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Late in President George W. Bush's administration, the CIA began developing a broad and lethal counterterrorism program, RIGOR, that targeted an array of terrorists in different countries. Part of the program examined the possibility of finding and eliminating al-Qaida inside Iran, former intelligence officials said. They described the program as a feasibility study. One aspect was to figure out whether the CIA could slip spies into Iran to locate and possibly kill al-Qaida figures. RIGOR was separate from an earlier program involving contractors from Blackwater Worldwide. RIGOR existed on the books for about two years but never progressed any further. CIA Director Leon Panetta canceled RIGOR last year. A U.S. official familiar with the program said a list of specific targets had not yet been identified when the program was nixed. U.S. officials realized that things in Iran were changing in the waning days of Bush's administration when Saad bin Laden crossed into Pakistan. The administration took the unusual step of announcing bin Laden's move and freezing his assets. As many as four others were believed to have been with him. "This served in large part as a symbolic act to remind both Iran and al-Qaida that we are watching this relationship," said Juan Zarate, Bush's former deputy national security adviser for counterterrorism. "We were concerned operationally about his movements, which was another reason for the designation." In July, intelligence officials revealed that Saad bin Laden was probably killed in a drone airstrike. Intelligence officials suspected he was traveling with Abu Khayr al-Masry, an Egyptian who had also been held in Iran. Officials believe al-Masry
-- an al-Zawahiri deputy -- is alive and in Iran. At the time, officials didn't believe bin Laden's departure was an isolated event. Indeed, it wasn't. Since Saad bin Laden left Iran, other al-Qaida figures have followed, current and former officials say. They are suspected to be taking smuggling routes heading toward Saudi Arabia or the tribal areas of northwest Pakistan. Last fall, top CIA officers received intelligence reports suggesting the release of several al-Qaida members from Iran, according to a former CIA official. One of the men placed a phone call to a relative in Saudi Arabia. The call was made from Baluchistan, a western Pakistan province bordering both Iran and Afghanistan. It is known as a transit point for al-Qaida operatives. But even when they have known that al-Qaida had traveled, U.S. officials say they have rarely understood the purpose. The activity comes as Iran allowed Osama bin Laden's daughter Iman to leave the country in March and settle in Syria. Details are murky. "Clearly, there's something going on on the Iranian front," said Riedel, the former CIA officer who is now a Brookings Institution scholar. Some experts believe that anyone from al-Qaida freed to leave Iran must be returning to the battlefield. Others believe that, with al-Qaida families left behind, terrorists may actually be working for Iran, gathering intelligence or passing messages before returning to Iran. Either way, it's being noticed. Clare Lopez, a former CIA officer and a senior fellow at Center for Security Policy, says it's not a good sign. "Movement like this doesn't augur well," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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