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Who is Who on the CIA Payroll
Allegations that Afghan
President Hamid Karzai's brother
worked for the CIA are a
reminder of a long list of
distinguished and
not-so-distinguished assets

Ahmed Wali Karzai, governor of
Afghanistan's Kandahar province
and brother of President Hamid
Karzai, at his house in Kandahar
City on Aug. 14, 2009
There was little surprise among
Afghanistan experts and longtime
CIA watchers at the New York
Times report that claimed
Ahmed Wali Karzai,
brother of the Afghan President
and alleged drug kingpin,
has
been paid by the CIA for eight
years. Whether or not
Karzai fits the bill — and the
allegations against him remain
unproven — it would come as a
surprise if the CIA did not
have any number of shady Afghan
politicians on its payroll.
The agency has declined comment
on the Times story, but
Karzai's CIA connection "has
been an open secret in
Afghanistan for many years,"
says Gretchen Peters, author of
Seeds of Terror, an
authoritative account
of Afghanistan's opium-terrorism
nexus. In Kandahar, the former
Taliban stronghold where Karzai
is alleged to have helped the
agency stand up a local
paramilitary, Kandahar Strike
Force, that group has long been
half-jokingly known by locals as
"the CIA's bastards."
(See
pictures of the battle against
the Taliban.)
Karzai has not been formally
charged with any involvement in
drugs, but allegations about his
connections to the opium trade —
which also helps finance the
Taliban and al-Qaeda — are
legion. Even if true, they would
hardly disqualify him from being
a CIA asset. "If you want inside
information on shady dealings,
you have to deal with shady
people," says Amy Zegart, a UCLA
professor and national-security
expert. "Nobody should expect to
find Boy Scouts on the agency's
payroll."
(Read "Why the CIA Can't Be
Picky About Afghan Partners.")
Over the years, the CIA has
recruited many famous (and
infamous) figures for
information, cooperation and
worse. Sometimes, the
association has been rooted in
moral or political motivations:
during the Cold War,
anticommunist revolutionaries
made common cause with the
agency. Others did it for cold
cash. "In a situation where
principle and loyalty don't
work, money is sometimes the
only tool the CIA [can use] to
get cooperation," says Nick
Cullather, a historian of the
CIA at Indiana University.
Some CIA assets went on to lead
their countries — Vietnamese
strongman Ngo Ding Diem,
Congolese despot Mobuto Sese
Seko and former Chilean
President Eduardo Frei. German
Chancellor (and Nobel Peace
laureate) Willy Brandt and
Indian Prime Minister Morarji
Desai spent the twilight of
their careers having to deny
allegations that they had been
on the agency's payroll.
The CIA never confirms the
identity of a covert asset, but
herewith a list of some of the
more notable figures previously
alleged to have been linked to
the agency:
Read more:
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1933053_1933052,00.html#ixzz12t8eAnhx
Full List
CIA Recruits
1.
A Brief History
of CIA Assets
2.
John Roselli
3.
Ngo Dinh Nhu
4.
General Dan Van
Quang
5.
Thubten Jigme
Norbu
6.
King Hussein of
Jordan
7.
Manuel Noriega
Read more:
http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1933053_1933052_1933043,00.html#ixzz12tyvIdyz
Ngo Dinh Nhu
By
Bobby Ghosh / Washington
Wednesday, Oct.
28, 2009

Larry Burrows /
Time Life / Getty
Like Ahmed Wali
Karzai, Nhu was the much reviled
brother of an unpopular
President, Diem. (He had two
other brothers: one was an
Archbishop, and the other ruled
the central provinces of South
Vietnam.) The CIA is alleged to
have helped Nhu set up the
Vietnamese special forces, which
were dedicated mainly to
preserving the brothers' rule.
Known by their acronym ARVN,
these forces built a reputation
for torture, repression
(especially against the
country's Buddhists) and
corruption. In time, the U.S.
came to regard Nhu as a
liability to American interests
in South Vietnam and cut off aid
to the ARVN. Nhu and Diem were
assassinated in the 1963 coup
that had the tacit support of
the U.S.
See
six ways to fix the CIA. |