CIA Chief In Afghanistan Accidentally Named In White House Briefing
(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 President 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 traveling with Obama on his surprise Afghanistan visit and included in a "pool report" shared with correspondents and others not on the trip.
The identity of the top CIA officer in a country is usually known to top government officials there. However, it is rarely publicly acknowledged in order to avoid targeting by terrorists and to allow the officer to take on other missions more deeply undercover.
In recent years, three different CIA station chiefs in Afghanistan’s neighbor Pakistan have been publicly named in the media after being identified in lawsuits or by other critics of U.S. drone operations there. In at least one instance, the officer was called back to the U.S. because of threats to his safety.
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