
foreign policy for decades.
Deepening ties
The intelligence centers were modeled on the CIA's
counternarcotics centers in Latin America and Asia. Faced with
corrupt local police and intelligence services, in the 1980s the
CIA persuaded the leaders of these countries to let it select
individuals for the assignment, pay them and keep them
physically separate from their own institutions.
Officers from the host nations serving in the newer CTICs are
vetted through background checks and polygraphs. They are
usually supervised by the CIA's chief of station and augmented
by officers sent from the Counterterrorist Center at Langley.
Such daily interaction with U.S. personnel, say intelligence
officials, helps keep the foreign service focused.
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he first two CTICs were established in the late 1990s to watch
and capture Islamic militants traveling from Saudi Arabia,
Yemen, Egypt and Chechnya to join the fighting in Bosnia and
other parts of the former Yugoslavia, two former intelligence
officers said.
Days after the Sept. 11 attacks, Tenet outlined a global
campaign against terrorism to President Bush. It included
invading Afghanistan to wipe out al Qaeda's main base of
operations as well as a "Worldwide Attack Matrix" detailing
operations against terrorists in 80 countries. The matrix also
listed priority countries where al Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan
were likely to flee during a U.S. invasion.
"If you brought a big hammer down on Afghanistan," as a former
CIA official described it, "there weren't too many areas where
people could squirt out" and hide. The most likely were Yemen,
Saudi Arabia, urban areas of Pakistan, and Indonesia.
On Sept. 17, 2001, Bush signed a classified Presidential Finding
that authorized an unprecedented range of covert operations. The
overall counterterrorism program included authorization of
lethal measures against terrorists and the expenditure of vast
funds to coax foreign intelligence services into a new era of
cooperation with the CIA, current and former intelligence
officials said.
To beef up operations in the priority countries and elsewhere,
the agency dispatched officers from its proliferation,
counternarcotics, Europe, Africa, Asia and Middle East
divisions, said several current and former intelligence
officials. It sent paramilitary teams from its tiny Special
Activities Division and enlisted the military's Special
Operations Forces to augment the teams.
But agency officials knew that a surge of hundreds of CIA
officers would not be adequate to solidify the new worldwide
infrastructure that Tenet and his top aides envisioned. The
agency quickly turned to dozens of sometimes reluctant foreign
intelligence services, which had much more intimate knowledge of
local terrorist groups and their supporters.
‘The money was just flowing’
The agency had extensive inducements to offer foreign services
once Congress opened the spigot, which it quickly did. "The
money was just flowing," said one CIA case officer. In fact, the
budget for the CIA's operations increased in the first two years
by 2 1/2 times what it had been before Sept. 11, according to
two government experts.
The Counterterrorist Center at CIA headquarters, which manages
the CTICs and all other counterterrorism efforts, bought its
friends SUVs, night-vision equipment, automatic weapons and
push-to-talk radios for countries where intelligence services
were starved for even basic material. It sent instructors in
surveillance, data analysis and military Special Forces tactics
to teach hostage rescue, VIP protection and counterterrorist
assault. Foreign countries sent officers to the CIA's training
school for weeks-long courses in counterterrorism operations and
analysis.
The new cooperative ventures depended as well on loosening U.S.
rules for sharing electronic eavesdropping and other precious
"signals intelligence," which experts estimate provides 80 to 90
percent of the information the United States gathers about
terrorist networks. Tenet ordered streamlined regulations.
The National Security Agency, which manages, analyzes and
distributes electronic intercepts, quickly became a new partner
in the joint centers, and established a Foreign Affairs
Directorate that now handles sharing information and equipment
with 40 countries.
Persuading foreign presidents and intelligence chiefs to begin
or deepen relationships with the CIA often took the personal
intervention of Bush, Vice President Cheney and the secretary of
state. But closing a deal was left to the CIA's chiefs of
station, other top officials, and foremost, Tenet, "the master
of liaison," as one longtime intelligence officer dubbed him.
Gregarious and comfortable in foreign settings, Tenet by Sept.
11 had earned a reputation among Muslim countries as an honest
broker in the Arab-Israeli dispute and for his role in training
Palestinian security forces.
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He was a natural at bonding with foreign chiefs of service,
current and former intelligence officials said. Once, during a
dinner for a foreign service chief, the guests asked Tenet about
Bush, whom Tenet briefed every morning. "He would tell them what
time he gets up. He'd say, 'The president calls me Jorge.' It
was really human-being-to-human-being," said a former
intelligence official. "He didn't give away anything classified,
but they felt important and could go back to their president and
say, 'The president calls him Jorge.' "
"George Tenet is a charming man, but also a very tough cookie,"
said a senior French official.
Yemen, with its terrorist training camps and al Qaeda presence,
was one of Tenet's most significant successes. Its president,
Ali Abdullah Saleh, had little control over the northern border
with Saudi Arabia, which had turned into a haven for extremists,
and even less over his violent rivals.
Faris Sanabani, a Yemeni presidential adviser, said Tenet's
trips to Yemen after Sept. 11 helped persuade Saleh to work with
the CIA in a way that would have been unthinkable before. "He
made an effort to reach out when people were really scared of
Yemen," said Sanabani, who sat in on meetings between Tenet and
Saleh. "He's the kind of person who doesn't work from a report
or from behind the office desk."
In the wake of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, Saleh thought
Yemen was next on the target list, said one current and one
former intelligence official. Tenet did not disabuse him of this
idea, they said. "You don't take anything off the table," one
said.
Predator drones
At the same time, Tenet "listened to him, took his views
seriously and did not rebuke him. He sought to meet Saleh's
needs," he said.
Tenet provided millions of dollars for Yemen's cooperation. He
gave helicopters, eavesdropping equipment, weapons and
bulletproof vests. He brought in 100 Army Special Forces
trainers to help Yemen create an antiterrorism unit.
Tenet also won Saleh's approval to fly Predator drones armed
with Hellfire missiles over the country to hunt and kill al
Qaeda figures. In November 2002, the CIA killed six al Qaeda
operatives driving in the desert, including Abu Ali al-Harithi,
suspected mastermind of the 2000 attack on the USS Cole.
"All of the sudden our enemy became common," Sanabani said.
"That's why Yemen and the United States reached out to one
other."
Countering terrorism has overshadowed just about all other
foreign policy concerns, including "making friends with the
sorts of characters you would not have been in the same room
with before," one former foreign intelligence official said.
In Indonesia, the most populous Muslim country and the center of
gravity for an al Qaeda affiliate, Jemaah Islamiyah, that meant
befriending Lt. Gen. Abdullah Hendropriyono, then head of the
intelligence service.
Sporting black hair lacquered with hairspray and colorful
jackets with matching ties and socks, Hendropriyono was more
flamboyant than most chiefs. A former Indonesian special forces
commander trained at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff
School at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Hendropriyono was accused by
human rights activists of ordering attacks that killed more than
100 unarmed villagers in 1989, according to Associated Press and
other published reports. In 2004, he threatened action against
foreign humanitarian groups monitoring human rights issues,
published reports said.
Hendropriyono replaced an intelligence chief who had conducted
surveillance against U.S. and Australian officials, according to
U.S. and Australian sources. Al Qaeda leader Omar Farouq had the
U.S. Embassy under surveillance and U.S. Ambassador Robert S.
Gelbard believed that the Indonesians had purposely blown an
operation meant to capture a bombing team targeting the U.S.
compound in Jakarta.
‘A breath of fresh air’
In August 2001, Hendropriyono was "a breath of fresh air," said
one CIA officer who worked with him. "He was focused, very
controversial, but very dynamic." Unlike his predecessor, he was
willing to work with the Americans, at a price.
Besides phone calls and office visits, Tenet worked hard on
Hendropriyono's requests for goods and services. "These guys had
1970s technology," the CIA officer said. "They were dying for
equipment, surveillance, wiretaps."
Tenet came through on two of Hendropriyono's personal requests
as well: to provide seed money for a regional intelligence
school, the International Institute of Intelligence on Batam
Island, and to get a relative of Hendropriyono's into a
top-rated American university. When his grades proved an
obstacle, the CIA director arranged for him to attend the
National War College at Fort McNair, four sources said.
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Hendropriyono proved his willingness to cooperate by arresting
Muhammad Saad Iqbal Madni, a Egyptian who the CIA believed was
linked to British failed shoe bomber Richard C. Reid. He also
agreed to allow the CIA to take Madni to Egypt for interrogation
under a process known as "rendition."
Hendropriyono agreed to expand the cooperation, and officers
arrested a few dozen Indonesians suspected of links to
terrorism. He began efforts to close down terrorist financing.
Then he secured the approval of his political leadership to
apprehend Farouq, believed to be a top al Qaeda figure in
Southeast Asia. "He forced [the Indonesian security services ]
to work with us and we started picking up the bigger fish,"
Gelbard said. Attempts to reach Hendropriyono were unsuccessful.
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Porter J. Goss, who succeeded Tenet as CIA director just over a
year ago, could hardly be more different. For all of Tenet's
gregariousness, Goss is the picture of reserve. And there are
indications that Goss may not place as much emphasis on
combining forces with others overseas.
Goss: ‘More unilateral’
When Goss took over, he said he valued these partnerships but
announced a goal of improving what he called "unilateral"
intelligence collection and operations. "We have gotten more
unilateral, though still not as much as I'd like," he told
employees in a staff meeti