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“Vengeance Is Mine” Sayeth The CIA: Suicide Bombing Devestates Critical Intelligence Hub



Jan 1, 2010 16 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

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Wall Street Journal:

WASHINGTON—Wednesday’s attack on a U.S. compound in Afghanistan devastated what has been a hub of counterterrorism and intelligence operations for the spy agency.

Seven Central Intelligence Agency officers and contractors were killed and six more wounded in the suicide bomb attack at Forward Operating Base Chapman, CIA Director Leon Panetta said Thursday, the second-largest single-day loss for the spy agency in its history.

Among the casualties was the agency’s base chief, former intelligence officials said. There had been only four publicly acknowledged CIA fatalities in Afghanistan prior to this attack.

The Taliban claimed responsibility Thursday for the bombing, which was carried out by suicide bomber wearing an Afghan National Army uniform. Some senior officials think the bomber may have been given access to the base because he was believed to be an informant, said two former intelligence officials.

Several former intelligence officials described the attack in Afghanistan as “devastating” to the agency. A number of the officers killed had been counterterrorism operatives since before the 9/11 attacks.

The loss of seven officers is significant for a relatively small agency whose workforce is estimated to be 10,000 or more, but it’s all the more damaging because those lost represented so much collective experience.

They were “experienced frontline officers and their knowledge and expertise will be sorely missed” and not easily regenerated, said Henry A. Crumpton, who led the CIA campaign in Afghanistan in 2001 and 2002.

The number of casualties in Wednesday’s attack was second to those sustained in the Beirut embassy bombing in 1983, which killed eight CIA officers. The Beirut bombing hit the agency’s Middle East group hard, and was one of the key events that drove the creation of the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center a few years later.

“It will mark this generation the same way Beirut marked mine,” said Ron Marks, a 16-year CIA veteran, who left the agency in 1999. With CIA officers deployed to the far reaches of Afghanistan and Pakistan for extended periods, he said, the agency has been lucky to have avoided such attacks for as long as it did.

It could also sow mistrust between CIA officers and the Afghan operatives with whom they work closely, another former agency officer said. “”This is a huge blow to the agency. It’s a close-knit group,” the former officer said. “They’re not going to know who to trust now.”

The base was located in Khost province, a hotbed of militant activity and a stronghold of the Haqqani Network, one of the most hardened and dangerous militant groups, which fought for a decade to wrest the area back from the Russians

The CIA’s Khost base was established in the months after the 9/11 attacks as the U.S. launched its CIA-led offensive against al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan. It began as a makeshift center for CIA-Afghan operations. By mid-2002, it had grown into a major counterterrorism hub for joint operations with CIA, military Special Operations forces and Afghan allies.

Its primary role has been to run informant networks in Afghanistan and over the border, said one former agency official. “That was one of the bases where they were paying people and running people and sending them into Pakistan,” he said.

The CIA’s activities on the base were an open secret locally, he added, “al Qaeda knows it and the townspeople know it and the Taliban know it.”

The attack in Afghanistan came during an already difficult week for the CIA, which has taken a beating in Washington with President Barack Obama issuing a blunt critique of intelligence failures in advance of the botched Christmas Day terrorist attack.

The brazen assault may prompt a re-examination how CIA deploys operatives into dangerous tribal regions in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and how local employees and other local operatives working with the CIA are vetted, former intelligence officials said.

“Those who fell yesterday were far from home and close to the enemy, doing the hard work that must be done to protect our country from terrorism,” Mr. Panetta said in a message to agency employees. “We owe them our deepest gratitude, and we pledge to them and their families that we will never cease fighting for the cause to which they dedicated their lives—a safer America.”

Mr. Panetta credited military doctors and nurses with saving the lives of the wounded. He said the agency would not release the identities of the officers killed at this time.

“Yesterday’s tragedy reminds us that the men and women of the CIA put their lives at risk every day to protect this nation,” Mr. Panetta said.

President Barack Obama also wrote to CIA employees Thursday to praise the service of officers who were killed.

“These brave Americans were part of a long line of patriots who have made great sacrifices for their fellow citizens and for our way of life,” he wrote. Since the Sept. 2001 terrorist attacks, he said, “because of your service, plots have been disrupted, American lives have been saved, and our Allies and partners have been more secure.”

The CIA began mobilizing against the perpetrators of the attack. “The CIA is already working hard to find those who supported the Khost attack,” a U.S. intelligence official, adding “this attack will be avenged through successful, aggressive counterterrorism operations.”

CIA spokesman George Little said that the attack serves as a reminder of the dangerous nature of the CIA’s work. “There’s still a lot to be learned about what happened,” he said. “The key lesson is that counterterrorism work is dangerous. Our fallen and wounded colleagues were on the front lines, conducting essential operations to protect our country.”

On Capitol Hill, the leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees issued statements of condolence.

Wednesday’s casualties will be added to a wall in the CIA’s lobby, which currently features 90 stars representing agency employees killed in the line of duty. The most recent one was added in June to memorialize an officer killed last year, but the officer’s name and duties weren’t made public.

According to a military official who works on Afghan issues, Chapman has grown substantially in recent months and is a base for both military and intelligence operations. Because of its size, the officer said, the suicide bomber likely penetrated multiple layers of security before detonating the explosives.

Much about the attack at Forward Operating Base Chapman remained uncertain. Officials variously said the blast had occurred as the bomber exited a car, or after the bomber had reached the base’s gym or its cafeteria.

Forward operating bases typically house hundreds of soldiers, and Afghan forces and private contractors also often live on such bases. But CIA outposts on these bases are usually small—no more than 15 or maybe 20 people, so 13 casualties is likely a majority of the CIA base personnel, said one former agency official.

The attack appeared to be the worst against foreigners since October, when 10 Americans — seven troops and three civilians — were killed in a helicopter crash following a firefight with insurgents.

It would also mark the first time a suicide bomber managed to strike inside a U.S. facility in the country, a sign of the insurgents’ growing sophistication. Insurgents have been staging increasingly complicated assaults in recent months, including one where a militant infiltrated the country’s police force and killed five British soldiers.

In a press release Thursday, the Taliban claimed responsibility for the Khost attack. “The martyr attack was carried out by an Afghan military, Samiullah, when the CIA agents got together in a U.S. club-cum-training center for a meeting in order to collect information on the Mujahiodeen,” the release said, according to a translation by the Middle East Media Research Institute.

“According to one of the club’s guards, the CIA employees, dressed in Afghan uniform were in the club discussing as an army officer entered the club and set off his explosive-packed vest, killing and injuring all inside the club.”
—Anand Gopal contributed to this article.


  • Ty

    Who cares? I’m more interested in the Obama’s date night. Maybe someone will snap a good pic of Michelle’s arms… When does American Idol start? Did y’all see who Britney’s dating?

    • Tim Roesch

      Good (sad) point, Ty.

    • MohammedSucksHogCock

      Two Points
      Touchdown
      Nail-on-head
      He scores!

  • http://www.myspace.com/ssgduke ssgduke56

    PC (Political Correctness) have hurt and killed more people then CS (Common Sense) has ever done in a life time! PC killed these good Americans because they did not want to offend this demonic A-Hole Muslim Culture!!!

  • lastconservativeblackmanonearth

    Okaaayyy … so I understand we’re now inviting un-frisked ‘informants’ into our encampments, ‘eh?

    This is the ‘change we can believe in’ … yup … we’re changing our war-footing to ‘peace, and love, and give the world some coke …’

    Who can argue? Idiots are running the asylum!!!

    Who da-fu*k would want to serve under these conditions? Losers, former criminals, and the otherwise unemployable???

    General Casey cares more about some friggin ‘reaction’ against muslims, more than our fallen comrades — heroes all — of Ft. Hood?

    And enemy combatants are given full legal rights!?!

    Putsch, to all of ‘em, I say … putsch; the old fashioned way.

    … look it up …

    • rightangle

      Putsch could have gone down a month ago at that White House Dinner that was “gate crashed.” A bigger (msm) deal was made there and then. Strange how both parties that did the crashing had muslim/mid-eastern names.

  • Moriah

    Your not going to search someone because you might offend a potential source? I say rough the f#cker up a little and say this is what you can expect when you do business with me. Nothing personal.. Smart people who want to live better stop worrying about how their self preservation might offend someone. :twisted:

  • GTFM

    whats next, people wont be able to shit because it is going to smell? this is war and somebody out there wants to kill you! are you going to let them?

  • Hawkerdriver (Pisson the Koran)

    A bit conspiratorial, but over at http://www.whatdoesitmean.com there is an interesting rant on how ovomit and vermin had this done.Ordinarily,I would say it’s a stretch,but I firmly believe these despots are capable of anything to retain their posits.

  • Kirk

    “the former officer said, “They’re not going to know who to trust now.”
    :shock: (Trust no one).

    • Minuteman01

      As Reagan said, “Trust, but verify”.

  • EL GONZO

    General Cassey is another example of our military in bed with Obongo to bring our country down. In fact, I would not be surprise if the secret service also helped these faggot muslin ass wipes to get in and do this….The people will need to rise at home first and remove this ass fucker bro from the White House, he is endangering all of us. Why should the CIA worry about muslin terrorist over there when the number one faggot terrorist mastermind lives in the White House????? My God, another freaking year with this mother fucker as our “leader”…. this is insane. I must have had a concussion a couple of years ago and I’m now going through some sort of hallucination that the US is becoming a third world country…that must be it!!!!

  • Blade Runner

    I’m really starting to miss Dubya.

    • MohammedSucksHogCock

      When he was VP, I was rather lukewarm on Dick Cheney. After a year of the teenage lawn jockey, I now think the best POTUS we could have is Cheney. We need a president who has the ability to tell a friend from an enemy, and who can do so mercilessly.

    • Hawkerdriver (Pisson the Koran)

      Agree totally. :beer:

    • MohammedSucksHogCock

      Cheney/Bolton. The very thought gives me goosebumps.