New York: US counterintelligence officials are warning CIA stations around the world about troubling numbers of informants recruited from other nations to spy for America being captured or killed, according to a media report which said in recent years adversarial intelligence services in countries such as Russia, China, Iran and Pakistan have hunted down the agency's sources and turned them into double agents in some cases.
The New York Times said in a report that "top American counterintelligence officials warned every CIA station and base around the world last week about troubling numbers of informants recruited from other countries to spy for the United States being captured or killed. The message was sent in an unusual top secret cable and said that the CIA's counterintelligence mission center had looked at dozens of cases in the last several years involving foreign informants who had been killed, arrested or most likely compromised. The cable also highlighted the struggle the spy agency is having as it works to recruit spies around the world in difficult operating environments.
In recent years, adversarial intelligence services in countries such as Russia, China, Iran and Pakistan have been hunting down the CIA's sources and in some cases turning them into double agents, the NYT report said on Tuesday. The report also said that sometimes, informants who are discovered by adversarial intelligence services are not arrested, but instead are turned into double agents who feed disinformation to the CIA, which can have devastating effects on intelligence collection and analysis. Pakistanis have been particularly effective in this sphere, the report quoted former officials as saying. The collapse of the American-backed government in Afghanistan means that learning more about Pakistan's ties to the Taliban government and extremist organisations in the region is going to become ever more important. As a result, the pressure is once again on the CIA to build and maintain networks of informants in Pakistan, a country with a record of discovering and breaking those networks, the NYT report said.