This
Danish Dude Claims He Was a CIA Mole in al-Qaida
9
October, 2012
His
story is absolutely wild, especially if it turns out to be true. A
Danish man calling himself Morten Storm claims that he worked
alongside the CIA and Danish intelligence to infiltrate al-Qaida’s
Yemeni affiliate and played a crucial role in killing Anwar
al-Awlaki, its most prominent propagandist.
Storm
is perhaps the least likely al-Qaida mole ever. He’s so white he’s
practically translucent. A ginger beard rings his baby face. That
made Storm, a convert to Islam, an attractive recruit for al-Qaida to
send inconspicuously to the West for attacks. But Storm was recruited
by Dutch intelligence in 2006 and kept tabs on the Yemeni affiliate.
If his story is correct, Awlaki trusted Storm enough to accept a
flash drive from him — a flash drive that helped the CIA target
Awlaki for a
fatal strike last September.
The
Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten first
reported on Storm’s claims.
To corroborate them, itprovides
a recording that
the paper claims is of an October 2011 conversation between Storm, a
Danish intelligence agent and a CIA operative called “Michael.”
It apparently refers to the operation that killed Awlaki, barely a
week before the conversation took place. (Interestingly, Danish
intelligence made a public statement that they do not “engage
in or support operations aimed at taking civilian lives.”)
Storm,
a former Islamic extremist — he converted to Islam, and then
blanched at al-Qaida’s murderous inclinations — expresses mixed
feelings about killing Awlaki. “He was my sheikh, he was my
teacher, he was a friend of mine,” Storm says in English, but
Awlaki was “misguided” to the point of turning “evil.”
Michael attempts to reassure him, and speaks of respecting Awlaki as
part of a “warrior culture.”
The
CIA declined to comment on Storm. And Danger Room cannot
independently corroborate his claims. But the Associated Press
reported in May that the CIA had placed
a mole inside
al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, as the group calls itself, who
“disrupted”
a bomb plot by posing as a suicide bomber and delivering his
explosives to intelligence operatives before they could blow up an
airliner. Accounts of the mole were among a series of prominent
national-security leaks this spring that freaked
out members of Congress.
To
be very, very clear, we have no idea if Storm was that mole, or if he
was a different one — or even if his story is
true. Jyllands-Posten reported
that Storm grew disillusioned with jihadis and wanted recognition for
turning on them. And it provided what it claims is an e-mail from
Awlaki to Strom.
“I
did receive the flash you sent me,” Awlaki allegedly e-mailed
Storm, apparently considering the flash drive a means of secure
communication, similar to how
Osama bin Laden sent out messages during
his own years of hiding in Pakistan.
“Please respond to this
message with what you want to say and give it to the brother. We
cannot have our brother travel with a laptop plus it is suspicious
for you guys to type out a message in a public place.” Awlaki
further indicates that he received e-mails forwarded from an account
set up by Inspire,
the English-language extremist Webzine al-Qaida in the Arabian
Peninsula publishes.
If
Storm’s claims are truthful, he’s the highest-level mole inside
al-Qaida that the public has ever known about — and quite possibly
the highest-level Western mole in al-Qaida that there has ever been.
There are only a thimbleful of public accounts of Western penetration
of al-Qaida, the most prominent of which — before now — concerned
the triple
agent who blew himself up on
a secret installation in eastern Afghanistan. Maybe Storm is a liar.
Or maybe this husky, red-bearded man really did mark for death one of
America’s most visible opponents.
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