CIA Assets and the Two-Sided Story
(a completely fictional man named Amir) by Grok & a me who I insisted on telling this story STRAIGHT
Part 1 – The Ones You’ll Never Know
You have already walked past them. They sit two rows behind you on the bus, they bag your groceries, they wait with you at the red light. Nothing about them looks special.
They are just people trying to get through another ordinary day.
Amir is one of them now.
From the CIA’s side he is a closed file: successfully exfiltrated, resettled, support terminated per plan.
From Amir’s side he is a man who once passed secrets heavy enough to kill him and who now keep silence even heavier.
Two truths. Same person.
Part 2 – Life on the Edge: The First Step
The CIA saw in Amir a biologist with good access who started passing accurate reports on his own.
Forty-three reports in fourteen months, each one checked and confirmed. They called it ideological motivation and opened a recruitment file. And recruited him.
Amir remembers the night he took the first photograph with a borrowed phone. His hands shook so hard the image was blurred, but he sent it anyway.
When the reply came back in under six minutes (“Wednesday, 22:40, the church”), something inside him hurt and he knew it would never be a way back.
And after Amir was exfiltrated, resettled and supported. Agency started with Vetting.
Part 3 – Inside the Vetting Machine
The Agency ran seven polygraphs, many psych evaluations, a full financial going back twelve years, and quiet interviews with people who never knew they were being interviewed. At the end they wrote APPROVED.
Amir remembers weeks of waiting and the same questions asked in slightly different order.
They wanted to know if he had ever hated America, if he had debts, if he is alone. He stopped sleeping. When they finally said “You passed,” he only felt tired.
Part 4 – The Night They Took Him Out
The Agency recorded a textbook extraction, by law: vehicles, a border crossed at 02:14, commercial cover. New identity issued within forty-eight hours. Success.
Amir remembers instead the hood for the last forty minutes of the drive and the way the plane’s engines sounded like crying. The whole flight image was his family. To save them!
Part 5 – Year Zero in a New Country
And the US! The Agency provided an apartment, a Social Security number, language classes, and a bank account with regular deposits. All boxes green.
Amir walked into the apartment and smelled fresh paint and emptiness. The first time he went to the supermarket he stood in the cereal aisle for twenty minutes because nothing looked familiar.
That night he called the emergency number they had given him just to hear another human voice.
It rang until it stopped.
Part 6 – The Slow Drift
The Agency reduced welfare checks from quarterly to annual. Employment verified: night janitor at a community college. No hostile contact. Support level downgraded to monitoring only.
File note: stable.
Amir watched the monthly deposit shrink every six months until one day it simply didn’t come.
The case officer who once called him “brother” now answered emails with single sentences, then not at all.
He started checking the door locks four times, then six, then ten. Some nights he sat on the street looking at the Moon. The only one the same as home!
Part 7 – The Place That Was Never an Option
The Agency’s file contains one annex the resettlement board barely glanced at.
Page 47, written by the psychologist who spent ninety hours with Amir:
“Optimal environment: low population density, rural or mountain setting, maritime climate, daily physical work outdoors, minimal law-enforcement presence. Subject repeatedly mentions wind, sheep, and wide horizons as calming factors.”
The form had only one pre-printed destination box. Someone checked it and moved on.
Amir lasted eighteen months in the quiet Ohio suburb before the walls felt too close and every police cruiser sounded like the old regime.
Nothing dramatic happened; he simply faded, the way a plant pale when it is kept in soil it was never meant to grow in.
If they had listened to the psychologist, Amir would be living on a small farm in Patagonia right now.
Eleven hundred dollars a month buys a house with a tin roof, twenty sheep, and a view of mountains that don’t remind him of anything except themselves.
The nearest police station is two hours away. When the nightmares come, the wind carries the sound away.
Instead, the country that saved his life became the place that slowly took the rest of it.
A quiet suggestion for anyone who still has the power to change the CIA’s resettlement forms
Let the CIA psychologists decide the country, not the lawyers or the budget officers.
If the profile says mountains and silence, send the person to Patagonia or New Zealand or rural Portugal. If the profile genuinely says “America is where I want to be,” then bring them here.
But never again sentence someone to a place, his own mind already warned would break him, just because it is the only box printed on the page.
The two truths still sit side by side. Maybe one day someone will listen . And no one life will be destroyed!
