A CIA established was detained on Tuesday and charged with leaking allegedly classified information about Israel’s plans to attack Iran following the U.S. adversary’s alleged October firing of more than 180 nuclear weapons against Israel.
According to The New York Times, Asif W. Rahman, who works for the CIA abroad, was arrested in Cambodia on Tuesday after being indicted on federal charges next year. According to the report, Rahman was detained and arraigned in a Guam provincial courtroom on two counts of willfully keeping and transmitting national security information.
The CIA agent also had a top-secret safety clearance and access to sensitive comparative details, according to The New York Times. According to the report, Rahman’s prosecution reveals that the drip of classified documents occurred on October 17.
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency compiled satellite imagery from October 15 and October 16 to provide the classified information that Rahman leaked, according to court records obtained by The New York Times.
The defined data leaked by Rahman was intended to only be shown to the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand as part of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance, according to The New York Times.
Study MORE: Pentagon deploying 100 soldiers, missile defense system to Israel
Federal officials were alerted to the hole of the classified documents after U.S. knowledge reports were made available on an Iranian-friendly Telegram account, according to The Daily Wire. The source noted that a summary of the Jewish army’s plans for the anticipated Iranian retaliatory strike was included in the classified documents. According to the documents, the Israeli government was “moving munitions and planes” and holding a “large exercise.”
Iran fired nearly 200 nuclear rockets at Israel on October 1st, prompting Israel to launch a retaliatory strike against the country.
Following Rahman’s imprisonment on Tuesday, Mick Mulroy, who formerly worked as the sheriff assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East, told The New York Post that protecting defined materials may be the “highest priority” for U. S. intelligence agencies.
A CIA officer may have been involved in the leak of this highly confidential information, according to Mulroy, who is deeply uneasy. Everyone has a right to an innocence presumption, but if it is accurate, there is no justification for this.