The Spy Who - The Spy Who Betrayed Bin Laden (Encore) | Aimen Dean talks about his time as MI6's Top Spy Inside Al-Qaeda | 5
Episode Date: January 21, 2025Aimen Dean talks Raza Jaffrey through the highs and lows of his eight years as an undercover agent and why he chose to spy for the British rather than the Americans. He also describes how he ...felt after his cover was blown when an American writer disclosed his identity with details that could only be sourced to Dean; and what his life has been like since. And Raza gets his chance to find whether the spy movies and TV series he's been involved in have anything to do with real life. Have you got a spy story you’d like us to tell? Email your ideas to thespywho@wondery.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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From Wondery, I'm Raza Jafri and this is The Spy Who.
When diving into the world of spies, we're often talking about historic figures,
people whose actions are felt today, but whose lives and adventures took place decades ago.
That's not so with today's guest.
Amon Dean's story is a gripping present day saga saga which is still unfolding in real time. Now as we've heard
throughout the season after he came face to face with the realities of fighting a holy war,
Eamon turned his back on Al-Qaeda to become a spy. It was the last thing he expected to do,
but he found his calling working as an agent.
Eamonn risked not only his personal safety, but also the safety of friends and family when he agreed to aid counter-terrorism efforts in the UK and beyond.
And then, rather unceremoniously, he was outed by the institutions that he was working to protect.
It's particularly fascinating for me.
the institutions that he was working to protect. It's particularly fascinating for me,
I've been involved in spy dramas
for quite a fair bit of my career,
and I've certainly played some spies as well.
And I'm often asked whether or not those stories
are based in reality, how close they are.
So it'll be very interesting for me today
to find out what it exactly is
that is the day to day life
of being a spy. Something tells me it's a little bit more mundane than movies and TV
lead us to believe.
So what does life as an ex-spy look like? How do you adjust from adrenaline and espionage
to a more ordinary way of living. My guest today is Eamon himself.
Author of Nine Lives, my time as MI6's top spy inside Al-Qaeda
and co-host of the Conflicted podcast.
Hello, Eamon.
Hi, Radhav.
So grateful to you for joining us today.
Thank you.
Should I be calling you Eamon? Eam calling you Ayman or Ali or Abu Abbas?
You've lived a lot of lives, I'm interested to find out about all of this.
Ayman is fine, that's what my kids like.
Well actually these days my daughter, at the beginning she used to call me Ayman.
So first she was calling me by my name and then daddy.
And now it's bro
so
From mine I have to put a stop to that. Yeah
We're really so lucky to have you with us today to hear
Really from the person behind all the stories that we've enjoyed listening to over the past episodes of this podcast and to find out
What so much of those stories were really like. Like I say, such an extraordinary number of lives you've lived and I'm so looking forward
to getting into what living those lives has meant to you along the way.
But I have to start out, you know, as an actor who's made a career telling stories of spies
and playing a number of them, it's great to be sitting in front of a real one.
But I need you to answer a question for me that I think you probably know the answer
to already. But can you tell me definitively today, is your world
anything like the movie world of Spooks or Homeland or Bond?
No, there is nothing of Homeland or Bond.
No, no, it's not.
I mean-
You mean everything I've been doing is a lie?
Should have been a spy.
Well, unfortunately, there are no, well, fortunately, if my wife is listening, there are no girls.
No martinis, no nice cars.
No hand riding skiing down mountains, none of that stuff.
No, although, like I mean, there will be the occasional, you know, frontline drama here
and there, you know, where there will be shootings here and there.
But it's not like because you are shooting against your enemies,
you are actually shooting alongside your enemies
against those who you are supposed to be allied with.
I mean, it is one of those convoluted worlds and scenarios, basically, that you live.
Yeah, I don't doubt it.
I'd like to start at the very beginning and really talk about the origins of your story and what led you to Bosnia in the first place.
You grew up in Saudi Arabia.
You were the youngest of one of six brothers.
Am I right with that?
Indeed.
Yeah.
And you lost your mother when you were very young and your father as well.
Is that right?
Indeed.
Yes.
Yeah.
What did that loss mean to you so early?
Well, I think what enabled me, I think, to still sail through all of this, I mean, losing
father at the age of four and mother at at the age of 12 was still devastating,
especially my mother, because by that time, you are more aware.
I mean, when you are four, you feel the absence.
When you are 12, the absence in itself becomes catastrophic in a sense.
But then I think the fact that there are five older brothers who are good at consoling and the second thing also is the fact that
Saudi Arabia is a at that time a conservative
close-knit
You know society
Everyone was supporting each other and I think like and I mean that kind of social support and that you know
The you know the kids of the school the, the neighbours, the fact they have uncles
and aunts and many cousins, that at least made the loss easier, I would say.
Was it a happy time then for you in Saudi Arabia or were there difficulties politically
for the family and things growing up?
I would say it was happy times. I mean, I was more of a nerdy, you know, boy growing up.
And I was more into books and more into learning.
And also I was more of a, you know, theologically and philosophically curious kid, you know, at a young age.
And I think I was always also fascinated with politics.
I think it's just you cannot grow up in the eastern province of Saudi Arabia without being
politically aware. I mean, I grew up in the 80s where there was a massive war next door
to us between Iraq and Iran, which was an ethnic and sectarian conflict. I mean, I grew up also, you know, at a time when it was the Afghan Jihad, you know, at
a time when, you know, you hear about all the stories of the Lebanese civil war.
I mean, of course, all of this will politicize any child.
Yeah.
But there's a fascination to me that then this, you know, you describe yourself as this
nerdy kind of bookish boy, turns up at his friend's house one day and decides wholeheartedly
that he's going to be of use in a war saving Muslims in Bosnia. You know, what did you
have to bring to them? What did you think when you turned there to say, I'm going to
go and do this?
I remember when he asked me the question, because he was three years older than me.
I was 16 at that time and he was telling me, for God's sake, this is war, not picnic.
Where do you think we're heading to?
He was saying to me, really, do you think that jihad really needs you?
Do you think the Bosnians really need you?
And I told him, no, I'm not arrogant to think that the jihad needs me but I
need it and I felt that some somehow I just was refusing flat out to be a
spectator watching the caravan of history passing by I remember when I
arrived in Bosnia I was it was just three weeks after my 16th birthday and I was praying so hard that I
should never see my 17th.
Here I am, soon to be 46, I'm still alive.
To this day, I'm still puzzled by the fact that I do have this kind of reckless tendency
to seek risk rather than avoid it. I think it was also the fact that
I mean I just wanted to be part of something bigger than me where I was living, my community,
my city, my town. I mean it was too small for me. I felt like, you know, what am I doing here? I don't feel belong, I belong here. I want to be out there doing what, you know,
others are afraid to do.
Yeah, I know we'll probably come to this later,
but there must be echoes of that
and what you saw with the movement in Britain
and in later years about children from that environment
feeling that they wanted to get out of a situation
and that was what Jahad was calling them to do.
Indeed, because remember that no one wakes up one day, you know, and think, oh, today
I'm feeling so good, I'm going to become a terrorist.
That's it.
Like, I mean, I'm going to join an evil organization and go kill Ray Pillage.
It doesn't happen like this.
I mean, really, like, I mean, this journey is, in my opinion, the journey
I've been on and a journey that many others went on, is the embodiment of that old adage,
the path to hell is paved with good intentions. You really want to go to fight for those who cannot fight for themselves?
You feel that when you see the images of the slaughter, of the atrocities,
and you think, why the world is so powerless to do anything?
And then you want to do it because, one, there is so much theology there involved
in terms of you wanting to redeem yourself,
wanting to be of use, and you want to move from being powerless to powerful.
You want to feel that sense of empowerment.
You want to feel that sense of use to others.
And you go.
But then of course, you're too young.
I mean, basically, like when you are 16, you know, wisdom is a short supply.
I mean, absolutely, there is no supply of wisdom.
So you go there and then that's it.
You are an easy catch for those who are waiting at the other end.
Yes, they are, you know, the neon sign says, come to save civilians, come to fight for
those who cannot fight for themselves. But also, we do have extra merchandise,
and the fine print also talks about future terrorism, suicide bombings,
and other things like ideological brainwashing, but that is for later.
So I think this is where the trap is set.
Slowly, gradually, you enter into a different realm altogether.
Like, I mean, you are separated.
You are in the in-between, between life and death, where death becomes ever-present.
You know, it's always around the corner.
And you feel a sense of, you know, beginning to divorce this world and embrace the fact
that, you know, you are in a waiting list.
You are about to be called at any moment to the afterlife.
Right.
So do you think that that same kind of feelings towards life and its value, or at least the
life on this earth to Muslims and its value, was what led you to accept the risks of
working for MI6 and going back and being around your peers all over again in
Afghanistan. Because actually, those risks weren't the risks to an average
person, because in your head, you'd already decided that the life on earth
isn't the most important thing to you.
Well, I mean, I will die the day I'm supposed to die. I mean, this is one of
the things I mean, in Bosnia, day I'm supposed to die. I mean, this is one of the things I mean
In Bosnia, there was an incident where I still remember it was September 12 1995 I will that date is etched in my memory
I was rushing into a bunker in order to save someone who was screaming his heads off like I mean
And I was worried like, you know, he will alert the snipers. And I was running and by, you know, I just noticed that something was holding my foot
and I was looking down to find that I was already pulling a wire attached to several
landmines foreign, you know, to be more precise, four landmines and none of them exploded.
So I remember this is when I realized that
you are going to die the day you are supposed to die. You know, whether you trip over mines,
whether you set a booby trap, whether you are, you know, shot in the leg or the foot
or whatever. I mean, at the end of the day, you are going to die the day you're supposed
to die. And this is exactly how I, you know,
why I, you know, when I wrote my memoir, I call them nine lives. And so I think, you
know, this is why when I went back, I think, to be a spy for eight years, I still remember
like, I mean, it's only afterwards, only after I left the service and, you know, and I became a banker, you
know, exchanging one form of terrorism to another.
And I remember when I went into banking, I mean, someone asked me there, they said, like,
I mean, you know, Aiman, you spent eight years undercover.
Like, I mean, that's usually, it's longer than usual.
Did it occur to you that every day could have been your last day?
I remember I said, do you believe?
Like, I mean, this is the first time I think about it.
This is the first time I think it will be my last day
because every day I was waking up,
it doesn't matter if it's my last day,
but what matters is, you know, how productive this day is.
Right.
So do you think that that kind of fatalistic view
that your day will come
when your day comes is what's needed to be a spy? Like, you know, whether it's a spy
now today or spy of hundreds or thousands of years ago, you know, that belief ultimately
that when your time comes, your time comes so you can take the risk because it's in someone
else's hands. That's it. That's all that you summed it up perfectly well.
The risk, you know, if you keep thinking about it, you will become nervous.
It will show on your face.
It will show, you know, it will let you let it slip.
To be a good spy, you must forget you're a spy.
So I'd love now to turn to what the day-to-day life of being a spy was.
When you first left the UK, when you decided that you'd be working for MI6, what
was that first day at work like?
When you entered those training camps with people you knew, you'd left as someone
else and now you were coming in as an MI6 officer
for the first day, what were you feeling?
To tell the truth, it was business as usual.
You go back and you wear the same clothes
that you were wearing,
you behave the same way you were doing,
you still have the same skills that they were utilizing,
you still have the same knowledge that they were utilizing, you still have the same knowledge that they
need from you. Because again, to be a good spy, you must forget you're a spy.
Can I come to the time when you decided in Qatar that it was time for you to talk to
a security service about what you've been doing for these years? You spent nine days
with the security services in Qatar,
I understand, is that right?
Being questioned afterwards.
How in those moments did you think,
this is going to be okay?
I am not going to be betrayed by the Qataris,
for all I know, there could be someone in here
who's going to tell Al-Qaeda what I've been doing.
Like, what was going through your mind to make you go,
no, I trust that this is the right place for me.
Or again, was this part of the greater plan?
You just have to trust your gut feeling.
I think at that moment, you really start to feel that, okay, how do I conduct myself now?
I have two choices.
Either I decide to defend those who I no longer agree with ideologically and
theologically or actually just stick to the truth.
And I remember there is a statement by the Prophet Muhammad where he says in Arabic,
الصدق من جات that truth is salvation.
And boy, I mean, I did, that's exactly what happened. You know, there is salvation and Boy, I mean I did that's exactly what happened
You know there is salvation in the truth
Which is extraordinary coming from a spy because you know so much of your life is not the truth
It has to be all the time. That's it must be a difficult thing to live with sometimes. Well, not necessarily you see, you know
there is a lot of
Misconception about espionage that it's all lies.
No.
Actually, the best of spies are those who do not resort to lying most of the time, but
they are mostly economic with the truth.
Right.
So, in that time with the Qataris, how did they trust you?
As someone who's from the Gulf, and they are from the Gulf, you know, the
distance between us, like, it is four hours by drive, it's the same accent, you
know, it's, you know, it is the same families, the same tribal structure, like,
you know, I mean, so the rapport between me and them was more like, you know, guys
sitting, having tea tea and just going through
this. It wasn't an interrogation. It was really like, you know, with, you know, food and tea
and coffee and drinks and all of that, like, I mean, and snacks and, you know, talking
and joking and so it wasn't what you would think.
It wasn't the movie version where you were sitting down to a table and someone was shining
a lamp on your face? No.
Oh no, no, no, no.
I think, you see, this is why I always tell people, like, I mean, the Americans really,
you know, got it wrong in the first years of the war on terrorism with their rendition
and, you know, and enhanced interrogation and all of that.
You want to get things out of people, be kind to them.
That's what you have to do.
The Qataris knew this from the beginning.
They were extremely kind to me.
I was also kind in return.
Is that why you chose the Brits as well?
Because, you know, their hearts and minds kind of attitude
towards espionage and was that why you were more drawn to them
as a security service when you had the choice to go
to the French or the Americans?
Indeed. I mean, there is no question about it.
Like, you know, the British are far more superior when
it comes to, at least at that time, when it comes to understanding, first of all, of the
Middle East. The fact that my father himself had an early life friendship with one of the
earliest spies of the British in Arabia, Sinjib Filby or later known as Sheikh Abdullah Filby, the
advisor of King Abdulaziz in Saudi Arabia.
So for me, there is an affinity with the British earlier before.
So I understood that they have a far more nuanced approach to the Middle East, to the
Muslim world.
They understand that the problems there are better, I think.
What was it that surprised you most about your early meetings
with those intelligence services, do you think?
One was how knowledgeable they were about jihad, about Afghanistan,
about Al-Qaeda, about Bosnia.
You start to see like well
There are hundreds of mosques in the UK like in I mean there are minimum in a two million Muslims like in a living there
like you know, I mean enjoying the freedoms and the privileges and going to university and you know
And then of course when you see, you know that there are offices who are also Muslims whether they are converts or
You know, you know or people like you know, basically who are from, you whether they are converts or people who are from ethnic
background or when you see even more the cream of the British intelligence here, people who
are orientalists, speak Arabic with Bedouin accent, you know, love to go to the desert and practice folk
Henry.
I mean, come on, like, I mean, why wouldn't you love to fall in love with this?
You know, people who actually, you know, the same on the same wavelength with you intellectually
speaking, you know, you immediately bond with them because they are trained to do that.
That's the first thing.
But also the same time, you can't dismiss the fact that they are fellow humans with their own
set of ambitions, dreams, problems, you know, worries, anxieties, but also at the same time,
you know, loyalty, like, you know, and, and above all their loyalty, loyalty to their
country, you know, and, you know and these are people who love their country.
You're now going back and forth between Afghanistan,
between Beirut, between London at this point.
This is when you're first working for MI6.
What changed for you crossing those borders?
I mean, this time it's just that you feel a little sense of ease because you have a little
bit of protection.
I mean, you're crossing, but this time you are not on the wrong side of the law.
I mean, let's put it this way.
So you know, it's still dangerous.
I mean, if I go into Lebanon and Hezbollah
find out or Jama'a Islamiyya
find out, oh my god,
I'm not going to be in good shape. So you have
to not incriminate
myself with association with
MI6, but what you do is that
no problem, go to prison and then figure out
what to do after that.
But for now, you are not supposed to do that.
And at the same time, sometimes you come up with
the most outlandish ideas.
I mean, you have to just talk to immigration officers
based on their local beliefs,
exploit their local traditions,
and just befriend them and try to appeal to their areas of curiosity
and interest.
So is that again another kind of common trait of a spy, like being able to bond with people,
charm people in that way?
You have to. Being a charming person is important, especially that if you have a sense of humor, it's important.
A sense of humor for a spy is important because it shows that you are at ease, that you're
not nervous, that you are not afraid of anything, you have no worries.
A sense of humor is a very good shield.
Was there a lot of laughing in those camps?
Oh yes.
I mean, this is why I said, you, I mean, it was, you sit down with people because you
learn more about them.
I mean, I never looked at them as enemies.
I looked at them as objects of learning, curiosity, experiments, you know, and this is why it
was important that I should never view them with hostility, because if I start to do that, it will show.
And I will start to, you know, become more withdrawn from them.
No, I'm not supposed to do that.
I have to care about them, and I have to make them care about me.
There must then have been difficult decisions,
because there's people that you really do care about,
and potentially you're putting them in danger
by talking to the authorities about what they're involved with. Was that difficult?
Of course it was difficult, but nonetheless, you have to look at the bigger picture. You
have to always understand. I know this is a cliche. I know like many people roll their
eyes when you say this phrase, but it is for the greater good. You will never understand
what is the greater good until you go through war and conflict
and you see mass graves and you see the worst of the worst of humanity.
Because at the end of the day, remember that these people I tell jokes with, you know, I eat with,
you will be surprised, you know, that people with such tender, you such tender affections to each other
would be incredibly harsh and bloodthirsty when it comes to the other
because they already have dehumanized the other so much.
And did you, at any point along the way, think there are people here
who I could try to persuade to think along the lines I think or was that
just off limits because it risked outing you for what you were doing?
Of course it's off limits.
I mean, one of the things I've been trained on is resist the temptation.
No matter how much you think, you think that someone is voicing concerns because sometimes
it happens like someone will come to you and say, say oh I'm not feeling good about this or that like in I mean are we
doing the right thing are we no don't fall into the trap because it could be a
trap yeah from my point of view like and I have to be really careful and no it's
not my job to recruit others that's the problem of you know in my six and my five
they can't go and recruit for me my job is not to persuade, is not to preach,
is not to teach, my job is to observe.
And what about the successes along the way?
What were those moments that you went,
I am making a difference, what I have done
has prevented something or it's working?
What were those moments for you?
There were quite few of them.
For example, like when you hand over certain information and they say, oh, a cell has been broken in
Yemen, thank you so much for this.
I mean, you've done it.
Oh, we have now uncovered the true identity of those who carried out the bombings in Russia.
Oh, we have disrupted a chemical weapon attack in New
York, we disrupted another poison attack in Mayfair and Canary Wharf, we disrupted also
another potentially big attack actually in Bahrain that would have targeted so many people
in the New Year's Eve of 2004-2005. So there were these moments when you feel that this have or
this did prevent significant harm to others and that hundreds of lives being
saved. There was of course the moment when you know you but some of the
successes you really feel a little bit hollow
when I uncovered the identity
of the first leader of Al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia,
Youssef Al-Airy, who was my teacher when I was young.
And I remember that the first thing I asked
before I hand over the information is that,
can you please persuade the Saudis to take him alive?
I asked for that and I was given the guarantees
that they will do their best to take him alive.
And guess what?
They did their best, the Saudis, you know,
in the end he just did not want to hand over himself.
He wanted to die.
That was his choice.
He, you know, just did not refuse
to hand over himself for nine hours.
So once the Americans had attacked Afghanistan and you had Al-Qaeda cells splintering all over the
world, I mean people, you know, it's like whack-a-mole presumably, we're working in the
intelligence services trying to find out where these cells were and what they were doing.
You were in Britain at the time, is that right? You were working with MI6
out of the UK just after 9-11?
Well, after 9-11, I worked from out of many places, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, UAE,
Lebanon, and of course the UK.
Because they were scattered, they were all over the place.
I mean, I spent 13 months actually in the Gulf, post 9-11, continuously undercover. But UK also became, it became apparent that there were cells there and they were hostile.
So I started also to pay more attention there into what the Al-Qaeda UK cells are up to.
And what did you come across then at the time?
What were you seeing?
Well, out of nowhere, I received the instruction from one of my associates in the Gulf.
He said, okay, where are you living right now?
I said, well, I was living in Oxford.
Oh, someone from Birmingham is going to come and see you.
And so, of course, like, I mean, I received this, you know, ominous, you know, two people
coming to my apartment in Oxford.
And they were from Dudley, or should I say
Dudley?
And so this is when I was sucked into this world of Anwar Al-Awlaqi and these people
who were recruited by him when he was preaching in the Whitechapel Mosque in East London and then later in the
Midlands.
And of course, I started to become more acquainted with the Birmingham jihadi circles and of
course went to Dudley.
And this is where I met Hamayon Tarek, who would later, you know up until 2016 17 18 would become one of the greatest
bomb-makers Isis, you know had in Iraq and Syria and that tells you a lot
so I met him for the first time and it was you know, the winter of 2004 and
You know and he was telling me I was given your number by you know
such and such and you know, he told me to get in touch with you because you know, we are planning something and I said oh
dear
Not again. I just be can you give me just a breather?
I just came back from another plot. I just don't smack me when I'm with another one
And I said, oh, I'm all ears
You know, I'm at your service. You tell
me like, I know what you need to do. And so he told me that they are planning, you know,
to use nicotine poison, a poison that you can make out of cigarettes. And that's why
I tell people do not smoke when they put that.
Nicotine poison. That's a new one on me. I haven't heard that before.
Well, a nicotine poison is a poison. I don't go into details as how you do it, but it is
extracted out of cigarettes. And so this is why,
I just alerted my handlers immediately,
guys, there are some psychos out of Dudley
and they want to do something.
And immediately we started putting the plans together.
It took about four months,
from December 2004 until March 2005,
to understand this whole cell, their connections,
who are they, what is their target.
They wanted to target, you know, because nicotine poison,
if you mix it with certain other additives,
it could penetrate the skin and could kill by touch.
So if you were to brush against door handles of, let's say, like, I mean,
Bentley's and Rolls Royces and Ferraris and, you know, of rich houses people, you know,
door handles, like, I mean, and so it is the audacity of it, the fact that it is designed
to give people terror, you know, because terrorism is about like installing
fear in the hearts of people.
Yeah, the unknown.
Because you don't know if it's going to be you, if it's on your door handle, if you do
it to 30 people, how do I not know that my door handle is not going to be covered in
it?
Exactly.
30 random people.
So suddenly, like, you know, basically, like, I mean, I mean, I remember, like, and I was
joking with my handlers, I said, should I buy shares in any company that produce gloves?
Yeah.
They said, don't you dare.
So, and of course, it was a joke because I was, of course, we were going to fold the
plot anyway.
How far along the line did they get with the plot?
Let's put it this way.
They really were two weeks away from it.
They were preparing their wills, they were basically deciding that they were actually
booking their flights.
So they will do it and then they will fly straight away.
So providing that intelligence along the way, was it in your remit to decide which intelligence
to give? Because, for example, had you given them a catalogue of information
and knowing that you were probably the only spy, as far as you know, inside Al-Qaeda at the time?
Did you not fear that giving them chunk of information after chunk of information,
these plots were getting foiled, each one was in front of you, there's a pattern here,
did you not think this is going to expose me?
So I need to hold back some of this. I won't give them some of this information.
Or were you just taught, give them everything, let them figure that out?
Yes. It is exactly as it is. You give them everything and they will figure it out.
Because the more you hide, you don't know.
Because I have part of the picture, they have the full one.
So I'm not supposed to second guess.
But that's incredible faith, isn't it?
That incredible faith in the people you work for.
Exactly, because it's military discipline.
It is military discipline.
It's not for the unit commanders to question the brigade commander.
So because the brigade commander have the fuller picture than the unit commanders, and
I think this is exactly why I'm not supposed to second guess what they might or might not
do.
I just have to trust them.
And part of the trust is the fact that, well, I mean, you know, I'm valuable.
They are not going to throw me like this, you know, or throw away my contribution. So
this is why, you know, it is a risk you have to take.
Now, that must therefore have been a really, really awful time when suddenly they did put
you in that situation. When you were sent that text message and told
that you needed to look at the Time magazine article in 2006, and that you'd been betrayed
by the people that you'd done so much for, when you put so much faith in their decisions
about the information that they'd given you, what did that feel in that moment?
I remember I was actually taking the first holiday in my life.
I mean, in my life as a private individual.
I remember I went to my handlers, it was May of 2006, and I said, guys, can you believe
it?
I've been working seven and a half years nonstop.
So I think I deserve the holiday and I would love to see Paris.
I've never seen it before. And so they said by all means.
So I went there, you know, and it was Saturday.
Then on Sunday, I'm enjoying myself the second day in this beautiful city.
I am in the river Seine, enjoying this boat ride.
And I received this text message, you know, there is a spy among us, go into hiding.
Go and read this Time Magazine website.
And I was okay, but you know, I'm waiting for this, you know, boat to stop.
Then I went into the Internet Cafe, went into the Time Magazine website, they clicked on
it.
So they had line.
My heart, you know, went all the way to my throat.
And then when I started reading the details, it went all the way to my stomach.
I just was like, it says there, a brilliant spy within Al-Qaeda thwarted the chemical
attack against the New York subway just before the war in Iraq. And by the way, that plot
remained secret for three years. No one knew about it. I mean, absolutely no one knew about
it. And I was thinking, Oh my God. I just read everything and then I realized that they
even chose my birth name to identify me with.
And I was thinking out of the 4,000 bloody names in Arabic, why they have to choose the
name that I was born with and then even to hint that I am from Bahrain?
Great, you might as well have put a crosshair on me, idiot.
But also, I realized immediately that it wasn't a leak from the British, it was a leak from
the Americans.
And they are the ones who decided that they want to claim my contribution as theirs, and
that I am their spy and their success story, because they wanted a success story at that
time when the Bush administration was under criticism that they have no effective
espionage against Al-Qaeda and that this is why they are failing time and time again to
do something.
So they're saying, no, no, no, we already prevented quite a few attacks.
We already have a spy inside Al-Qaeda and he was claiming that I am an American spy and that it is all the triumphs of the
CIA.
And I was thinking, no, they're not.
So I was just running towards the phone booth.
Of course it was Sunday, so I called the emergency line.
And I gave the code name Lawrence and I said, emergency, emergency, like someone needs to
call me immediately. And then the five minutes later, my handler called me and he said, you know, emergency, emergency, like, you know, someone needs to call me immediately.
And then the five minutes later, my handler called me and he said, what's up? You know,
of course, like, and he used the F word and everything and all of that. And he said, go
to garden or get the first ticket back to Waterloo. It was Waterloo at that time instead
of St. Pancras now. And we will wait for you there., I have only one message for you. Don't worry. We will look after you.
You don't have anything to worry about.
We will look after you.
Did you trust them?
So, yes.
Straight away?
Straight away.
I mean, I have no other choice. So, Eamon, after all your successes, your career, your spying career, ended rather abruptly
when the US outed you in the Time article.
Were there crisis talks at the time to see about, you know, ways they could get you back in?
Was there some way of fooling people to think actually that wasn't the Ali they were talking about
and get the journalist to write another article saying that the Ali was a name he'd made up?
Or, I don't know, figuring out a way. Were there talks about that?
Because you must have been so valuable. Get you back in, right?
No, that's it. The cat is out of the bag and you can't roll the dice with the lives of people like that.
You know, I would love to have gone back, I mean, I would have done it.
But unfortunately, I mean, the decision came from up.
No, it is for resettlement.
And so I became a resettlement case.
That's what they call it, isn't it? Yeah, I became a resettlement case. That's what they call it. Yeah, yeah.
A resettlement case.
How did they look on you?
Well, judging by the fact, basically, I mean, I lived all this time.
And I went into a very respectable job at one of the biggest banks in the world.
I worked with them for nine years.
I work as a consultant for many governments around the world,
as well as banks and private institutions.
I've done quite well for myself, multiple businesses,
all of that.
Do they look after me?
Without any shadow of a doubt.
I've always wondered, once you've
left the security services, what happens when you see
someone who you know is still in the service?
Is there a special look?
Do you catch someone's eye at one moment if you're in a cafe or something, knowing that
that person works for MI6?
And the two of you just know, but walk on by.
Has that happened to you? It happened twice where I just get the look that ignore me. But the rest of the time,
they just come out of nowhere, big hugs, pat on the back. Okay, yeah, I just left. I'm
now in the private sector. Yay! Okay, let's sit down and let's talk about the good old days. And so, yeah,
I mean, it happens a lot that out of nowhere, one of my previous handlers, or the people
I met before, will jump out of nowhere, basically email me or get in touch on LinkedIn or social media basically and say hey
Remember yeah, I and then we'll say well
I just retired you know would love to see you for dinner
Were there were there other spies you knew of while you were there at the camps?
Did they have anyone else in or can you not talk about that now? Well? I don't know about the British, but
We came to know about five others, but they were of course working for
the Egyptians and the Jordanian intelligence services.
Thank goodness they met a grizzly and yes, they were all in their thirties.
I mean, over the three years I was spying against the Qaeda in Afghanistan, I mean,
basically five spies were caught.
Three were working for the Egyptians and five were two for the Jordanians.
So five in total and all of them were executed.
And there was one actually who was Syrian,
and he was working for one of the Gulf intelligence agencies,
and he was handed over to the Taliban at the last minute
because they intervened to take him from Al-Qaeda
because he was supposed to be executed also.
So actually six in total.
And I remember that, you know,
all of them were in their 30s, all of them were mature people. And I was always praising
the professionalism and the wonderful training that MI6 gave me. And in particular, there
was always this low expectations, this policy of low expectations.
In other words, basically, Aiman, just go there, have fun, come back.
If there is nothing to tell us about, we are just happy that you're back in One Piece.
Right. Since you've left and worked as you have since then,
and built a life for yourself in all these years afterwards.
Do you miss those days, those adrenaline-fueled days?
Do you ever find yourself, you know, in a shop wondering what if, or at an airport checkpoint
thinking, wow, those days were different then?
I mean, how do you reconcile that life now?
I don't feel that I miss, you know, that sense of danger for a reason.
I think it's just, I think up until 2017, I was always thinking, what if I stayed in?
What if there was no leak, you know, from the American side?
What if I stayed in more and more?
I could have gone to Iraq because I had an invitation to go to Iraq and to spend time
with Zarqawi himself.
I really like Amin was going to do even more wonders, hopefully.
I was thinking like that.
I would have thought like, I always felt I didn't do enough.
I always feel that.
You always feel that when you are in that world that I didn't do enough.
You're always chasing that glory, I think.
But then, of course, 2014 I got married, and this is when you start to think, nah.
And then slowly, gradually you start to become domesticated, which wasn't easy.
I think the moment my daughter was born, I think when I saw her for the first time,
I thought, there is no way in hell I'm going back to do anything risky whatsoever.
I'm going to live to see this one get married and, you know, get that PhD and run that company.
There's an Arab father speaking right there.
Indeed.
Well, I'm really glad you've been able to have a life for yourself afterwards.
And thank you so much for sharing all this.
I could really go on.
It's fascinating to know just how much insight you have into those times.
So thank you for your time today and thank you for answering our questions.
Thank you so much. Much appreciated. Thank you.
Eamonn's book is Nine Lives, my time as MI6's top spy inside Al-Qaeda.
Or you can hear him on the Conflicted podcast.
Well, this brings us to the end of our season on Eamon Dean, but do join us for the next season,
the spy who infiltrated Auschwitz.
We open the file on Witold Pilecki.
Polish resistance fighter Pilecki volunteers to go to the secretive internment camp Auschwitz,
driven by a compulsion to expose its horrors. But the rumours were nothing compared to the reality, a hellish place where the unimaginable
becomes routine.
Now trapped in a nightmare, his first mission is to survive.
Follow The Spy Who now and add free on Apple
podcasts or the Wandery app.
From Wandery, this is the final episode in our series, The Spy Who Betrayed Bin Laden.
This bonus episode of The Spy Who is hosted by me, Raza Jafri.
Our show is produced by Vespucci for Wondery with Story Consultancy by Yellow Ant.
The producer of this episode is Natalia Rodriguez.
Our senior producer is Thomas Curry.
Our sound designer is Ivor Manley. Music Supervisor is Scott Velasquez
for Frison Sync. Executive Producers for Vespucci are Johnny Galvin and Daniel Turkin.
The Executive Producer for Yellow Ant is Tristan Donovan. Our Managing Producer for Wondery is
Rachel Sibley. Executive Producers for Wondery are Estelle Doyle, Jessica Radburn and Marshall
Louie.