Crisis Four (49 page)

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Authors: Andy McNab

BOOK: Crisis Four
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I said, ‘I’ll certainly bear it in mind. Thanks.’
He put his hand up. ‘Hey, no problem.’
We reached the desk and Metal Mickey switched his camp game-show host’s voice into overdrive: ‘Wayne, I bet if you looked in the delivery drawer you’d find a large UPS envelope addressed to Sarah.’
Wayne had a look, rummaged around for a moment and handed it over. ‘Why, thank you, Wayne, I hope you continue to have a very nice day!’
We said our goodbyes and walked to the elevator. He saw me looking at the envelope; as the elevator doors closed he raised an eyebrow. ‘Why, Mr Snell, you didn’t expect me to carry the material around with me, did you?’
Sarah’s apartment was just as I’d left it. There was even the faint aroma of burned food hanging in the air. Metal Mickey wrinkled his nose.
‘Cooking – the other night,’ I explained, closing the door behind us.
‘Ooh, that’s what it is.’ He walked towards the kitchen. ‘I’d ask for the recipe, but…’ He twitched his nose again. ‘Can I get you some tea?’ He threw the envelope onto the settee and unzipped his bag.
I walked over and sat down beside it, checking my watch. The envelope looked quite thick, but I had plenty of time before my RV with Sarah.
I heard the kettle being filled as I ripped open the UPS plastic outer. Inside was a brown, A3 envelope, sealed with Sellotape.
Metal Mickey came back into the room. ‘They’re printouts, and they are now your responsibility.’ He couldn’t help looking rather pleased with himself.
‘How did you get all this?’ I asked.
He gave an impish smile and his eyes twinkled. ‘Ask no questions, you’ll be told no lies; that’s what my dear mother always used to say.’ He came over and sat down next to me. ‘However, I have a friend,’ – his fingers mimed quote marks – ‘who has access to Intelink.’ He clasped his hands together between his legs and did a pretty good impression of a Cheshire cat. It was the most pleased I’d seen him, and he had every reason to be.
Intelink was switched on in 1994. The need for real-time intelligence had never been so acute, as the Gulf War demonstrated when General Schwarzkopf very loudly complained that the spooks had failed to produce satellite imagery fast enough. The network was soon being used as a central pool by all thirty-seven members of the United States Intelligence Community, from the CIA to FINCEN (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network), plus other groups connected with national security and the military. I knew that at least 50,000 people had passwords, with varying levels of access.
We both heard the kettle boil and click off. Mickey jumped up. ‘Tea! Milk, sugar?’
‘Strong. Shaken, not stirred.’
I heard him giggle as I pulled out the wad of A4 paper, filed in three clear-plastic sleeves. It was definitely stuff off Intelink. On the top file I could see the META tagging: <”IL.CIA” Executive Order 12958: Classified National Security Information”> META (Megadata) is a system for pulling down the documents needed from hundreds of thousands on call. The information available is nearly half a million electronic pages; just over 80 per cent of all the National Security Agency’s output can be accessed in two hours.
The rest of the title went on to give its level of security. This document was tagged Intelink-P – in other words, managed purely by the CIA and top secret, available only to policy-makers.
Mickey came back with the tea. I had just finished skimming through the rest of the tags. This was looking good. There was another Intelink-P and an Intelink-TS – classified secret, about a third of the intelligence community have access at this level. I was quite looking forward to having a read. I looked at Mickey as he held a sugar lump on a spoon for me. I shook my head. ‘How on earth did your friend get this stuff?’
He sat down and proceeded to put four lumps in his cup. ‘Well, the objective is the eventual flow down, or up, of information as various security classifications impose themselves. Right now, standard COTS tools are used, but they’re not specially augmented with multilevel security. These tools don’t provide the right hooks, so for now different levels of security are provided by different physical levels of security, so there’s an issue regarding upgrading and downgrading information between security levels.’
I gave up listening to him halfway though his waffle. ‘What the fuck are you on about?’
His spoon fought a battle with the amount of sugar in his cup. ‘If they say something is an “issue”, it means they haven’t got that sorted out yet. Now and again you can confuse the system. Especially when it’s new and is taking a while to sort itself out.’
He went back into Cheshire-cat mode and took a sip of what must have been very sweet tea. I was waiting for his teeth to drop out as he spoke. ‘The only one that can’t be got into at the moment is a new, fourth level. It hasn’t even got a name that I know of. Maybe it’s only for the president and a few of his best buddies, who knows?’
I didn’t touch my cup, just kept flicking through the pages, looking for things I understood. I heard him slurp another mouthful of tea, and then a loud swallow. ‘There will be a lot in there that is of no use to you whatsoever. He just pulled down any document containing information that might be relevant. He’s such a nice boy. Drink your tea, Nick, it’ll get cold.’
I nodded and didn’t say a word. He got the hint; I heard the cup go down on its saucer. Mickey stood up and went back into the kitchen, then returned with his laptop bag. ‘Nick, I hope you find it interesting reading. I’ve left the milk and tea for you.’
I looked up at him. ‘Thanks, mate.’
‘Of course, you’ll destroy all the files before you leave?’
‘No problem.’
He got to the door and turned, dangling the apartment keys between his thumb and index finger. ‘By the way, send my love to Sarah. Tell her, if she needs these, I’ll be leaving them with Wayne.’
I looked at him, trying to look confused. ‘Er, what?’
His eyes twinkled. ‘Oh, you are so transparent, Nick! PV? Pants, that’s what it is, a load of frilly old pants. I’m not that mad, you know. I bet they told you I was, didn’t they? Well, let’s just let them think it. Pension, that’s what it’s all about, my absolutely gorgeous disability pension.’ Still highly amused with the whole thing, he turned to leave.
I said, ‘Michael, thank your friend for all his help.’
He looked back with a smile that suggested it had already been taken care of. ‘Been there, done that. Now remember, say a special hello to Sarah for me. Byeee.’ The door closed behind him. I got off the settee and turned the lock. If anybody decided to hit the place, it should at least give me enough time to get the papers down the toilet.
I checked out Baby-G. An hour to go before the RV with Sarah. I pulled out the papers that were tagged Intelink-P: Executive Order 12958. I turned the pages, but they meant nothing to me, just lots of directions on security of documents. Maybe Mickey’s friend had a sense of humour.
Next was Executive Order 12863 on the PFIAB (President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board) and Executive Order 12968: Access to Classified Information. I thumbed through acres of stuff that was full of abbreviations and acronyms. I understood ziff.
Then I saw the reason I had been given it. One of the sub-paragraphs was entitled, ‘Yousef’. I felt a jolt of adrenalin.
I read slowly, making sure I understood every word.
Since 1995, several senior officials in Clinton’s administration had been under surveillance by the FBI. At first they suspected that one of them was spying for the Saudi government, but more recently that information was being leaked to Bin Laden. According to this report, the hunt for Yousef had narrowed to include a senior official on the National Security Council, the 1,200-strong body that advises the president on intelligence and defence-related matters. Its office is in the White House.
I picked up my lukewarm tea. It tasted shit; I’d have to make a new brew. I went to the kitchen with the files. There was plenty of jargon and junk, but it was clear that the hunt for Yousef had begun after the interception of a message between Washington and Bin Laden’s farm in the Sudan that hinted about an agent who might be able to get a copy of a secret letter signed by Warren Christopher, then secretary of state, which spelled out American commitments to the Palestinians in the Middle East peace process.
The handler in the Sudan had replied, ‘That is not what we use Yousef for.’
The report carried on to say that they believed there was little chance of discovering Yousef’s identity after the intercept, because he would have been one of the first to learn about it on Intelink. All communication between him and his handlers would have ceased. I had a quiet laugh to myself. Maybe that was what the fourth level of Intelink was all about: trying to keep people like him out of the loop.
There were references to other documents relating to Yousef, but Mickey’s friend hadn’t included them. I placed the cup on the floor and picked up the other Intelink-P file. Its tag told me it was a CIA document, entitled simply, ‘Counter-terrorism Center’. It wasn’t the whole document, just the introduction, but even that ran to fifteen pages. I definitely needed more tea.
When the Clinton administration endorsed the idea of specialized units to infiltrate terrorist operations and disrupt them, the CIA established the Counter-terrorism Center as a central clearing house for intelligence. Its aim was to ‘give the president more options for action against foreign terrorists to further pre-empt, disrupt and defeat international terrorism’. These options included covert operations designed to prevent terrorism, or to take revenge for successful attacks on Americans. New cadres of undercover CIA officers were sent overseas, and the use of CIA teams was expanded to assess and predict threats against United States military personnel deployed abroad.
Part of this strategy was a new level of co-operation between the intelligence agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, its traditional rival. Senior FBI agents stationed overseas held long and successful meetings with CIA station chiefs – the first at the United States Embassy in Rome, the second at the embassy in London – to work out ways to co-operate against terrorists and other international criminals.
The kettle boiled and cut out. I left it for a while; this was getting interesting. I knew that such a meeting would have been unthinkable as recently as two years ago, when the two agencies were at each other’s throats over their conduct in the investigation and arrest of Aldrich Ames, a spy for Moscow inside the CIA.
I put the file down, threw a teabag into a cup and poured. The next page dealt with Sarah’s group. The unit had scored several successes. British police raided the London home of an Algerian named Rachid Ramda and found links with the Armed Islamic Group, an Algerian organization suspected of seven bombings in France that killed seven and wounded 180 in 1997. The police also discovered records of money transfers, and traced them to Bin Laden’s headquarters in the Sudan.
In Egypt, security officials uncovered a conspiracy by the extremist group Islamic Jihad to assassinate President Hosni Mubarak. It seemed that Sarah’s group was investigating evidence that Bin Laden helped fund the plot. They also had evidence that Bin Laden was the major backer of a camp in Afghanistan called Kunar, which provided training for recruits of Islamic Jihad and the Islamic Group, both Egyptian terrorist organizations. This was in addition to the three terrorist training camps in northern Sudan, which Bin Laden helped to fund, and where extremists from Egypt, Algeria and Tunisia received instruction.
I threw the teabag into the sink, added milk and wandered back to the settee to read some more. Sarah’s explanation of events was becoming more convincing as the minutes passed. I sat back down. To track Bin Laden’s activities, the National Security Agency’s eavesdropping satellites were used to listen in on telephone and e-mail conversations throughout the world. CIA analysts were able to determine that in January he had held a meeting with leading members of his network to prepare for a new wave of terrorism. Soon afterwards he publicly announced his intentions when he issued a fatwa calling on Muslims to kill Americans.
I had a drink and held the cup on my chest, slumped on the sofa. American officials are barred by executive order from planning an assassination. But after the fatwa was issued, Bin Laden was named in a secret presidential covert action order on terrorism, signed by Bill Clinton, which authorized intelligence agencies to plan and carry out covert operations that might lead to death. Such a measure was necessary, the report concluded, for two reasons:
‘1. We believe that Bin Laden is planning new terrorist acts against American interests.
2. We believe that the question is not whether Bin Laden will strike again, but when.’
I bent my neck forward and drained the cup. I checked my watch; thirty minutes to go to the RV.
I went back into the kitchen and turned on the electric hob, then placed my cup and the two files I’d read on the worktop.
It was time for file number three. This one came from an acronym, DOSFAN, which I didn’t recognize. The document discussed the investigation and arrest of several of Bin Laden’s operators worldwide.

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