WASHINGTON—A CIA official has been charged with leaking top-secret classified documents that revealed information last month about Israel’s plans for a military strike against Iran, according to U.S. court documents and people familiar with the matter.

Asif William Rahman was arrested in Cambodia on Tuesday and transported to a federal court in Guam to be charged. He was indicted last week in federal court in Virginia on two counts of willful transmission of national defense information, charges that can result in years in prison.

Court documents filed Wednesday say Rahman possessed a top-secret security clearance and had access to sensitive compartmented information. The documents don’t state that he worked at the Central Intelligence Agency, but people familiar with the matter confirmed his employment at the spy agency.

Rahman worked overseas for the CIA in Cambodia and elsewhere, one of the people said. It isn’t publicly known what sort of work he did for the spy agency.

In October two leaked classified reports from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which analyzes imagery gathered by American reconnaissance satellites, appeared on Telegram and X. The files were circulated by a pro-Iran account, Middle East Spectator, which says it received them from an anonymous source.

The leak set off a scramble within U.S. spy agencies—which have suffered a number of significant unauthorized disclosures in recent years—to identify the source of the breach. Officials were worried about the possibility of more disclosures, though it appears the leak was limited to the original documents. The Federal Bureau of Investigation previously acknowledged investigating the leak.

The leaked reports assessed Israel’s planning for a possible Iran attack, including the types of aircraft and munitions its military could use. They also described Israeli air-force exercises involving air-to-surface missiles, believed to be in preparation for aerial strikes inside Iran. One of the reports says the U.S. hadn’t seen any sign an attack would involve nuclear weapons, a capability Israel is known to possess but doesn’t publicly confirm it has.

The motives for Rahman’s alleged leaks weren’t immediately clear. His arrest took place the same day that Jack Teixeira, a former Massachusetts Air National Guardsman, was sentenced to 15 years in prison over a leak of highly classified U.S. intelligence documents last year on the social-media platform Discord.

Teixeira’s leaks were more voluminous and wide-ranging than the pair of documents allegedly disclosed by Rahman, and authorities said their releases were done to impress anonymous friends on the internet. Teixeira pleaded guilty in March 2024.

  • D61 [any]
    ·
    1 month ago

    and authorities said their releases were done to impress anonymous friends on the internet.

    Well.. consider these anonymous internet friends impressed.

    ursus-hexagonia

    • urmums401k [she/her, they/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 month ago

      Conflating a relatively precise attempt to put the brakes on a war that coukd go nuclear and a Nazi doxxing himself with classified documents over discord yo impress his friends in the last paragraph. Fuck that rag.

      • Lemmygradwontallowme [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 month ago

        The documents are believed to have been first posted in early March 2023 to a large audience in a Discord server for British-Filipino YouTuber wow_mao. They gained wider attention after they were posted two days later on a Minecraft server, in a discussion in which one user cited them in an argument with another.[8]

        wowmao's discord server

  • NephewAlphaBravo [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    One of the reports says the U.S. hadn’t seen any sign an attack would involve nuclear weapons, a capability Israel is known to possess but doesn’t publicly confirm it has.

    Yes we knew they have nukes but is a place like WSJ confirming it a new thing?

    • neo [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      1 month ago

      Interesting point. I'm not sure of the record of publications acknowledging this.

  • Frogmanfromlake [none/use name]
    ·
    1 month ago

    Lol first the military secrets leaked to impress a tinder match and now this to impress internet friends.

    • DerRedMax [comrade/them, any]
      ·
      1 month ago

      The motives for Rahman’s alleged leaks weren’t immediately clear.

      I was also confused at the end and had to reread it a couple of times. The “author” was piggybacking off the second-to-last paragraph.

      Tinder match = internet friends.

      As a former copywriter, the thought that news editors are allowed to write this way and claim it’s both readable, and in accordance with vernacular grammar style, makes me irrationally angry.

      • Justice@lemmygrad.ml
        ·
        1 month ago

        What if I told you there are allowed to write this because it serves an overall goal of heavily regulating (even more so) online communications

        Absolutely not a coincidence that all this stuff "leaks" to small groups of "Internet friends."

        Maybe I'm being too conspiratorial, but it does seem like a narrative is being crafted to declare all the apparently not fully compromised sites (reddit, facebook, twitter being fully compromised) as "hotbeds for terror and treason!" as we enter this apparently-inevitable hot war between US/"the west" and Russia/China/Iran. They already spy on absolutely everything... but they want more.

        • DerRedMax [comrade/them, any]
          ·
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          I don’t have a position on this. I’m just trying to clarify what was said:

          CIA leaker caught with no known motive.

          The same day, an Air Force Reservist was sentenced for leaking to impress friends online.

          CIA guy leaked specific information about the strike and nothing else.

          Commander Cosplay leaked a bunch of random stuff he thought would get him a date.

  • Speaker [e/em/eir]
    ·
    1 month ago

    a capability Israel is known to possess but doesn’t publicly confirm it has.

    Okay, so we're just publishing this now? Every time I talk about this elsewhere people act like I'm just lying, but the Wicked Shitty Journal is just saying it?

    • _pi@lemmy.ml
      ·
      1 month ago

      It's antisemitic to talk about how Israel developed its nuclear capacity.

  • darkcalling [comrade/them, she/her]
    ·
    1 month ago

    Imagine getting arrested in a non-eyes, non-NATO country by the US. And right on the doorstep of Vietnam and China. How does that even work? Did the Cambodian authorities for some reason agree to arrest a dude who was in all likelihood an undeclared spy in their country for the benefit of the US and just hand him over without any further questions? Did the CIA kidnap him onto a plane and drag him away? Did he agree to be arrested and cooperate? I mean it's right next door, a bus ride to Vietnam and a short plane jaunt to China and absolutely beyond the hand of the US.

    Also kind of funny, I thought at the time that the leak was almost certainly done by the administration itself to try and tamp down the back and forth between Iran and the zionist colony and prevent a war they didn't want to be in.

  • somename [she/her]
    ·
    1 month ago

    So, do we think it’s actually a warthunder situation? Or competing factions in the deep state, and that’s the cover excuse for the fall person?