File Photo of Al Qaeda militants..
Washington:
The FBI facilitated a 2012 ransom payment of $250,000 to Al-Qaeda from the family of a kidnapped US aid worker later killed in a drone strike, The Wall Street Journal said Wednesday.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation's role, previously undisclosed, runs counter to Washington's longstanding public opposition to paying ransoms to secure the release of hostages.
ABC News reported at the weekend that a National Counterterrorism Center advisory group, acting on White House orders, is expected to recommend that US officials stop prosecuting families of American hostages who communicate with kidnappers abroad or raise funds and pay ransoms.
Warren Weinstein was snatched by Al-Qaeda in Pakistan in 2011 and killed with fellow hostage and Italian aid worker Giovanni Lo Porta in a CIA drone strike in January targeting a suspected hideout of the terror group in Pakistan's tribal areas.
The Journal said the FBI vetted a Pakistani middleman used by the Weinstein family to transport the $250,000 ransom payment and provided additional intelligence for an exchange.
The Pakistani intermediary told the newspaper that the ransom was transferred to kidnappers in 2012 in $100 bills in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar, but Weinstein was never released.
US officials told the newspaper, however, that the FBI agents did not directly authorize or approve ransom payments, which would have violated US hostage policy, and instead provided the information in part to protect the family.
A family spokesman said over the weekend that Weinstein's relatives "took the advice of those in government who deal with such issues on a regular basis and were disappointed that their efforts were not ultimately successful."
US officials said the FBI had indicated to the family that the ransom option was probably the least bad of the unattractive options available to secure Weinstein's release.
But the FBI also warned the family that Al-Qaeda might not release Weinstein even after receiving the money.
Because US law enforcement and spy agencies did not have credible intelligence about Weinstein's location in Pakistan at any given point, a rescue mission was not a realistic option, officials told the newspaper.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation's role, previously undisclosed, runs counter to Washington's longstanding public opposition to paying ransoms to secure the release of hostages.
ABC News reported at the weekend that a National Counterterrorism Center advisory group, acting on White House orders, is expected to recommend that US officials stop prosecuting families of American hostages who communicate with kidnappers abroad or raise funds and pay ransoms.
Warren Weinstein was snatched by Al-Qaeda in Pakistan in 2011 and killed with fellow hostage and Italian aid worker Giovanni Lo Porta in a CIA drone strike in January targeting a suspected hideout of the terror group in Pakistan's tribal areas.
The Journal said the FBI vetted a Pakistani middleman used by the Weinstein family to transport the $250,000 ransom payment and provided additional intelligence for an exchange.
The Pakistani intermediary told the newspaper that the ransom was transferred to kidnappers in 2012 in $100 bills in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar, but Weinstein was never released.
US officials told the newspaper, however, that the FBI agents did not directly authorize or approve ransom payments, which would have violated US hostage policy, and instead provided the information in part to protect the family.
A family spokesman said over the weekend that Weinstein's relatives "took the advice of those in government who deal with such issues on a regular basis and were disappointed that their efforts were not ultimately successful."
US officials said the FBI had indicated to the family that the ransom option was probably the least bad of the unattractive options available to secure Weinstein's release.
But the FBI also warned the family that Al-Qaeda might not release Weinstein even after receiving the money.
Because US law enforcement and spy agencies did not have credible intelligence about Weinstein's location in Pakistan at any given point, a rescue mission was not a realistic option, officials told the newspaper.
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