Why the CIA doesn't spy on the UAE
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[August 26, 2019]
By Aram Roston
(Reuters) - The United Arab Emirates
finances the military leader trying to topple a United
Nations-recognized government in Libya. It helps lead a coalition of
nations imposing an economic blockade of Qatar, despite U.S. calls to
resolve the dispute. It hired former staffers of the U.S. National
Security Agency as elite hackers to spy in a program that included
Americans as surveillance targets, a Reuters investigation https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-spying-raven
found this year.
And yet, in a highly unusual practice, the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) does not spy on the UAE’s government, three former CIA
officials familiar with the matter told Reuters, creating what some
critics call a dangerous blind spot in U.S. intelligence.
The CIA’s posture isn’t new. What’s changed is the nature of the tiny
but influential OPEC nation’s intervention across the Middle East and
Africa - fighting wars, running covert operations and using its
financial clout to reshape regional politics in ways that often run
counter to U.S. interests, according to the sources and foreign policy
experts.
The CIA’s failure to adapt to the UAE’s growing military and political
ambitions amounts to a “dereliction of duty,” said a fourth former CIA
official.
The U.S. intelligence community doesn’t completely ignore the UAE.
Another branch, the National Security Agency (NSA), conducts electronic
surveillance - a lower-risk, lower-reward kind of intelligence-gathering
- inside the UAE, two sources with knowledge of NSA operations told
Reuters. And the CIA works with UAE intelligence in a “liaison”
relationship that involves intelligence sharing on common enemies, such
as Iran or al-Qaeda.
But the CIA does not gather “human intelligence” - the most valuable and
difficult-to-obtain information - from UAE informants on its autocratic
government, the three former CIA officials told Reuters.
The CIA, the NSA and the White House declined to comment on U.S.
espionage practices in the UAE. The UAE’s foreign ministry and its U.S.
embassy did not respond to requests for comment.
The CIA’s hands-off practice - which hasn’t been previously reported in
the media - puts the UAE on an extremely short list of other countries
where the agency takes a similar approach, former intelligence officials
said. They include the four other members of an intelligence coalition
called “The Five Eyes”: Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and
Canada.
CIA spies gather human intelligence on almost every other nation where
the United States has significant interests, including some key allies,
according to four former CIA officials.
The closest contrast to the UAE may be Saudi Arabia - another
influential U.S. ally in the Middle East that produces oil and buys U.S.
weapons. Unlike the UAE, Saudi Arabia is often targeted by the CIA,
according to two former CIA officials and a former intelligence officer
for a Gulf nation. Saudi intelligence agents have caught several CIA
agents trying to recruit Saudi officials as informants, the sources
said.
The Saudi intelligence agencies do not complain publicly about CIA
spying attempts but privately meet with the agency’s station chief in
Riyadh to ask that the CIA officers involved be quietly ejected from the
country, said the former intelligence official for a Gulf nation.
Robert Baer, a former CIA agent and author, called the lack of human
intelligence on the UAE “a failure” when told about it by Reuters. U.S.
policymakers, he said, need the best available information on the
internal politics and family feuds of Middle Eastern monarchies.
“If you pride yourself on being a world service, it’s a failure,” he
said. “The royal families are crucial.”
‘ROGUE STATE’
A former official in U.S. President Donald Trump's administration said
the lack of UAE intelligence is alarming because the desert monarchy now
operates as a “rogue state” in strategic nations such as Libya and Qatar
and further afield in Africa.
In Sudan, the UAE spent years and billions of dollars propping up
long-serving Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, then abandoned
him https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/sudan-bashir-fall
and supported the military leaders who overthrew him in April. The new
government’s security forces in June killed dozens of protesters
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-sudan-politics-investigation/sudan-says-87-killed-when-troops-broke-up-protest-critics-say-too-low-idUSKCN1UM0BI
who were pushing for civilian rule and elections. The UAE has also built
military bases in Eritrea and the self-declared Republic of Somaliland.
“You turn over any rock in the horn of Africa, and you find the UAE
there,” the former Trump administration official said.
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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Abu Dhabi's Crown
Prince Mohammed Bin Zayed in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates June
24, 2019. File photo. Jacquelyn Martin/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
The UAE has asserted itself as a financial and military power in
areas “far from its immediate neighborhood,” said Sara Leah Whitson,
executive director of the Middle East and North Africa Division of
Human Rights Watch.
“Whether Somalia, or Eritrea or Djibouti, or Yemen, the UAE is not
asking for permission,” she said.
In Yemen, the UAE and Saudi Arabia have led a coalition of nations
fighting Iran-aligned Houthi rebels, but the UAE recently started
drawing down troops amid international criticism over air strikes
that have killed thousands of civilians and a humanitarian crisis
that has pushed millions to the brink of famine. The U.S. Congress
recently passed resolutions to halt arms sales to Saudi Arabia and
the UAE, but President Trump vetoed the measures.
The UAE government has spent $46.8 million on U.S. lobbyists since
2017, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
One of the three former CIA officials with knowledge of the agency’s
UAE operations said intelligence on its government is needed for
reasons beyond its regional interventions. The UAE is also forging
closer ties with Russia – including a wide-ranging strategic
partnership signed last year to cooperate on security, trade and oil
markets – and with China, where Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown
prince of Abu Dhabi and the UAE’s defector ruler, last month made a
three-day visit for a UAE-China economic forum.
Some national security experts, however, continue to see enough
alignment between U.S. and UAE interests to explain the continued
lack of spying.
“Their enemies are our enemies,” said Norman Roule, a retired CIA
official, referring to Iran and al-Qaeda. “Abu Dhabi’s actions have
contributed to the war on terror, particularly against al-Queda in
Yemen."
FEAR OF DEMOCRACY, POLITICAL ISLAM
The Abu Dhabi crown prince controls the foreign policy of the UAE, a
federation of desert emirates, with a small group of advisors. He
installed his U.S-educated brother, Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, a
mixed-martial arts buff who owns a stable of Arabian race horses, as
his National Security Advisor. His son, Sheikh Khalid bin Mohammed,
runs the country’s sprawling internal surveillance network.
The UAE’s rising interventionism dates to 2011. Mass protests
demanding democracy across the region during the so-called Arab
Spring sparked rising concern within the UAE palace elite over the
preservation of its own power, said Jodi Vittori, a former Air Force
Intelligence officer now with the Carnegie Foundation for
International Peace.
Like many Gulf royals, UAE leaders viewed the demonstrations as a
threat to monarchic rule in the region. They have since fought the
rise of political Islam and the Muslim Brotherhood, the
international Islamic party that briefly rose to power in Egypt
after the 2011 protests that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. The UAE
cut off financial support to Egypt when brotherhood candidate
Mohamed Mursi was elected president in 2012, and then resumed
sending billions in aid after Egypt’s army ousted Mursi a year
later.
Vittori, of the Carnegie Foundation, acknowledged some continuing
shared goals between the U.S. and UAE governments but said those
interests are diverging as the UAE’s monarchy focuses on
self-preservation.
“When the goal is regime-survival at all costs,” she said, “it’s not
one that’s going to align with the U.S.”
(Reporting by Aram Roston; Editing by Brian Thevenot)
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