Credit Suisse catered to global intelligence figures
In the 2008 spy movie Body of Lies, the fictional character
Hani Salaam helped CIA agents portrayed by Russell Crowe and Leonardo DiCaprio
to catch terrorists. What cinema-goers may not have realized was that the
Salaam character was based on a real person: a Jordanian spymaster named Sa’ad
Kheir.
Kheir headed Jordan’s General Intelligence Directorate (GID)
between 2000 and 2005, acting as a key US ally in the War on Terror. But though
lionised in theaters as a stylish hero helping the US, Kheir’s real-life
activities were more morally questionable. As well as allegedly profiting from
illicit oil trading, he oversaw Jordan’s role in America’s extraordinary
rendition program, running an agency accused of torturing prisoners and
overseeing kangaroo courts.
In 2003, he opened a personal account at Credit Suisse. Over
the next seven years, the account would grow to 28.3-million Swiss francs
($21.5m) at its peak, before being closed months after his death in late 2009.
Kheir was not the only spy who stashed large sums of money
at Credit Suisse. Journalists found that 15 leading intelligence figures from
around the world, or their close family members, were clients of the bank.
The revelations come from a huge trove of leaked Credit
Suisse banking data containing client information from the 1940s until well
into the last decade.
Most of the 15 were top-tier spy chiefs in their country.
The data also held a number of other spies that OCCRP has chosen not to name,
because their identities could not be verified beyond absolute doubt.
Along with Kheir, the careers of three of these spy chiefs
have common threads that make them stand out: Egypt’s Omar Suleiman, Pakistan’s
General Akhtar Abdur Rahman and Yemen’s Ghaleb Al-Qamish.
All four ran state intelligence agencies where they
controlled large black budgets that were above parliamentary and executive scrutiny.
All of these figures or their family members also held personal accounts at
Credit Suisse worth large sums of money, without obvious sources of personal
income that could explain the wealth.
All four had roles in key US interventions in the Middle
East and Afghanistan, from the CIA’s early attempts to back anti-Soviet
mujahideen in the late 1970s, to the first Gulf War in 1990, to the so-called
“forever wars” launched in Afghanistan and Iraq since 2001.
Three of the figures, Qamish, Suleiman and Kheir, were in
charge of agencies that were well known for being involved in torture. At least
eight of their family members also had Credit Suisse accounts.
Since these intelligence officials would be considered
“politically exposed persons,” their accounts should have been carefully
scrutinised and should have raised questions for Credit Suisse. According to
Swiss compliance expert Monika Roth, secret service agents are considered by
banks to be particularly sensitive customers.
"I wouldn't take them as clients — that is far too
risky," Roth said, adding that intelligence chiefs are often "people
with a great deal of power, questionable connections and very opaque sources of
money."
One former Credit Suisse executive told OCCRP: “In the
example of an intelligence chief like Saad Kheir, opening an account is a red
flag and many banks in Switzerland would not take it, but Credit Suisse would.”
It is not clear what, if any, due diligence processes were
carried out. Credit Suisse declined to comment on individual cases, citing
Swiss banking laws that prohibit banks from identifying or providing
information on clients. The bank said it “operates its business in compliance
with all applicable global and local laws and regulations” and that it had
strengthened its “risk management framework and control systems.”
Akhtar Abdur Rahman and the Secret Cash Flows
Long before Kheir was building his account at Credit Suisse,
secretive officials who helped America fight a proxy war against the Soviets in
Afghanistan made their own connections to the institution.
In the late 1970s, the US backed seven different factions of
Islamist fighters called the mujahideen who were battling Russia’s presence in
Afghanistan. Saudi Arabia matched US funding to the jihadists dollar for
dollar, often sending the money to the CIA’s Swiss bank account. The end
recipient in the process was Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence group
(ISI), led by General Akhtar Abdur Rahman.
By the mid-1980s, Akhtar was adept at getting CIA cash into
the hands of Afghan jihadists. It was around this time that Credit Suisse
accounts were opened in the names of his three sons. As Mohammad Yousaf, a
colleague of Akhtar’s at the ISI who later penned a book about the time, wrote:
“The combined [U.S. and Saudi] funds, running into several hundred million
dollars a year, were transferred by the CIA to special accounts in Pakistan
under the control of ISI.”
Both Yousaf and Steve Coll — author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning
2005 book Ghost Wars — claim Akhtar was the man who decided where this cash
went next. To train the mujahideen in sophisticated weaponry, the CIA trusted
him with millions. By 1984, the CIA’s Afghanistan budget alone was some $200m.
Oversight was chronically lax, and Akhtar’s role has long
been questioned.
One South Asian intelligence source with knowledge of
Afghanistan operations told OCCRP: “It was easy at that point in time to open
Swiss banking accounts of any manner or type for transfer of overt funds.”
“Akhtar was doing it to fill his own pockets,” the source
said. “A lot of money was siphoned off from the Afghan war and into his bank
accounts.”
One of the two Akhtar family accounts at Credit Suisse — held jointly by Akhtar’s sons Akbar, Ghazi,
and Haroon — was opened on July 1, 1985, when the sons were in their late 20s
and early 30s. That same year, US President Ronald Reagan would raise concerns
about where the money intended for the mujahideen was going. By 2003, this
account was worth at least 5-million Swiss francs ($3.7m). A second account,
opened in January 1986 in Akbar’s name alone, was worth more than 9-million
Swiss francs ($9.2m) by November 2010.
Akhtar died in a 1988 plane crash that also claimed his
boss, Pakistani dictator Zia-ul-Haq.
Akbar and Haroon Khan did not respond to requests for
comment. In a message to OCCRP, Ghazi Khan called information presented by
reporters about the family’s Swiss accounts “not correct,” and said it was
“denied,” but did not elaborate.
Ghaleb Al-Qamish: The ‘Black Box’
As the CIA and Akhtar were collaborating on Afghanistan,
Yemen’s Ghaleb Al-Qamish was starting his own rise.
By 1980, Qamish headed Yemen’s Political Security Office
(PSO), which was in charge of domestic intelligence. Just as Akhtar was doing
from Pakistan, Qamish recruited fighters for the Afghan war against the
Soviets.
A looming figure over Yemen’s security apparatus for
decades, Qamish was a key enforcer for strongman President Ali Abdullah Saleh,
who ruled from 1978 to 2012. When Al-Qaeda bombed the American destroyer USS
Cole in the Yemeni port of Aden in 2000, Saleh tasked an initially reluctant
Qamish with helping the CIA flush out the suspects.
According to three officers who worked under Qamish at
Yemen’s PSO, he was the nation’s most feared security official, described as
Saleh’s "black box.” The three sources, who requested anonymity for fear
of reprisals, told OCCRP that Qamish had “an open budget made up of millions of
dollars” to do with as he pleased.
By the time he had become Yemen’s chief spy, helping the
Americans to unravel terror cells in the early 2000s, Qamish also had
inexplicable millions tucked away at Credit Suisse.
His account, opened
in 1999, the year before the Cole attack, was worth almost 5-million Swiss
francs ($3.7m) by 2006, the same year that some of the Cole suspects escaped a
Yemeni prison. Qamish’s monthly salary was probably between $4,000 and $5,000 a
month, including allowances and bonuses, according to the former intelligence
officers and official Yemeni salary law guidelines..
Qamish was accused of various abuses, including
participating in the US extraordinary rendition program, which saw millions in
CIA funds lavished on officials and other helpers in allied countries. Official
documents show huge payments were made to countries that hosted black sites,
and those who performed torture and interrogations.
Ruth Blakeley of the Rendition Project, a group of UK
academics who have investigated the US programme, said any new information that
torture-linked intelligence figures had money secreted away should be
investigated.
“If there is evidence that senior intelligence officials
were gaining financially from collusion in the rendition, detention, and
interrogation program led by the CIA, then that warrants thorough
investigation,” she said.
If Credit Suisse questioned the source of Qamish’s money or
his fitness as a client, that did not deter the bank from dealing with him. His
accounts lasted long after his involvement both in the rendition program and
the repression of Yemeni political opponents.
“Through the PSO, [Qamish] was in charge of arresting all
elements that were seen as opponents of the regime of Saleh,” said one senior
officer, while another added: “No one knew how the PSO money was spent.”
Qamish’s ties to Saleh frayed when the president began
preparing a son to take charge of the country. Saleh also set up a new domestic
intelligence unit, the National Security Bureau
in 2002, under the command of a nephew, which quickly overshadowed the PSO.
Slowly, the leader began pulling the rug from under Qamish’s feet.
Qamish removed the last of his assets from Credit Suisse —
worth about 3.8-million Swiss francs ($4m)
— in January 2011, just as crowds were taking to the streets of Aden in
the first sparks of the Arab Spring. Though removed from his role as PSO chief
in 2014 by President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, who had come to power after Saleh’s
overthrow, he was made an ambassador, though he was not officially posted
anywhere.
Nowadays, Qamish lives in Istanbul. In recent years he has
taken a back seat, but his sons apparently remain active in business in Yemen,
Bahrain, Brazil, and Turkey. Qamish did not respond to multiple requests for
comment.
Omar Suleiman: Egypt’s Feared Enforcer
In a January 2009 diplomatic cable leaked to Wikileaks,
Margaret Scobey, the U.S. ambassador to Egypt, said spy chief Omar Suleiman was
used by the Hosni Mubarak dictatorship as an enforcer. She added that Mubarak
was “not one to lose sleep” over Suleiman’s brutal methods.
Credit Suisse did not seem overly worried about Suleiman
either. Despite the fact that he was personally linked to torture by victims of
the U.S.’s rendition program, Suleiman’s
family kept much of their wealth with the bank.
In February 2003, while the U.S. their father’s friends at
the CIA and the Pentagon hatched plans to invade Iraq, Suleiman’s family were
making preparations of their own: financial ones. That month, a Credit Suisse
account in their names was opened. It would later swell by millions.
Like Akhtar, Kheir and Qamish, Suleiman was seen as a
trusted US ally.
Weeks before the Suleimans’ account was opened, US Secretary
of State Colin Powell, speaking to the United Nations, outlined why President
Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq urgently needed to be toppled. When Powell told
the U.N. he had evidence of Iraq’s training of Al-Qaeda in chemical weaponry,
the source he relied on was a victim of Suleiman’s intelligence regime: Ibn
Sheikh Al-Libi.
Al-Libi, a Libyan, had been captured in Pakistan in 2001
before being rendered by the CIA to Egypt in 2003. He would confess, Egyptian
handlers told him, because “three thousand individuals had been in the chair
before him,” and they had all done so. After being squashed inside a tiny box,
Al-Libi would later say he told the Egyptians “what they wanted to hear.”
Suleiman tended to get what he wanted.
As the Iraq War moved from pitched battles into a
counter-insurgency, Suleiman’s family’s wealth bulged. By 2007, four years
after the fall of Saddam Hussein, the Suleiman account at Credit Suisse was
worth 63-million Swiss francs, shared between Omar’s three daughters.
The Suleiman family did not respond to repeated requests for
comment.
The account outlived Egypt’s Mubarak dictatorship, which
fell in 2011 under the weight of the Arab Spring. After Mubarak was ousted,
Swiss authorities said they were freezing the assets of about a dozen figures
linked to him and his government. But it seems the crackdown didn’t apply to
the Suleimans. Credit Suisse continued to maintain their accounts despite
multiple concerns raised elsewhere about the crimes of the patriarch. There was
no evidence in the data that the account was closed down.
Besides overseeing torture, Suleiman was also involved in
the agency's clandestine financial transactions.
At Mubarak’s trial, a judge cited testimony from Suleiman
and other officials that Hussein Salem — an Egyptian tycoon and known frontman
for the intelligence service — owned a
variety of companies in gas and other sectors for the spy agency. The judge wrote
that Suleiman had admitted that his intelligence agency set up front firms for
“national security” reasons, often using Salem.
Salem was also a Credit Suisse client. He had several
accounts, with one holding assets worth 105-million Swiss francs ($79.3m) by
2003. It was named in legal proceedings when investigators alleged that it had
been used to pay and receive what looked like corrupt commissions to executives
at FlowTex, a German company prosecuted for massive fraud.
The origin of their fortunes may never be known, but experts
say cases like those of the Akhtar, Kheir, Qamish, and the Suleiman family
raise questions about how intelligence leaders may have benefitted from
illegality.
“Don’t forget that Mubarak wanted his generals and
intelligence chiefs to steal money,” said Robert Baer, an ex-CIA agent who
served in the Middle East. “Because anybody who’s not making money in a
position like that can’t be trusted. Those are the people that make coups
d'etat.”
Sa’ad Kheir: Jordan’s Action Hero
Jordan’s Sa’ad Kheir was made for the big screen. The
Washington Post’s David Ignatius, who wrote the novel upon which the movie Body
of Lies was based, described him as “brilliant but emotionally wounded.”
But the interrogations carried out by Kheir’s GID were
highly illegal, according to reports by Amnesty International and Human Rights
Watch.
Human Rights Watch reported that the GID served as “proxy
jailer” for the CIA, “holding prisoners that the CIA apparently wanted kept out
of circulation,” just as Suleiman’s intelligence forces had done in Egypt. The
rights group documented at least 14 prisoners the US sent to Jordanian custody
for likely torture between 2001 and 2003.
Amnesty International, citing victim testimony, reported
that the GID obtained more than 100 confessions via torture, and then sent
these cases to Jordan’s State Security Court, which handed out death penalties
to the most unfortunate.
Senior GID officials would later deny holding prisoners for
the US, or that torture even happened. Kheir has also been stalked by rumors of
corruption involving oil trades, but no charges were ever filed.
According to Wikileaks diplomatic cables, former Jordanian
Prime Minister Ali Abul Ragheb (2000-2003) put Kheir at the heart of oil deals
involving Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates.
“Kheir, along with then-Prime Minister Abul Ragheb,
institutionalised high-level corruption that continues to haunt Jordan today,”
a Jordanian politician told OCCRP.
Kheir’s run, however, would eventually come to an end. In
May 2005, he was removed from his GID post by King Abdullah. Kheir died at a
luxury hotel in Vienna in December of 2009.
Three years earlier, his account at the bank was worth
28.3-million Swiss francs. A Credit Suisse account opened in 2006 by Kheir’s
brother Saeed, a ground engineer for King Hussein’s two private jets, was worth
13-million Swiss francs by 2011, before being closed in 2014. Kheir’s wife at
the time of his death, Janiche Frayeh, had her own account that was worth 6-million
Swiss francs ($5.9m) in 2010. Her
account also closed in 2014.
Saeed Kheir told OCCRP that given his brother Sa’ad’s
sensitive position, “it should not surprise you that he never shared any
information with me about his work in intelligence.” He said he knew nothing of
any Credit Suisse account set up by his brother, and that he himself never set
up any accounts. He said all his taxable income “has been declared to the tax
authority in Jordan.” He said he never shared a bank account with, or received
funds from, his brother.
In a message to OCCRP, Frayeh said questions about the
family accounts at Credit Suisse were “weird and strange and outrageous.”
She described Kheir as “an honourable man who fought
terrorism all his life so people like myself and your group can live safely in
this life.” She said she had not opened a Credit Suisse account, had “no idea”
about any funds there, and was merely a “house wife.”
‘Something Very Precious’
For intelligence figures, working with Credit Suisse offered
a service that was hard to find in an increasingly globalised world.
“These banks represent something that for the intelligence
community is very precious: secrecy,” said one European intelligence officer on
condition of anonymity. “This confidentiality makes their services very useful
for covert operations.”
A former German intelligence director in the Middle East
told OCCRP and partners he was not surprised that high-ranking secret service
employees from undemocratic countries would bank in Switzerland. Such accounts
can serve as a back-up, the source suggested, set aside in the event that the
regimes these spies serve are overthrown, or they themselves fall out of
favour.
This hypothesis was echoed by Baer, the ex-CIA agent.
“In the Arab world, you’re only in your job for so long,”
said Baer. “You and your clan have to steal what you can and create a nest egg.
Switzerland is the safest place, once you’ve got your accounts set up.”
Losing favour, it seems, is one of the main hazards of the
spy world. After the fall of Mubarak in 2011, Suleiman threw his hat into the
ring to lead Egypt, but was disqualified as a candidate. He died at the
Cleveland Clinic months later, in July 2012, of natural causes.
Beyond navigating internal power struggles, spies also have
practical problems that Swiss banking may have helped solve.
“Spy agencies and terrorist organisations sometimes work in
the same way,” said ex-Mossad officer Avner Avraham. “They have the same
problems. They have to transfer money from point A to point B, to pay someone,
and they don’t want anyone to know who’s the one paying and how it’s being
transferred, or where it’s coming from.”
Graham Barrow, a U.K.-based financial crime expert, said the
enormous sums involved in Credit Suisse accounts connected to intelligence
figures should have raised red flags for the bank.
“There’s no reason why a senior intelligence operative can’t
open a bank account, but they’ve got to give a reason why they want that
account and what they’re going to use it for,” he said. “Then the account has
got to be used in the way they said they were going to use it.
“If at any point there’s a discrepancy, the bank should be
raising red flags.”
Other Spies in the Data
These four are the tip of the iceberg. Journalists found
almost 40 accounts in the Credit Suisse data linked to intelligence officials
from almost a dozen countries. These include:
Former Venezuelan army captain Carlos Luis Aguilera Borjas,
known as “The Invisible One,” who served as Hugo Chavez’s bodyguard in the
1990s.
As director of Venezuela’s intelligence services for two
years in the early 2000s, Aguilera was known for arresting opposition
politicians. He resigned around 2002, having failed to prevent a coup attempt
that almost overthrew the president. Aguilera then focused on business, and is
said to have banked around $90m from a corrupt deal to overhaul a Caracas metro
line.
Aguilera opened one account at Credit Suisse in June 2011
and within a few months it was worth almost 7.8-million Swiss francs ($8.6m).
Another, linked to a legal entity he controlled, was opened in July 2011 and
held a maximum value of almost 5-million Swiss francs.
Aguilera did not respond to requests for comment.
Meanwhile in Ukraine, accounts were held by Valery
Khoroshkovsky, former head of the security service, and now a business tycoon.
His are among the highest value accounts in the data. One account, listed as a
legal entity, was valued at 1 billion Swiss francs in September 2006. In
December 2006, he resigned as CEO of Russian steel giant Evraz and joined
Ukraine’s security and defense council, which focuses on national security
issues. The account was still active more than two years later.
Khoroshkovsky denied having had a bank account “in the
mentioned bank in [the] given period,” but would not elaborate. “I consider
this to be the end of this matter,” he said.
In Egypt, an account was held by Ashraf Marwan, a spy whose
allegiances were as murky as his finances. While serving as an intelligence
adviser to his father-in-law, President Gamel Abdal Nasser, Marwan is known to
have leaked intelligence to Israeli forces during the 1973 Yom Kippur War – but
his family and other supporters claim the information he gave Israel was fake.
Marwan’s account at Credit Suisse, listed under a legal entity, was opened in
2000. By that time he’d left intelligence work behind and moved to the U.K.,
where he purchased a stake in Chelsea Football Club. Seven years later he was
dead, after a mysterious fall from his London balcony. His wife, Mona Nasser,
later told the press his death was retribution for betraying Israeli
intelligence. Nasser did not respond to questions sent by OCCRP.
From Germany, former secret police officer Jürgen Czilinsky
held an account worth some 218-million Swiss francs ($206m) as of January 2010.
Czilinsky had left Germany after the collapse of Communism, landing in
Congo-Brazzaville, where he reportedly set up a waste management business.
Czilinsky did not respond to a request for comment.
Also in the data are accounts belonging to figures with ties
to Uzbekistan’s intelligence services, which multiple human rights
organisations have accused of torture, forced disappearance, and arbitrary
detention. In 2009, former intelligence officer Ikram Yakubov told BBC
Newsnight he’d witnessed these abuses firsthand, and claimed he had been forced
to fabricate evidence against people he knew were innocent.
Other accounts were linked to intelligence figures from
Iraq, Jordan, Montenegro, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Yemen. The oldest holding
dates back to the mid-1970s, while the highest balance among the spies is
Khoroshkovsky’s 1-billion Swiss francs.
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