A CIA operative has been arrested for the leak of Israel’s plans on Iran:
A Guam-based CIA staffer named Asif W. Rahman was arrested after the Israeli plan for a counter-strike on Iran was passed on to Iranian-linked social media accounts. The leaked documents revealed detailed U.S. intelligence on Israeli military preparations in the run-up to a possible Israeli retaliation to a major Iranian aerial attack in early October.
Rahman was arrested in Cambodia; had he fled there? He had a top security clearance, and has been charged with “two counts of willful retention and transmission of national defense information.”
Of course, anyone reading the name “Asif Rahman” immediately recognizes it as Middle Eastern or perhaps Pakistani (which would be South Asian). I can’t find any more information on who he actually is, but I did find a road in Queens named after a man with the same moniker, a young musician and artist who was tragically killed on that road by a truck while riding his bike. This other Asif Rahman had been raised in Queens but was born in Bangladesh, which is the country that used to be known as East Pakistan. So my best guess is that the Asif Rahman who was recently arrested might be of Bangladesh origin.
An agency like the CIA has a dilemma. It probably needs to have agents with backgrounds in Muslim countries around the world, and yet vetting them presents special challenges. Then again, as we know full well, spies and moles come from all backgrounds. Some of the most dangerous have been all-American, such as Robert Hanssen, for example:
Hanssen’s espionage activities began in 1985. Since he held key counterintelligence positions [with the FBI], he had authorized access to classified information. He used encrypted communications, “dead drops,” and other clandestine methods to provide information to the KGB and its successor agency, the SVR. The information he delivered compromised numerous human sources, counterintelligence techniques, investigations, dozens of classified U.S. government documents, and technical operations of extraordinary importance and value.
Because of his experience and training as a counterintelligence agent, Hanssen went undetected for years, although some of his unusual activities had aroused suspicion from time to time. Still, he was not identified as a spy.
Hanssen was responsible for the death of many informants, and he received a life sentence.
Then there was Aldrich Ames of the CIA, currently serving a life sentence for spying:
In court, Ames admitted that he had compromised “virtually all Soviet agents of the CIA and other American and foreign services known to me” and had provided the USSR and Russia with a “huge quantity of information on United States foreign, defense and security policies”.[42] It is estimated that information Ames provided to the Soviets led to the compromise of at least 100 American intelligence operations and the execution of at least ten sources.
These people are vipers.
I wonder what the ultimate charges against Rahman will be.