
REUTERS/Omar Sobhani
Afghan President Hamid Karzai speaks during a gathering discussing youth and national issues in Kabul September 17, 2013.
Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden thought the CIA cash was too good to be true: He feared the CIA knew about the money and had tainted it with poison, radiation, or a tracking device, the Times reported, and suggested it be converted to another currency.
The letters found in the bin Laden raid were submitted as evidence in the trial of Abid Naseer, who was convicted this month in New York of supporting terrorism and plotting to bomb a shopping center in Manchester, England.
The Times said Abdul Khaliq Farahi was the Afghan consul general in Peshawar, Pakistan, when he was kidnapped in 2008 and handed over to al Qaeda. He was released two years later after Afghanistan paid al Qaeda $5 million, a fifth of which was CIA money that came from an Afghan government fund that received monthly cash deliveries from the agency, the Times said.
The Times said the cash the CIA delivered to the Afghan presidential palace under President Hamid Karzai was used to buy the support of warlords, legislators and others, as well as expenses for clandestine diplomatic trips and housing for senior officials. Afghan officials told the newspaper the payments have slowed since Ashraf Ghani became president in September.
REUTERS/Jim Bourg U.S. Secretary of State Kerry looks at his watch and jokes about the time as he is greeted by Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai (L) while arriving for a dinner at the presidential palace in Kabul, July 11, 2014.
About $4.5 billion was taken out of Afghanistan in 2011, according to estimates by The Congressional Research Service. In 2012, Time reported that the cash was taken "to places like Dubai, where many of the ruling Afghan elite have bank accounts and there is a significant amount of bank secrecy."