“They know the bad guy’s . . . culture, his associates, and more [than anyone] about the network to which he belongs,” said Jamie Smith, a former CIA officer who worked in the border region in the years immediately after the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan. Jordanians were particularly prized for their skill in both in interrogating captives and cultivating informants, owing to an unrivaled “expertise with radicalized militant groups and Shia/Sunni culture,” said Smith, who now heads a private security company known as SCG International…
The slain officer, identified in Jordanian press accounts as Sharif Ali bin Zeid, was on one of the CIA’s most sensitive listening posts in eastern Afghanistan, Forward Operating Base Chapman, when a suicide attacker exploded a bomb in the middle of a group of CIA officers and contractors. The blast killed seven Americans, including the base chief…
Current and former U.S. intelligence officials said the special relationship with Jordan dates back at least three decades and has recently progressed to the point that the CIA liaison officer in Amman enjoys full, unescorted access to the GID’s fortress-like headquarters. The close ties helped disrupt several known terrorist plots, including the thwarted 2000 “millennium” conspiracy to attack tourists at hotels and other sites. Jordanians also provided U.S. officials with communications intercepts in summer 2001 that warned of terrorist plans to carry out a major attack on the United States.
Join the conversation as a VIP Member