Asif Rahman was arrested in Cambodia by the FBI. Pictured Cambodia's capital city Phnom Penh  

 

The FBI had revealed last month that it was probing the source of the leak, saying at the time it was “working closely with our partners in the Department of Defense and intelligence community.”

The indictment doesn’t provide exact details on the nature of the leak but says it occurred on or around Oct. 17.

The intelligence described in the documents was based on satellite imagery taken from Oct. 15-16.

Investigators believe the leak took place in Cambodia, according to court papers.

Rahman’s clearance with the CIA meant he had access to sensitive compartmentalized information, which is typical of employees who handle classified materials.

In the wake of his arrest, Mick Mulroy — the former deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East — stressed that safeguarding such materials should be the “highest priority” for and intelligence agency or employee.

“It is very troubling to know that a CIA officer may of been involved in leaking this highly classified information,” Mulroy, who is also a non-Resident Senior Fellow at MEI, told The Post.

“Everyone is entitled to the presumption of innocence, but if true, this is a serious security breach and there is no excuse for it.”

“This protection is critical to protecting the sources and methods of our intelligence collection and covert operations rely,” he added.  

More than one million people have access to top secret materials in the US, according to the latest available figures from 2017. An additional 1.6 million also have access to either information regarded as confidential or secret, data shows.

Once doled out, security clearances are reviewed constantly in a process officials describe as a “continuous vetting,” meant to ensure that any new threats a cleared employee presents are caught swiftly.

The process, which was overhauled by the Defense Department about two years ago, involves regularly reviewing a cleared individual’s background to ensure they continue to meet security clearance requirements.

Rahman, who is being brought to a federal court in Guam to face the charges, is charged with two counts of willful retention and transmission of national defense information.

After his initial court hearing, he is set to be transferred to stand trial in the Eastern District of Virginia.