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White House inadvertently reveals name of top CIA officer in Afghanistan

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Name was on a list of participants in briefing with Barack Obama and subsequently sent to the media, Washington Post reports


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Barack Obama speaks to US troops during his visit to Afghanistan. Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
The White House inadvertently included the name of the top CIA official in Afghanistan on a list of participants in a military briefing with Barack Obama that was distributed to reporters on Sunday, the Washington Post reported.

The newspaper said the official, identified as "chief of station" in Kabul, was named as being among those at a briefing with Obama during the president's trip to Bagram air base near the Afghan capital.

The list of names was sent by email to reporters travelling with Obama on his surprise Afghanistan visit and included in a "pool report" shared with correspondents and others not on the trip.

The Post said the White House issued a revised list deleting the CIA official's name after it recognised the mistake.

The newspaper said its White House bureau chief, Scott Wilson, who was on the trip, copied the original list from the email provided by White House press officials and included it in a report sent to a distribution list with more than 6,000 recipients.

After he spotted the reference to the station chief, Wilson asked White House press officials in Afghanistan if they had intended to include that name, the Post said.

"Initially, the press office raised no objection, apparently because military officials had provided the list to distribute to news organisations," the Post said. "But senior White House officials realized the mistake and scrambled to issue an updated list without the CIA officer's name."

The newspaper said it withheld the individual's name at the request of the Obama administration, which warned he and his family could be at risk if his name were circulated.

A review of the pool reports from the trip shows that the name was taken out of an updated list sent to reporters.

The Post said it was not clear if the CIA would now be forced to remove the officer from Afghanistan.

The White House declined to comment.
 
CIA chief in Afghanistan 'accidentally' exposed by White House press staff
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The lobby of the CIA Headquarters Building in McLean, Virginia (Reuters/Larry Downing)


The Obama Administration’s press service unwittingly put the real name of the CIA’s top spy in Afghanistan on the ‘pool report’ distributed among journalists accompanying the American president on a surprise trip to Kabul’s Bagram Airfield base.

The identity of the man dubbed ‘Chief of Station’, the usual address to a CIA local chief, was inadvertently added to a list of 15 US officials supposed to take part in a military briefing with Obama at the base, and emailed it to the White House press pool on Saturday, the Washington Post reported.

The unusual address was observed by Scott Wilson, the Washington Post's White House bureau chief, who informed the White House press officials.

“Wilson said that after the report was distributed, he noticed the unusual reference to the station chief and asked White House press officials in Afghanistan whether they had intended to include that name,” reported the Washington Post. “Initially, the press office raised no objection, apparently because military officials had provided the list to distribute to news organizations. But senior White House officials realized the mistake and scrambled to issue an updated list without the CIA officer's name.”

Up to 6,000 journalists, including some for foreign outlets, received the original version of the document, yet the identity of the CIA officer has not been disclosed. The list also contained such names as the US Ambassador to Afghanistan James B. Cunningham, the commander of US and ISAF forces in the country, Marine Gen. Joseph F. Dunford, Jr. and other top brass.

There have been no comments either from the CIA or the White House on how the CIA officer will proceed with his duties in the Afghan capital from now on. Yet the White House press service informed inspective Washington Post’s employee that making the CIA’s officer name public might endanger his family.

As the Washington Post noted, with hundreds of subordinate officers and analysts under his command, the CIA Station Chief in Kabul is unlikely take part in clandestine missions and operates from the US Embassy compound anyway, whereas senior Afghan government officials are probably aware of his identity anyway.

In neighboring Pakistan, at least three CIA station chiefs have been exposed over recent years, and in at least one case an officer had to flee the country after receiving death threats.

The Washington Post points out that the latest incident of a kind took place back in 2003 during the George W. Bush presidency, when former CIA operative Valerie Plame was deliberately exposed as the US officials tried to apply pressure on her husband, an American diplomat criticizing the US invasion to Iraq.

President Barack Obama made a surprise visit to the US largest military installation in Afghanistan to mark Memorial Day with US troops ahead of planned withdrawal from the country, and to try and talk the outgoing Afghan President Hamid Karzai into signing a security deal. The latter aspiration proved to be in vain.
 
What's also quite interesting is the snub that Obama got from President Hamid Karzai, who refused to meet Obama at Bagram.
 
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