of the U.S. embassy in
Nairobi, Kenya Berntsen started his career in the East Asian division and soon after transferred to the Middle East division a few days after the
1983 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Beirut. In 2000, Berntsen was recruited to serve on a mission to capture a key
al-Qaeda lieutenant. He was one of the two Persian speakers on the team which was flown into the
Panjshir Valley by the
Northern Alliance. Soon after they arrived, there were reports that al-Qaeda's leader
Osama bin Laden had known of the presence of Americans in Afghanistan and was offering a bounty for their capture. The mission was cancelled and the team was recalled by CIA headquarters, a move that Berntsen was critical of. The mission was never executed and the CIA's indecision would lead the Northern Alliance's leader
Ahmad Shah Massoud to conclude that the US was "not serious" about fighting the Taliban. Berntsen was serving in Latin America when the attacks on September 11 happened, after which he volunteered for the Counterterrorism Units response. He joined the Northern Alliance Liaison Team, codenamed Jawbreaker, and arrived in Afghanistan a few weeks after
Gary Schroen had led the team into the Panjshir Valley. 's proximity to the
Afghanistan–Pakistan border (
dark green) After the
Battle of Tora Bora began on December 1, Berntsen requested 800
Army Rangers be sent to the back of the mountain range to block off an escape route, but General
Tommy Franks denied this request. On December 12, al-Qaeda called for a cease-fire with the Afghan militias in order to surrender their weapons, but which some, including Berntsen, saw as device to allow for al-Qaeda leadership, including bin Laden, to escape. When he heard of the cease-fire, Berntsen responded by screaming into his phone "No cease-fire! No negotiation! We continue airstrikes!" In early December, Berntsen was replaced as the CIA lead in Afghanistan, and sent back to his station in Latin America. In
Jawbreaker, Berntsen alleges that bin Laden could have been captured at Tora Bora if the
U.S. Central Command had devoted more resources to the operation. This claim gained substantial traction due to a Senate Report on the circumstances of bin Laden's escape. According to both Berntsen's account and the Senate Committee's report, "Bin Laden and bodyguards walked unmolested out of Tora Bora and disappeared into Pakistan's unregulated tribal area." == Recent activities ==