Triple Cross: How bin Laden's Master Spy Penetrated the CIA, the Green Berets, and the FBI Audiobook By Peter Lance cover art

Triple Cross: How bin Laden's Master Spy Penetrated the CIA, the Green Berets, and the FBI

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Triple Cross: How bin Laden's Master Spy Penetrated the CIA, the Green Berets, and the FBI

By: Peter Lance
Narrated by: John Pruden
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About this listen

This is the story of the most dangerous triple-agent in US history. Peter Lance, author of the highly acclaimed 1000 Years for Revenge and Cover Up, returns to uncover the story of Ali Mohamed, a trusted security advisor of Osama bin Laden who hoodwinked the United States for more than a decade.

As Lance reveals for this first time, this one man served in a series of high-security position within the United States security establishment, as a Special Forces advisor, FBI informant, and CIA operative, while simultaneously helping orchestrate the al Qaeda campaign of terror that led to 9/11. In October 2000, after tricking three US intelligence agencies for almost two decades, Ali Mohamed appeared in handcuffs and a blue prison jumpsuit in a Federal District courtroom on Manhattan's Lower East Side, where he pleaded guilty five times. His crimes included brokering terror summits, financing an attack on two Black Hawk helicopters, training jihadis in improvised bomb building, and the creation of secret cells. And yet, for decades Mohamed had lived the life of a Silicon Valley computer executive. How this evildoer moved in and out of and around the US is just one of the questions answered. From the Able Danger scandal of the Clinton Administration to today's CIA Leakgate, Mohamed appears at nearly every crucial turn of America's terror probes.

An important final piece to the 9/11 investigation, Triple Cross penetrates Mohamed's secret past and the dark reaches of Al Qaeda to reveal the danger that still threatens America and its internal security.

©2006 Peter Lance (P)2011 HarperCollinsPublishers
Espionage Freedom & Security Political Science Terrorism War
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Critic reviews

"A chilling account of a killer who slipped through the hands of a daft justice system…. Triple Cross chronicles one of the most vicious spies of our time." ( Toronto Sun)

What listeners say about Triple Cross: How bin Laden's Master Spy Penetrated the CIA, the Green Berets, and the FBI

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i kinda believe it

kinda crazy, i need to check if the facts are true or not . and i would like to cross check maybe in feture . but this book the is slam in the face of usa intelligence

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SO WE BLEW IT.... NOW WHAT?

The upsetting news isn't that disfunctional intelligence agencies failed to connect the dots, or even take the dots seriously but rather that they may not have learned anything. Since this book was written, we got bin Laden and we've been fairly safe, more or less, but as Rumsfeld said it's the unknown unknowns that haunt us.
I tend to think that the worst over-reactions are fazing out (the shoe removing at airports) but maybe I'm overly optimistic. I hope the FBI learned something and I hope they are doing a better job but maybe that's overly optimistic too.

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Triple truth

Being of rather ancient age I remember where I was and the following hour running thru the office building and trying to clear three upper floors from the seventh being adjacent to the LA airport. I was in early. I had no time to explain. I was glad to read this great book. I knew something was wrong. How could we be so blind. Yes the final words hit hard. And my sister was in Iraq from being out and around to being confined to the green zone and wearing armor to going to catch a plane in an armored vehicle. If we don’t have the truth and be hypnotized by fake news. I don’t know every historian professional or hobby should read this book. I know the courage and dedication to construct this gift thank you audible. You don’t have enough stars for this one.

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Disappointed in our FBI, CIA and Homeland Security

I regret purchasing this book. John Pruden's narration was just too fast for me. With all the Muslim names and the abbreviations for various organizations, I could't keep up. Combine that with the fact the book appeared to be a never ending stream of situations (all very factual and true i believe) all supporting Peter Lance's assertion. In my opinion, the Preface told most of the story, the part of the book (12 chapters) I was able to listen to supported the Preface. I finally had to stop listening, it became an endless drown of Muslim names, dates and places. I did get more than enough from the book to be very upset with the agencies which could have prevented 9/11.

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