AP/ May 16, 2012, 12:18 PM

FBI Director Robert Mueller confirms bureau probing leak of foiled Qaeda underwear bomb plot

FBI Director Robert Mueller testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington May 16, 2012, before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

FBI Director Robert Mueller testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington May 16, 2012, before the Senate Judiciary Committee. / AP Photo

Updated at 1:42 p.m. ET

(AP) WASHINGTON - FBI Director Robert Mueller said Wednesday the bureau has launched an investigation into who leaked information about an al Qaeda plot to place an explosive device aboard a U.S.-bound airline flight.

In an appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Mueller said a leak like this one threatens ongoing operations, "puts at risk the lives of sources, makes it much more difficult to recruit sources" and damages relationships with law enforcement partners from other countries.

Last month, al Qaeda's Yemen branch entrusted a new, sophisticated underwear bomb designed to take down an airplane with a would-be suicide bomber. But the bomber was actually a double agent, working with the CIA, Saudi intelligence agencies and the MI6. The double agent turned the bomb over to the U.S. government.

AP sources: Britain's MI6 key to foiled bomb plot
Al Qaeda in Yemen down, but not out
GOP rep. says leak of bomb plot "criminal"

Before he was whisked to safety, the spy provided intelligence that helped the CIA kill al Qaeda's senior operations leader, Fahd al-Quso, who died in a drone strike earlier this month, before The Associated Press and other news organizations revealed details of the bomb plot.

"We have initiated an investigation into this leak" and "will investigate thoroughly," said Mueller.

The federal investigation is the latest move in an aggressive campaign by the Obama administration to crack down on leaks, even as it has supported proposed legislation that would shield reporters from having to identify their sources. The administration has already brought at least six criminal cases against people for discussing government secrets with reporters, more than under any previous presidency.

Last week, before the House Judiciary Committee, Mueller said the FBI was examining the explosive device. He said the scheme hatched in Yemen demonstrates that it's essential for Congress to reauthorize counterterrorism tools enacted in 2008. Some of these programs expire at year's end.

A spokesman for the AP, Paul Colford, said in a statement last week that the news organization "acted carefully and with extreme deliberation in its reporting on the underwear bomb plot and its subsequent decision to publish."

"As the AP has reported, we distributed our exclusive report on the underwear bomb only after officials assured us — on Monday — that their security concerns had been satisfied and we learned that the White House would announce the news the next day," Colford said.

The explosive has been described as an upgrade over the 2009 Christmas bomb that nearly brought down an airliner over Detroit. This new device contained lead azide, a chemical known as a reliable detonator. After the Christmas attack failed, al Qaeda used lead azide as the detonator in the 2010 plot against cargo planes.

Security procedures at U.S. airports were unchanged despite the plot, a reflection of both the U.S. confidence in its security systems and a recognition that the government can't realistically expect travelers to endure much more. Increased costs and delays to airlines and shipping companies from new security measures could have a global economic impact too.

Security officials said they believe airport security systems put in place in the United States in recent years could have detected the new device or one like it. But the attempt served as a stark reminder that security overseas is quite different.

While airline checks in the United States mean passing through an onerous, sometimes embarrassing series of pat-downs and body scans, procedures overseas can be a mixed bag. The U.S. cannot force other countries to permanently adopt the expensive and intrusive measures that have become common in American airports over the past decade.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
5 Comments Add a Comment
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murkymook says:
And the Gestapo announced that they would be investigating the Reichstag fire. It is believed that communists started the fire.
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vissionquest says:
There is no such thing as journalism as it used to be, it is mostly opinions and politicall double talk that makes it into the news. Fox "fair and balanced" is a laugh as it is clear they have a political agenda, and since they repeat "liberal media" so often, their viewers are silly enough to take it as fact. As far as most other news organizations, the basic tennant is the more sensational they can make a story or the more inuendos they can put in a story the more people will watch and advetising revenues go up. There is not one reporter that would jump at the chance to print a classified story even though it endangered this country.
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zzert says:
The media has no clue what "double agent" means. Sad, we used to have responsible and intelligent journalism in this country. I think it is important that Obama has specifically targeted terrorist leaders and plots. The US policy over history is to wage war against ill-defined enemies and knock off thousands of civilians. Obama's sophisticated use of intelligence is one reason why he must be re-elected.
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MIO42 says:
how sad that a country as great as the USA has to now go around the world killing people that are real or perceived threats to achieve a modem of security which can never be achieved

almost reminiscent of Palidin

" HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL "
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josephp5 says:
The Administration leaks like crazy when they think the leaks benefit them.

For instance, the US officially refuses to acknowledge that it is using Predator drones in Yemen (ostensibly to fight al Qaeda, but more probably to prop up a pro-US dictator). But Obama himself has taken credit during press conferences for drone attacks that have killed terrorists. Accused terrorist (and US citizen) Anwar Al-Awlaki was assassinated in Yemen by a missile launched from a drone, and Obama publicly announced this action a success against terrorism.

Obama claimed to have the most open Administration ever---so open, that there would be a television channel for his Administration similar to C-SPAN for Congress. But he has run the other way---pursuing whistleblowers with an unprecedented intensity. Obama has used the Espionage Act more times during his 3 1/2 years in office than in the entire 95 year history of the Act. He relentlessly pursued Thomas Drake under the Act (and spectacularly failed) for merely exposing government corruption that had nothing to do with terrorism. Obama is continuing with his hard line stance against CIA officer John Kirakou, who only confirmed what everyone knew about the CIA and waterboarding.

Many government watchdog groups of both liberal and conservative persuasions (including one of the best---Melanie Sloan's CREW) have declared that of all the Administrations they have covered, the Obama Administration is the most secretive by far. This is most startling when you consider Obama's rhetoric to the contrary.
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