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  • 15
    May
    2013
    12:12pm, EDT

    How a diplomatic spat over compromised spy may have triggered AP leak probe

    By Keir Simmons, Correspondent, NBC News

    News analysis

    LONDON -- The Justice Department's secret seizure of phone records from the Associated Press was prompted by a leak that put considerable strain on the relationship between American and British intelligence agencies.

    The leak was the basis of an AP story in May 2012 about a CIA operation in Yemen that foiled an al Qaeda plot to detonate a bomb on an airplane headed for the United States. 

    There was anger in the British government over the leak and subsequent news reports that disclosed U.K. spies had been heavily involved in the operation.

    The alleged details of the operation, which were never officially confirmed, were straight out of a John Le Carre novel. According to reports, a U.K. passport holder of Yemeni descent was recruited by British security officials and sent to Yemen to infiltrate an al Qaeda group.

    The details of alleged U.K. involvement were attributed by many American media outlets to U.S. security sources. According to London's Times newspaper, the level of detail made public had left British officials "slack-jawed." 

    Deputy Attorney General James Cole, who approved getting the AP's phone records to track down the person that leaked classified information, said it was a last-resort effort after having conducted hundreds of interviews. NBC's Pete Williams reports

    "I understand there is an investigation under way, being led by the Americans. It is clearly a matter for the U.S. authorities,", the official spokesperson for Britain's prime minister said at the time. "Clearly, we think that sensitive information should be protected."

    Sir Malcolm Rifkind, chairman of the parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee, went even further and said leaks about operations could be "extremely harmful."

    "It can prevent the effective involvement of intelligence officers or agencies in operations that are designed to save lives either in this country or other countries," he added. "Whether a leak arises in the U.S., the U.K. or elsewhere it is equally serious."

    In the wake of the leak, it was claimed that the double agent had managed to smuggle out a bomb that would have been used to blow up an airliner. The bomb was described as even more sophisticated than the underwear bomb that attempted to bring down an jet landing in Detroit on Christmas Day in 2009.

    The British double agent was also said to have provided vital information about al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and about its master bomb maker Ibrahim al-Asiri. Around the same time as the leak, a drone strike in Yemen killed a senior al Qaeda leader, Fahd al Quso, who had been involved in the USS Cole bombing. However, it not been confirmed that this killing was connected to the undercover operation.

    US Attorney General Eric Holder tells reporters he recused himself from the investigation into leaks which led to a subpoena for AP phone records, a leak Holder said "put the American people at risk."

    The leaked news potentially did more than put the operation it at risk. It also threatened the life of the double agent and his family and had an impact on the prospects for similar operations in the future. After all, why would similar recruits co-operate with the British knowing that information about what they did would go public?

    "The revelations about the British agent in al Qaeda remind us that Beltway leaking is a major security threat," said Nigel Inkster, a former assistant chief of the British intelligence agency MI6.

    Raffaelllo Pantucci, senior research fellow at London-based think tank RUSI, added: "It, of course, undermines  the trust between the agencies. It’s a big problem."

    The Saudis also substantially assisted in the operation, according to experts. Could their connections have been compromised? In 2010, Saudi intelligence had helped foil an attack out of Yemen involving bombs disguised as printer cartridges smuggled onto airplane cargo.

    Did British disquiet help spur the U.S. investigation into the leak? British government sources would not say whether a complaint was lodged.

    "It is a long standing policy of successive governments not to comment on intelligence matters," an official with the U.K.'s Foreign Office said Wednesday.

    NBC News' Michele Neubert contributed to this report.

    Related: 

    • AP, DOJ clash over seriousness of leak that prompted phone records seizure

    123 comments

    News Agencies that release classified information should be subject to the same penalties as private citizens who do the same. "Free Speech and freedom of the press" should not trump national security no more than yelling "FIRE!!" in a crowded auditorium trumps Free Speech.

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    Explore related topics: ap, yemen, leak, cia, spy, uk, mi6, featured, double-agent, keir-simmons
  • 28
    May
    2012
    10:40am, EDT

    Leaks, corruption, intrigue: Cardinal among plotters in Vatican scandal?

    Vincenzo Pinto / AFP - Getty Images

    Paolo Gabriele (bottom left), the pope's butler, was arrested three days ago for allegedly feeding documents to Italian journalists.

    By msnbc.com news services

    VATICAN CITY -- The worst crisis in Pope Benedict's pontificate deepened on Monday when Italian media said at least one cardinal was among those suspected of leaking sensitive documents as part of a power struggle at the top of the Catholic Church. The pope's butler, who has been arrested, has pledged to cooperate in the probe. 

    Leading Italian newspapers Corriere della Sera and Il Messaggero reported Monday that the pope's butler — arrested three days ago for allegedly feeding documents to Italian journalists — clearly did not act alone, and that an unidentified cardinal is suspected of playing a major role. 


    The scandal exploded last week when within a few days the pope's butler was arrested, the head of the Vatican's own bank was abruptly dismissed and a book was published alleging conspiracies among the cardinals or "princes of the Church."

    Vatican cops arrest pope's butler over leaked papers alleging corruption

    However, the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, denied the reports that a cardinal might be the next target of the "Vatileaks" probe. He said many Vatican officials were being questioned but insisted: "There is no cardinal under suspicion." 

    Meanwhile, the lawyer for the pope's butler says his client has pledged "full cooperation" in the investigation and wants the truth to come out. 

    On his final day in Cuba, Pope Benedict noted that the Cuban government has taken steps to allow greater freedom of religion, but still has room for improvement. Vatican analyst George Weigel talks about the Pope's message and his meeting with Fidel Castro.

    The commitment by butler Paolo Gabriele to cooperate raises the specter that higher-ranking prelates may soon be named in the scandal. Leaks of confidential Vatican correspondence have shed light on power struggles and intrigue inside the highest levels of the Catholic Church. 

    Gabriele, the pope's personal butler since 2006, was arrested Wednesday evening after documents he had no business having were found inside his Vatican City apartment. He remains in detention in a Vatican detention facility, accused of theft, and has met with his wife and lawyers. 

    The 46-year-old father of three was always considered extremely loyal to Benedict and his predecessor, John Paul II, for whom he briefly served. Vatican insiders said they were baffled by his alleged involvement. Gabriele's lawyer, Carlo Fusco, reported Monday that Gabriele was "very serene and calm." 

    So far, Gabriele has been the only one arrested, but Lombardi stressed that the investigation was continuing. 

    Pope at Easter vigil: Technology without God is dangerous

    The probe is working on two separate tracks. Vatican magistrates are pursuing the criminal investigation, and Gabriele was arrested as part of that. Separately, Pope Benedict appointed three cardinals to form an investigative commission to look beyond the narrow criminal scope of the leaks. 

    Those cardinals have the authority to interview broadly across the Vatican bureaucracy, Lombardi said, and can both share information with Vatican prosecutors and receive information from them. 

    The Catholic Church accused the nation's largest organization of American nuns of espousing "radical feminist" ideas. MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell discusses the charges with Sister Jeannine Gramick, who was once silenced by the Vatican, and Jeff Stone, communications director of Dignity USA.

    They report directly to the pope, who Lombardi said, was being kept informed of the investigation. 

    Like a Dan Brown book? Vatican allows mobster to be exhumed

    Benedict has not commented directly on the scandal. 

    Meanwhile, hundreds of demonstrators marched to St. Peter's Square on Sunday to demand information on Emanuela Orlandi, the daughter of a Vatican messenger who disappeared in 1983 at the age of 15. 

    Various theories have surrounded her disappearance, linking her kidnapping to an attempt to free the Turkish gunman who shot John Paul in 1981, or to alleged Vatican financial dealings with a Rome criminal gang. 

    The march came a day after an Italian prosecutor told CNN that a priest who used to run a church in Rome is under investigation on suspicion of complicity in her abduction.

    Reuters and The Associated Press Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'War criminal': UK ex-PM Blair heckled while testifying
    • UN Security Council condemns Syria massacre that left more than 100 dead
    • A baby made in India: a couple's dream comes true
    • Two Americans held over death of student in Japan after Nicki Minaj concert
    • UN Security Council condemns Syria massacre
    • Iran state TV: We'll build second nuclear plant
    • Video: Intrigue behind arrest of Pope’s butler

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    471 comments

    why would anyone be surprised at this..... The church through-out history has been corrupt. It covers any and all disgusting impropriorties either with donated money or by corruption and deceit. Everyone from the children to adults have suffered through this for centuries

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    Explore related topics: vatican, leak, scandal, pope, cardinal, featured, benedict, paolo-gabriele
  • 27
    Mar
    2012
    8:43am, EDT

    North Sea exclusion zone set as gas surges from leak

    Antoine Agasse / AFP - Getty Images file

    A file picture taken on May 29, 2009 shows the Total Elgin-Franklin oil and gas platform in the North Sea 150 miles off Aberdeen on Scotalnd's east coast.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    A cloud of explosive natural gas boiling out of a leaking drilling platform off the Scottish coast has led to the evacuation of hundreds of workers and the creation of a two-mile exclusion zone.

    Coastguard officials ordered shipping to come no closer than two miles from the abandoned Elgin platform, located 150 miles off Aberdeen, and said there was a three-mile exclusion zone for low-flying aircraft such as helicopters, the BBC reported.


    Energy firm Total UK, which operates the platform, said it did not know the source of the leak and was considering all options including drilling a relief well – a solution that could take six months.

    “We have mobilised experts from elsewhere in the Total Group to offer additional assistance and help us deal with the incident,” it said in a statement.

    It evacuated 238 workers from the platform after the leak was spotted on Sunday, according to a report in The Scotsman. The report said Shell had reduced its workforce on two nearby offshore installations because of the drifting gas.

    Reuters reported that the company has enlisted the services of Wild Well Control, which was heavily involved in the BP's Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

    In a statement, Britain’s Department for Energy and Climate Change said the environmental impact of gas condensate leaks is substantially lower than from oil spills.

    Aerial surveillance flights have confirmed the presence of a sheen on the water, which is thought to be gas condensate, a petrol-like substance that normally evaporates naturally.

    Workers’ union leader Jake Molloy warned there was there was the potential for a "major event" if the gas ignited.

    "You're looking at something on the scale of Piper Alpha here,” he told Scottish channel STV, referring to the huge 1988 oil rig blaze that killed 167 workers. "On the positive side, nobody's there. So the human side has been dealt with. But the potential remains for an ignition source and for the complete destruction of that installation.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: Syria accepts Kofi Annan's plan to end violence
    • Bomb plot foiled: Cache of suicide vests found in Afghan defense ministry
    • Sarkozy begs TV channels not to show France killings
    • Queen's bank fined for 'serious' money laundering faults
    • In Brazil, 'Gang of Blondes' kidnapped women, emptied their bank accounts
    • Strauss-Kahn hit with preliminary sex-ring charges

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    66 comments

    Oil thieves destroying the Land, Ocean, and Atmosphere .. what's left?

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    Explore related topics: britain, leak, gas, shell, total, north-sea, featured, elgin

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