
The CIA in Somalia
AFTER-ACTION REPORT: Spying used to mean stealing another
government's secrets,
but what can spies achieve in a country with no government? In
Somalia with the CIA, Garrett Jones and John Spinelli found out.
VERNON LOEB
Sunday, February 27, 2000
One night in October 1993, Garrett Jones saw his life pass
before his eyes on the evening news.
On his television screen, a wounded Army helicopter pilot
named Michael Durant was being carried on a stretcher to a waiting
airplane after 11 days' captivity in Mogadishu, the war-racked
capital of Somalia. Jones, watching in his living room in Silver
Spring, could feel his breathing accelerate and his heart begin
to pound. In the seconds it takes to air a foreign report on
television news, he began to feel that he, too, was standing
on the sun-blasted tarmac. He could hear the turbines whining.
He could smell the jet fuel burning in the salty ocean air.
Just four days before, Jones had been on that tarmac. He was
the CIA's chief of station, Mogadishu, an old Africa hand who
had spent most of his spy career on the continent. But nothing
had prepared him for what happened in the Somali capital. In
14 years with the agency, he'd never seen his deputy shot, or
taken mortar fire night after night, or watched a firefight engulf
a city, or seen his buddies in the U.S. military maimed and killed.
But all of that, and more, happened in only eight weeks in Mogadishu.
Somalia was something entirely new.
It is hard to play the classic espionage game -- stealing
another government's secrets -- in places that have no government.
But more and more, this is where the CIA finds itself, chasing
terrorists and drug kingpins, weapons merchants and warlords.
George J. Tenet, the current director of central intelligence,
says the CIA's operational agenda is "running hotter than
ever -- hotter than anyone expected in the aftermath of the Cold
War -- from Somalia to Haiti to Bosnia to Rwanda to Burundi,
Iraq, Kosovo and East Timor."
During the Cold War, the CIA strove for "presence"
around the globe, dueling with its archenemy, the KGB, from Moscow
to Malaysia. But now, with the KGB gone and the Berlin Wall dismantled
and a proliferation of rogue nations and regional wars demanding
the agency's attention, the watchword is "coverage"
and the capability required, "surge" -- putting spies
and high-tech eavesdroppers on the ground anywhere in the world,
in a hurry.
The Persian Gulf War, in 1991, was something of a turning
point for the CIA. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf complained that battlefield
analyses from intelligence agencies were "caveated, disagreed
with, footnoted and watered down" and said the CIA and other
intelligence agencies "should be asked to come up with a
system that will, in fact, be capable of delivering a real-time
product to a theater commander when he requests that." In
response, senior CIA officials decided that supporting military
missions would become a priority. In the summer of 1993, Somalia
became a painful test case.
Very few people know much about what the CIA is doing in places
like Kosovo and East Timor today, because secrecy is an operational
imperative. But in this regard, too, Somalia is something new:
Jones and his deputy, John Spinelli, have chosen to talk in some
detail about what they did there and why. Their decision was
prompted both by anger at the Clinton administration and the
CIA, which is now their former employer, and by pride in their
commitment to their mission. Their accounts are limited by their
desire not to disclose information that would identify CIA agents
or divulge classified information. The agency declined to comment
on their account, but key parts of it were corroborated in interviews
with officials familiar with the operation. Together, Jones and
Spinelli provide one of the fullest descriptions yet of a CIA
operation in the post-Cold War world -- a narrative that illuminates
the hazards of "mission creep," when peacekeeping operations
become heavily armed exercises in "nation building,"
and the limitations of on-the-fly intelligence in a spy paradigm
that mixes special operations and law enforcement.
The Somalia they came to know was surely a nation in need
of building. A revolt against the country's sitting dictator
in 1991 had left the capital in anarchy; the ensuing civil war
ravaged southern Somalia and triggered a famine as farmers fled
into the bush. Then another war broke out in Mogadishu, between
forces loyal to the two principal leaders of the revolt. Along
the way, the U.S. Embassy and the CIA's Mogadishu station were
evacuated by helicopter. The United Nations suspended its efforts
at famine relief because of thievery and fighting. In late 1992,
President George Bush sent 25,000 U.S. troops to Somalia for
the express purpose of assuring the delivery of U.N. food, medicine
and other supplies.
As soon as Operation Restore Hope was unveiled, the CIA sent
advance teams to Somalia to assess conditions on the ground before
the troops arrived. The first American killed in Somalia, in
fact, was a CIA operative whose vehicle hit a mine outside Bardera
on December 23, 1992. "The U.S. military was going into
Somalia knowing nothing about Somalia," William R. Piekney,
then chief of the CIA's Africa division, said in a recent interview.
"We were their eyes and ears on the ground."
By May 1993, with relief supplies flowing, famine on the wane
and the country relatively peaceful, the United States withdrew
most of its troops and turned Somalia over to a U.N. peacekeeping
force. With almost no planning, the U.N. Security Council broadened
the peacekeepers' mandate from securing relief operations to
"the rehabilitation of the political institutions and economy
of Somalia."
The Clinton administration strongly supported this more aggressive
stance. Madeleine Albright, then the U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations, said the goal was "nothing less than the restoration
of an entire country." Eager to maintain the Americans'
enthusiasm, the United Nations named retired U.S. Navy Adm. Jonathan
Howe, who had been President Bush's deputy national security
adviser, as its senior representative in Somalia.
All of this infuriated Gen. Mohamed Farah Aideed, the warlord
whose Somali National Alliance had emerged as the dominant force
in Mogadishu. Realizing that the United Nations' peacekeepers
would be a far weaker adversary than the U.S. Marines, Aideed
immediately began increasing his armed presence in Mogadishu.
He also began broadcasting a stream of anti-U.N. invective on
Radio Mogadishu, his fury fueled by his antipathy for Egypt,
the homeland of U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali
and a steadfast supporter of Mohamed Siad Barre, the dictator
Aideed had helped depose two years earlier.
In early June, 24 Pakistani peacekeepers were killed in an
ambush just after they had inspected Aideed's radio transmission
center. Soon, Howe himself issued an arrest warrant for Aideed
and offered a $25,000 reward, turning U.N. peacekeepers into
a posse. Aideed denied involvement in the ambush and asked for
a commission of inquiry.
Howe reported to U.N. headquarters in New York but also had
direct access to senior officials in the Clinton White House.
He quickly emerged as a hawkish force who saw Aideed as the root
of Somalia's problems. He began lobbying U.S. officials to send
in the Delta Force, America's most secretive and potent fighting
unit, to apprehend the warlord.
Any chance the peacekeepers had of negotiating with Aideed
disappeared in mid-July, when a unit of the U.S. Army's 10th
Mountain Division -- the American component of the U.N. peacekeeping
force -- launched a ferocious missile attack on the Somali National
Alliance's command center, killing at least 20, and perhaps as
many as 50, Aideed lieutenants and operatives. The attack, approved
at the highest levels of both the United Nations and the Clinton
administration, was supposed to remove Aideed and the SNA as
an obstacle to nation building in Somalia.
It had the opposite effect: The SNA declared war. And the
United States was the enemy. In August 1993, Jones and Spinelli
arrived to support the American side.
An ancient dc-3 crossed the desert from Nairobi until it reached
Somalia's turquoise coastline and banked sharply over the Indian
Ocean. Jones looked down at the coral heads and thought of Key
West, knowing that when he landed in Mogadishu there would be
little beauty.
Jones was 43, a former Miami police detective with a stocky
build, round face and bushy mustache. He had just finished a
year's study at the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., where
he'd written a paper on U.N. peacekeeping missions' need for
a dedicated structure for analyzing intelligence. Three other
temporary station chiefs had already rotated in and out of Somalia,
and Jones was the only candidate left back at Langley who wanted
to go and knew anything about Africa. The CIA, strapped for funds,
was closing stations all over the continent.
After Jones's plane touched down in Mogadishu, the cabin door
opened to a rush of hot air, the smell of burning garbage and
the sight of piles of airplane wreckage along the tarmac, remnants
of Somalia's air force. There was vodka on the breath of the
pilot of the Russian helicopter that ferried Jones to the former
U.S. compound on the other side of town, which had been taken
over by the United Nations.
There to meet him was his deputy, Spinelli, 46, a former New
York City police detective. He was a solid man with dark hair
and a long, thin nose, a native Roman who had immigrated to Brooklyn
with his family when he was 12. Only a week before, Spinelli
had been torn from a plum assignment in the CIA's Rome station
and sent to Somalia. He knew nothing about Africa, but he spoke
Italian, and the Italians in the U.N. peacekeeping force weren't
getting along with their American counterparts.
When Spinelli took Jones to the CIA station, the new chief's
jaw dropped: It consisted of two windblown rooms in the vandalized
former residence of the U.S. ambassador. Only one room had a
door. Spinelli told him they had no business being in the middle
of this war zone, trying to meet secretly with agents in a city
where they couldn't drive down the street without getting shot
at.
Beyond providing intelligence support to the military, Jones's
marching orders were simple: Finish moving the CIA's base of
operations from the airstrip to the station inside the U.N. compound,
and patch up the CIA's relations with U.S. special envoy Robert
Gosende, which had basically ceased after Gosende and Jones's
predecessor clashed.
If this were a movie, Jones remembers thinking, Francis Ford
Coppola would have to direct. Beyond the walls of the U.N. compound,
there was no controlling authority other than clansmen cruising
the streets in jeeps with mounted machine guns. Buildings had
no roofs, windows had no panes, roads had no pavement and everything
was full of bullet holes. The CIA's electronic snoops tried to
monitor Aideed's radio traffic from a tent on the sand dune overlooking
the airstrip, but all the high-tech wizardry was of little value;
Mogadishu had sunk to what might be called a pre-electronic state.
If Jones's band of spies were going to help the military arrest
Aideed, they would have to do it by working those streets.
The agency's primary "asset," as paid informants
are known in CIA parlance, was a minor subclan leader from north
Mogadishu left over from before the U.S. government pulled out
in 1991. As warlords went, he controlled maybe 400 men, which
was laughable in the face of Aideed's thousands. But the Warlord
had his connections, and the CIA's ability to rent an army --
however small -- was not insignificant. The Warlord and his men
knew the lay of the land and had some chance of actually finding
Aideed.
The Warlord was so valuable, given the paucity of alternatives,
that the CIA brought in a veteran operations officer who had
worked with him in the past to run him again. The officer, code-named
Condor, had distinguished himself as a military officer in Vietnam
and become a stellar CIA operator. Condor had another critical
attribute: He was African American, which allowed him to blend
into the scenery in a way that Jones and Spinelli, white men
both, never could.
With Condor on the scene, the CIA's Office of Technical Services
back in Langley implanted a homing beacon into an ivory-handled
walking stick and hatched a plan straight out of Hollywood: The
Warlord would give Aideed the walking stick as a token of friendship.
After that, tracking Aideed would be a simple matter of following
the beacon's signal.
The chaos in the city kept building. In early August, just
four days after Spinelli had arrived, four U.S. soldiers were
killed when their Humvee hit a land mine just a mile from the
U.N. compound. On August 22, six more Americans were wounded
by a land mine.
Soon afterward, Jones drove out to the beachfront airstrip
to meet a cigar-chomping man dressed in the uniform of an Army
private. The fact that this putative private had arrived in his
own C-141 Starlifter, accompanied by an advance team of security
guards, communications technicians and logistics officers, told
Jones all he needed to know: The Delta Force was being sent in
to take down Aideed.
"With you in town, I work for you," Jones told the
man with the cigar. He was Maj. Gen. William F. Garrison, Delta's
commander, traveling under cover.
"Okay," Jones remembers Garrison replying, "I
need intelligence."
A CIA case officer, code-named Buffalo, arrived with the Delta
Force advance team and worked out of its operations center at
the airstrip, ensuring close communications between Delta and
the agency's Mogadishu station. (To blend in with the soldiers,
Buffalo, a burly 250-pounder with curly hair, had shaved his
head back at Fort Bragg.) Garrison, meanwhile, assigned a military
officer code-named Gringo II to work with Jones inside the CIA
station. Operation Gothic Serpent -- the code name for the pursuit
of Aideed -- was rapidly taking shape.
The Warlord, however, would not be taking part. The CIA's
prize asset shot himself in the head playing Russian roulette
the night before the full Delta task force was due to arrive.
As soon as Jones heard, he sent Spinelli to the American military
hospital inside the U.N. compound to make sure the Warlord would
be admitted, but the chief military doctor said no -- this was
a U.S. military hospital, and the man with the bullet in his
head was a Somali civilian. Spinelli and a Marine major from
military intelligence tried to explain. A heated argument ensued,
which Spinelli won after he threatened to have the doctor put
on the next flight out.
Then he received an informed medical opinion on the Warlord's
condition, which he relayed to Jones by phone: "Garrett,
this guy is a goner. He's alive, but he's not going to make it
until morning."
Plan A was expiring on the operating table, and Jones had
no Plan B.
That night, August 26, Task Force Ranger -- 130 Delta Force
commandos, a company of U.S. Rangers and 16 helicopters -- touched
down aboard six giant C-5A Galaxy cargo jets.
Aideed greeted America's best special forces with a massive
mortar barrage at the airstrip.
Garrison decided to strike back hard and fast. The Delta Force's
intelligence chief asked Jones about a known hangout for leaders
of the Somali National Alliance, a place called the Lig-Ligato
house off Via Lenin. "Yeah, that's a good target,"
Jones said, knowing that sometimes Aideed himself visited.
Delta Force commandos launched at 3 a.m. on August 30 in a
dozen helicopters, roping down onto the roof and handcuffing
Lig-Ligato's occupants in a matter of minutes. The only problem
was that their captives turned out to be a handful of U.N. aid
officials and their Somali assistants. Aideed's men were nowhere
to be found. U.S. military officials defended the raid as a precision
operation, and Jones contends that it sent the right message
to Aideed's forces, but the raid caused a stir back in Washington
and showed just how difficult arresting Aideed was going to be.
Frustrated by a lack of useful intelligence about Aideed's
whereabouts, Garrison quickly moved to the next phase of Operation
Gothic Serpent: going after Aideed's six top lieutenants, known
as Tier One personalities. If you can't find the head, attack
the body. The cigar-chomping general asked Jones about a Tier
One list.
Jones had never been told of such a list. "Do you think
you could find out?," Jones remembers him barking. "There's
supposed to be a list of targets." Garrison, now retired,
declined to comment for this article.
Jones scrambled over to the military intelligence unit at
the 10th Mountain Division's quick reaction force, which he'd
consulted with regularly from the moment he arrived. Much to
his surprise, the officers there had a list. No one had thought
it was important -- until now. Jones got a copy, reviewed it
with Gosende and Howe, and then forwarded it to his people and
to Garrison. While dozens of CIA communications technicians and
logistics officers began arriving to support the mission, Jones's
cadre of operations officers -- actual spies who ran the CIA's
paid Somali assets -- never numbered more than half a dozen (and
ended up working round the clock). They immediately spotted problems
with the list. One of the men on it was actually an Italian citizen.
Another was a former Somali military official who was by then
working against Aideed, not with him.
Jones grew more and more apprehensive: Plan A had died with
the Warlord, leaving few assets on the ground and 400 elite commandos
sitting in a hangar itching to kick ass and leave. And all he
had was this half-baked list. "They were sitting there looking
at me saying, we can't move until you give us something,"
Jones remembers.
Condor came to the rescue. His plan was both simple and daring:
He would take over the Warlord's men and deploy them as a surveillance
team to find Aideed. Spinelli had known Condor for 10 years,
and cared about him. He didn't think Condor would last more than
20 minutes if Aideed's forces uncovered his location.
But Jones, desperate to get something going for the Delta
Force, told Condor to write up his proposal. Langley approved
it, and Garrison assigned four Navy SEAL snipers to protect Condor
and a CIA communications officer. He also vowed to go in and
get them out within 15 minutes if their cover was ever compromised.
Late one inky night, a Blackhawk helicopter took Condor's
team to a deserted soccer stadium in north Mogadishu, where a
truck was waiting to ferry them to a safehouse. Soon, encrypted
radio communications began emanating from Condor's base deep
within the city.
Now it was Spinelli's turn to be daring. Another CIA asset,
an aide to one of Aideed's political rivals, told Spinelli that
two Aideed bodyguards were ready to give up their boss's location
in exchange for the $25,000 reward. He wanted to meet the bodyguards
at his asset's compound in north Mogadishu to test their credibility
and, possibly, plan an ambush, but traveling in the city had
become hazardous enough to make any such meeting problematic.
The only way to map out a route was from the air. Spinelli,
Gringo II and the head of the CIA's security team went up in
a Blackhawk helicopter and plotted a land route that went around
the city, through a U.N. checkpoint near an old pasta factory
and then into north Mogadishu.
Jones had urged Spinelli to meet the bodyguards and evaluate
their offer, but when the reconnaissance team returned from its
overflight, the chief left it up to his deputy to decide whether
to attempt a meeting. "John, it's your call," Jones
said.
"We'll do it tomorrow morning, early, before anybody
gets up," Spinelli replied.
The following morning, a Sunday, Spinelli and four CIA bodyguards
climbed into two Isuzu Troopers and left the U.N. compound a
little after 8 o'clock. Spinelli started noticing debris and
burned tires on the road that he hadn't seen from the air the
previous day, but the route was still clear -- until they made
a 45-degree turn at Checkpoint Pasta.
As soon as they turned, their Trooper was engulfed by a crowd
along the road. Looking ahead 200 yards, Spinelli could see burning
tires, huge chunks of concrete obstructing the way, and a Blackhawk
helicopter hovering overhead, looking as though it were preparing
to fire.
Italian peacekeepers had turned Pasta over to a Nigerian contingent
that morning -- without telling Spinelli, their official liaison
to the CIA and the U.S. military. Aideed's forces had immediately
attacked the Nigerians. Spinelli was heading straight into somebody
else's ambush.
Sitting in the back seat of one of the Troopers, Spinelli
told the driver to stop. "Let's get the hell out of here,"
he said. "We can't make it."
The driver kept going.
Within seconds, bullets ripped into the vehicle. Kevlar shields
protected the two bodyguards in the front seat, but not Spinelli,
in the back. A shot tore into his neck through a gap in his flak
jacket.
Lying face down on the back seat, he started drifting into
and out of consciousness as he watched his blood pooling on the
floor. With that, the driver turned around, drove out of the
mob and pulled over near an Italian armored personnel carrier.
The bodyguards hadn't gotten off a shot.
Jones was shaving in his trailer in the U.N. compound, his
two-way radio by the sink. He heard muffled cries, followed by
a frantic message from one of the bodyguards.
"Leopard's shot," he said, using Spinelli's code
name.
When Jones got to the hospital after a short drive within
the U.N. compound, Spinelli's bloodied flak jacket was lying
on the ground next to the Trooper. The vehicle had been hit 49
times. Gringo II was trying to break up a fight between the two
frightened bodyguards and two U.S. military guards who had been
manning a security gate outside the hospital. The CIA's men had
flattened it in their panic to get Spinelli inside.
Two vascular surgeons in the Army Reserve happened to be passing
through on a busman's holiday when medics burst through the doors
carrying the wounded CIA officer. Spinelli was on the operating
table, still conscious, when Jones came in minutes later. "Don't
tell my wife!" he cried out to Jones. "Don't tell my
wife!"
It took the doctors 25 pints of blood, an artery graft and
100 stitches to get him out of danger. Bundles of nerves in his
left shoulder had been severed. He couldn't feel his left arm.
He needed more surgery.
Spinelli's doctors wanted him flown out of Mogadishu's filthy
environment as quickly as possible, to cut the risk of infection,
but the CIA had trouble providing a medevac plane. Jones appealed
to Garrison, and Garrison got Spinelli out on a military flight
to Germany the following day, pinning a Purple Heart on his hospital
gown on the tarmac. It had been a month since Spinelli had arrived
from Rome.
He flew to Germany. Then he flew a total of 20 more hours
to the United States. It was 1 a.m. when he arrived in an ambulance
at Fairfax Hospital -- and 6 a.m. when the other patient in his
room started watching cartoons on the TV. With a stream of senior
CIA officials stopping by his bed, Spinelli asked if he could
have a private room. But a CIA doctor told him that his health
insurance wouldn't cover it.
He got a private room after convincing top CIA officials that
the situation compromised agency security. At one point, the
agency's deputy director of operations, Thomas Twetten, came
by for a visit. "This is your time to ask for anything you
want," he told the wounded spy. Spinelli remembers thinking
that a promotion from GS-14 to GS-15 might be in order, but before
he could say anything, his wife, Darlene, still disoriented from
her trip from Rome, said she could use a map of Fairfax County.
Twetten went out to get one.
When he came back, he asked Spinelli what the agency should
be doing in Mogadishu.
"Declare victory and leave," Spinelli said.
"I agree," Twetten said. "But we aren't likely
to have that happen soon."
Condor survived in north Mogadishu for 21/2 weeks before Aideed's
men got wise to him. Once his cover was compromised, Jones called
Garrison, who made good on his promise: Condor's team came out
20 minutes later in a Blackhawk that had swooped down and picked
them up in the soccer stadium. They left behind two surveillance
groups, Team One and Team Two.
At the same time, CIA officials back in Langley were complaining
to Jones that they didn't know what Garrison and the Delta Force
were up to. They blamed Jones for not keeping them informed,
which rankled him. He thought he was there to spy on foreigners,
not the U.S. military. He also felt he had a good working relationship
with Garrison, who didn't want Jones telling the CIA what he
was doing before he told his own boss, Gen. Joseph P. Hoar, head
of the U.S. Central Command back in Tampa. They had compromised:
As soon as Garrison told Centcom about any operation, he told
Jones and the agency.
And that's the way it would remain. If anybody at headquarters
ever asked the Mogadishu station to spy on the U.S. military,
Jones told his bosses back at Langley, he would take the matter
to the CIA's inspector general. Jones's relations with headquarters
were strained even before he left for Mogadishu -- he had made
it clear from the start that he wasn't wild about having to finish
moving the station. This latest confrontation made matters worse.
But there were no more requests to spy on Garrison.
By the third week of September, pressure mounted to produce
something that the Clinton administration could tout as a success.
Just then, Team One lookouts told Condor that they had a contact
who met regularly with Osman Ato, a wealthy businessman, arms
importer and Aideed money man whose name was right below Aideed's
on the Tier One list. The contact was willing to help set Ato
up -- for money, of course.
Condor asked Jones whatever happened to the magic cane that
the Warlord was supposed to have given Aideed. Jones quickly
retrieved it from one of his communications technicians trained
to monitor its beacon. Team One's contact had it in hand when
he climbed into a car near Mogadishu's Bakara market. The car
was supposed to take him to Ato, but after a winding ride through
north Mogadishu -- tracked by helicopters monitoring the cane's
beacon -- the car stopped for gas. A Team One member on the ground
just happened to spot it -- and immediately radioed Condor with
the startling news that Ato was in the car.
Delta launched.
Minutes later, a Little Bird helicopter dropped out of the
sky and a sniper leaned out and fired three shots into the car's
engine block. The car ground to a halt as commandos roped down
from hovering Blackhawks, surrounded the car and handcuffed Ato.
It was the first known helicopter takedown of suspects in a moving
car.
The next time Jones saw the magic cane, an hour later, Garrison
had it in his hand. "I like this cane," Jones remembers
the general exclaiming, a big grin on his face. "Let's use
this again."
Finally, a Tier One personality was in custody. The arrest
came the same day that Aideed's men ambushed a column of Pakistani
tanks and armored personnel carriers not far from the U.N. compound,
killing three peacekeepers and wounding seven. It was the bloodiest
day in Mogadishu since Spinelli had been shot, a little over
two weeks before.
An intelligence report produced by CIA analysts back at Langley
reflected a growing sense of doom shared by Jones, Gosende and
just about everyone else on the ground in Mogadishu except Howe.
Jones still remembers its title: "Looming Foreign Policy
Disaster." The manhunt for Aideed was only making the political
situation more unstable, according to the report, which circulated
among top CIA officials and Clinton administration policymakers.
Pressure was growing in Congress to withdraw U.S. forces from
Somalia. The administration had begun to pursue a diplomatic
solution aimed at producing a cease-fire and renewed talks on
nation building among the clan leaders. But nobody told Task
Force Ranger -- or anyone in the CIA's Mogadishu station -- to
call off the manhunt.
In late September, a wing of Aideed's Habr Gidr subclan known
as the Suleimans showed up at the embassy compound. They were
tired of having their neighborhood shot to pieces. And they wanted
one of their leaders, a former Somali National Alliance politician
now opposed to Aideed, removed from the Tier One list.
Gosende and Jones ultimately agreed, convincing the Suleimans
that they had just been handed a huge favor. Jones seized the
moment, gave them a radio and started organizing surveillance
Team Three. He assigned a case officer from Langley, a bookish
young man in his mid-twenties code-named Cheetah who refused
to carry a gun in Mogadishu because he was afraid he would shoot
himself, to handle the CIA's newest surveillance unit. Jones
decided to run the ex-SNA politician as an asset himself, now
that the man was off the list and willing to cooperate.
As committed as he and the CIA were to supporting the military,
Jones had misgivings over this kind of quick and dirty intelligence
work. There was no time for the vetting process that CIA case
officers normally used. In another time and place, they would
have polygraphed prospective sources and put them through a series
of tests designed to prove their loyalty and build a sense of
trust. But with the Delta Force in a hangar at the airstrip and
Aideed at large, Jones and his men felt that they had to dispense
with the basics of espionage tradecraft.
He already felt partly responsible for Spinelli getting shot,
the way any commander does when one of his men is wounded. And
conditions in the city had only gotten worse since then, with
mortar rounds now coming into the U.N. compound every night.
As October began, Jones couldn't hold back his sense that something
bad was going to happen. He decided it was time to let Langley
know how he felt and wrote a report known in agency circles as
an "ardwolf" -- a frank assessment by the CIA's senior
officer on the ground.
He marked the document "eyes only" for his boss,
Africa division chief Piekney. He noted in a preface that he
knew he was going over the top, but felt Piekney needed a candid
assessment. "Things are bad and they're getting worse,"
Jones began. Howe didn't know what he was doing, Jones wrote,
and the Delta Force was being misused -- capturing Aideed would
do little to solve Somalia's problems as a nation.
Jones says that Piekney cabled him back the following day,
told him to stop criticizing policy and senior officials, and
directed him to redraft the cable. Piekney says he criticized
Jones only because he thought the ardwolf was "badly done,"
full of "poor choices of excessive language," not because
it criticized policy.
"U.S. policy was badly flawed at the time," Piekney
says now. "And our analysts were saying so in weekly teleconferences
we were having with the White House and the Department of State."
Still, it only took a day for Jones to look like the most
prophetic man in Mogadishu.
On October 3, he was at the airstrip meeting with Garrison
when Cheetah radioed in a tip from the CIA station across town.
Jones's newest asset, the ex-SNA leader, had just arrived with
word that a cadre of top Aideed lieutenants, including two from
the Tier One list -- Omar Salad Elmi and Mohamed Hassan Awale
-- would be meeting that afternoon inside a compound 50 yards
down Hawlwadig Road from the Olympic Hotel near the Bakara market,
the heart of Aideed country. Aideed might be there, too, the
asset advised.
The Delta Force intelligence chief told his CIA liaison, a
case officer code-named Wart Hog who already had three tours
in Africa under his belt, to radio the following instructions
back to Cheetah: The asset should tell his driver to drive to
the target building, pull up out front and open the hood of his
car.
The driver set out and returned to the station, only to admit
that he'd chickened out and stopped short of the target house.
Cheetah relayed another demand from Delta: Do it again. This
time the driver stopped in front of the right house. An Orion
spy plane and surveillance helicopters recorded the exact location.
Video streaming back into the Delta Force command center showed
a distinctive yellow Volkswagen Thing, known to be the vehicle
driven by Omar Salad Elmi, sitting inside the compound walls.
Jones was standing next to Garrison inside the command center
when the general gave the order to launch an assault.
Jones went outside and watched a line of heavily armed helicopters
hover a few feet off the ground like a long iron snake before
launching into the sky and heading for their target. He went
back inside the command center and watched the assault unfold
in real time across a bank of video screens. Dust swirled everywhere.
Delta Force commandos roped down from helicopters and blew open
the doors of the target house. Rangers roped down from helicopters
and secured the perimeter. Within minutes, Jones heard a radio
call from a commando inside the target building: "Precious
cargo." The commandos had 24 Somali prisoners in cuffs.
All they lacked was a ride back to their base at the airstrip.
A 12-vehicle convoy was on its way to pick them up.
Jones headed back to the station, knowing he'd soon have to
send Langley an urgent cable describing the operation. He arrived
15 minutes later.
"How's it going?" he asked Gringo II, his Delta
Force liaison.
"Perfect," he said.
Five minutes later, at 4:20 p.m., Wart Hog came over the radio
from the Delta Force command center and told Gringo II that a
Blackhawk helicopter had been shot down and the convoy bearing
the "precious cargo" had been redirected to the crash
site.
"What's happened?" Jones asked.
"A chopper went down, but it's okay," Gringo II
said nervously. "They have a contingency."
But the radio soon crackled again. It was Condor calling in
from his tent on a dune near the airstrip. "There's another
Blackhawk going down right now," he cried. "I'm watching
it go."
Gringo II buried his head in his hands. "It's a disaster
now."
It was worse than he knew. On its way to the first crash site,
the convoy got lost in Mogadishu's labyrinthine streets, blasted
at every intersection with machine guns and grenade launchers.
About 90 minutes after the first Blackhawk went down, the convoy
made its way back to the airstrip -- without ever reaching the
crash site. Nearly half of those on board -- 50 U.S. soldiers
and their 24 Somali prisoners -- had been shot or hit by shrapnel.
Meanwhile, another convoy had set out to relieve 90 soldiers
who were then clustered around the first crash site. But this
convoy, too, had to turn back under heavy fire. Jones walked
out the back door of the CIA station and watched tracer rounds
fill the air above the firefight -- soldiers from this second
convoy fired 60,000 rounds just getting back to the airstrip
as the battle of Mogadishu raged on into the night.
Jones heard a call on Armed Forces Radio for A-positive blood
and went over to donate some at a field hospital where wounded
soldiers from the lost convoy had arrived in ambulances from
the airstrip. The fear that had been playing with Jones's mind
off and on all afternoon surged inside him again: Had he been
betrayed by a double agent and duped into sending these men into
an ambush?
Jones kept waiting for the battle to end before filing a cable
to Langley, but no relief column had made it to the soldiers
clustered at the first crash site -- and two Delta Force commandos
inserted by helicopter to secure the second crash had been overrun
and killed.
Around 10 p.m., he called Wart Hog inside the Delta Force
command center for one more read on what had taken place. Then
he wrote a cable and marked it "NIACT IMMEDIATE," short
for "night action" required. The heading meant only
one thing to desk officers back at Langley: Wake people up, because
something really bad is happening. The cable summed up the night's
grim developments in a few terse paragraphs: two helicopters
down, six deaths confirmed, and 90 soldiers trapped near the
Bakara market, fighting for their lives. The battle was still
raging.
At 11:15 p.m., a third convoy -- 70 vehicles, headed by the
10th Mountain's quick reaction force and including four Pakistani
tanks and 28 Malaysian APCs -- left the airstrip, only to get
caught in another ambush. At 1:55 a.m. on October 4, a unit from
the 10th Mountain shot its way to the first crash site and linked
up with the besieged troops. Another 10th Mountain unit reached
the second crash site, but found only blood trails.
With the rescue convoy still consolidating at the first crash
site, Jones got on the radio and ordered all his men to go to
bed for an hour or two and be ready to go at first light to look
for missing troops with all of their Somali assets on the street.
The rescue convoy blasted its way back to a makeshift aid station
inside a stadium on 21 October Road at 7 a.m. By then, 18 Americans
had been killed and 84 wounded. It was the most intense ground
combat involving U.S. infantry since the Vietnam War.
As the smoke cleared over Mogadishu, Jones could no longer
contain the anguish and fear he'd been wrestling with all night.
"Did I take these guys into an ambush?" he asked
a Navy SEAL commander.
"No," the commander replied. "It wasn't an
ambush. It was just a shootout."
Jones was exhausted, enraged, desperate to find the bodies
of missing U.S. servicemen and, in the midst of the devastation,
relieved.
A week later, Jones's tour was up. He left Mogadishu on a
C-5A bound for Cairo and, ultimately, Dover Air Force Base in
Delaware. A casket bearing one of the Americans killed in the
firefight was aboard the plane.
Jones was replaced by a higher-ranking station chief from
the Latin America division. Given the magnitude of the fiasco,
and a CIA deployment that had swelled to nearly 40 since the
Delta Force arrived, the agency wanted a more senior officer
on the ground, even though the action was over. By then, all
U.S. troops in Somalia had been ordered to halt offensive operations
while U.S. diplomats worked to find a political solution.
When Jones showed up at CIA headquarters, he says, Piekney,
his boss, refused to talk to him at first. Piekney denies this,
but both men agree that when they did meet, Piekney lectured
Jones about all the complaints he'd received about him. "I
told him I received reports from his bodyguards out there who
had come to me in a large group and said they felt they had been
asked to take unnecessary risks," Piekney says, adding that
some of Jones's operations officers had expressed a similar concern.
Jones didn't buy it. Though there was no denying that Mogadishu
was a dangerous place, he believed that the risks he had taken
-- and asked others to take -- were measured. With his anger
turning to rage, Jones took Piekney's criticism to mean only
one thing: He was being set up to take a fall. He took a month
off and returned to work in late 1993 as a deputy branch chief
in the Africa division.
By that time, senior CIA officials say, they too were concerned
about whispers emanating from the White House that the Somalia
debacle might have been a case of "intelligence failure."
Spies are always good fall guys, given the inherent limits secrecy
places on their ability to explain themselves. The officials'
fears were first aroused by the National Security Council, which
asked the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board to
review the agency's performance immediately after the disastrous
battle of October 3.
In January 1994, Osman Ato and Mohamed Hassan Awale and all
the other Somalis captured by the Delta Force were released in
Mogadishu -- there was simply no point to keeping them locked
up. Around the same time, Sen. John Warner of Virginia, the second-ranking
Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, showed up
at Langley to conduct an investigation of his own.
Summoned to the seventh floor, the seat of power at CIA headquarters,
Jones sat down in a waiting room outside the director's office
with two of his operations officers from Mogadishu and two analysts
from the agency's Directorate of Intelligence. One of the analysts
was holding his report, "Looming Foreign Policy Disaster."
He called it his "insurance policy."
When Jones's turn came, he took a seat on Warner's right at
the end of a long conference table. "Okay," the silver-haired
senator said, "tell us what happened."
Jones walked him through the entire battle, and all the intelligence
operations that had preceded it, before resuming his place in
the waiting room.
An hour later, Warner called Jones back into the room. He
seemed even more perplexed than he'd been at the start. "Garrett,"
Warner said, "why did they send these people over there
-- to do what?"
"You'll have to ask the president," Jones replied.
"I don't know what we were doing."
Warner wasn't satisfied. He promised to return as soon as
CIA officials gathered all the documents he had asked to see.
Warner returned a month later for another meeting. When it
was over, Warner called Jones into the room and shook his hand.
"I want to congratulate you for having vision and dedication,"
said Warner, who confirms Jones's account of their meetings.
"You and your people did such a marvelous job. Thanks very
much."
A long memorandum Warner and Democratic Sen. Carl Levin of
Michigan produced for the Armed Services Committee on the overall
military engagement concluded that intelligence resources "appear
to have been effectively integrated" and quoted Garrison
as saying, "I was totally satisfied with the intelligence
effort -- never saw anything better from the intelligence community."
The President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board reached
similar conclusions in an after-action report that is still classified,
according to Piekney and R. James Woolsey, who was director of
central intelligence at the time.
The powers that be moved on to other matters. Jones and Spinelli,
however, could not.
After he got out of Fairfax Hospital in the fall of 1993,
Spinelli started having nightmares that always ended the same
way: with him dead. He recalls crying as he described his nightmares
to a CIA psychologist, and being told not to worry: " `You're
doing better than anyone else in your situation I've ever met
before.' "
After returning to the CIA station in Rome, he received treatment
for his nightmares and mood swings, but found little relief.
His work life did not improve that spring, when he had to fight
to receive an invitation to an awards ceremony for CIA officers
who had served in Mogadishu.
During the ceremony, Jones received the Intelligence Medal
of Merit for "especially meritorious service." The
bodyguards who drove Spinelli into the ambush received Intelligence
Stars for courageous acts under hazardous conditions. Spinelli,
the only agency operative to be wounded in Operation Gothic Serpent,
was formally presented with the Exceptional Service Medallion,
the CIA's version of the Purple Heart, which the agency had awarded
him the previous October. But unlike most of the other officers
in the room, he received no after-action commendation. Months
later, after he complained, he was called back to Langley to
receive the Intelligence Star and promotion to GS-15.
By then, he had regained full movement in his left arm, though
he still has no feeling in his hand and cannot tie his shoes.
At work, he showed none of his old aggressiveness in pursuing
potential intelligence assets. At home, he was irritable and
easily angered. Overall, he was prone to anxiety attacks. He
tries, his supervisor in Rome wrote in his annual evaluation,
but just can't cut it anymore. Spinelli couldn't disagree.
When it came time for his family to rotate back to Washington
in the summer of 1996, Spinelli filled out his "dream sheet"
-- a form on which he listed his preferences for assignment --
but he got no offers. A friend from the Secret Service created
a job for him as the service's CIA liaison. He liked the job,
but his anxiety attacks were so severe that he thought his heart
was failing. More than once, he asked to be driven to the emergency
room.
Jones had become chief of station in Namibia, but he, too,
was having nightmares, and fits of rage. He developed fibromyalgia,
a mysterious disease that causes acute soreness all over the
body. On some days, he couldn't get out of bed. He had trouble
remembering his name. He thought he was losing his mind.
When he went to the hospital for treatment of bronchitis,
doctors took one look at his liver functions and told him he
had to stop drinking. In the summer of 1996, the agency shipped
him home a month early and sent him to a residential treatment
facility. Doctors there determined that Jones was abusing alcohol
to deal with post-traumatic stress -- meaning stress from his
service in Mogadishu. The CIA sent him for second and third opinions
from a psychiatrist and psychologist of its own, and when both
concurred, the agency granted Jones's request for early retirement
on the basis of a work-related medical disability.
As luck would have it, Jones bumped into Spinelli that fall
outside the cafeteria on the ground floor of CIA headquarters.
They hadn't seen each other for months. Jones asked his former
deputy how he was doing, and Spinelli held up the middle finger
of his injured left hand and said, "I can do this now."
Jones, walking with a cane because of his fibromyalgia, could
see the same angry look on Spinelli's face that he saw most mornings
when he looked in the mirror. They sat down for coffee. Jones
had just started seeing, with the CIA's approval, a psychologist
with expertise in post-traumatic stress. When he gave his former
deputy the psychologist's name, Spinelli went straight to the
agency's office of medical services and asked for an appointment.
Now, as looks back on that meeting with Jones, Spinelli says:
"Thank God I met the real screwed-up guy."
He retired in March 1998, after trying, without success, to
persuade the CIA to restructure its disability program so that
officers wounded in action and disabled would receive the same
benefits as FBI agents or military officers. He has filed an
administrative claim against the agency, the first step toward
suing his former employer, contending that it refused to provide
adequate medical care. He travels widely as a corporate security
consultant and is looking for a publisher for his first novel,
an espionage thriller set in Rome and Mogadishu.
Jones retired from the CIA in June 1997. He lives in Oregon,
where he tends a garden, slowly renovates an old house on a four-acre
lot and sees a counselor for post-traumatic stress. He still
doesn't know why his brief tour as chief of station, Mogadishu,
has left him with so many scars, but he has a theory. "If
you run on adrenaline for long enough," he says, "maybe
something breaks in your head."
Also: The CIA tries to prohibit Jones
and Spinelli from speaking out.
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