AFP PHOTO / FILES Rescuers work to help survivors amid the devastation brought in by a bomb explosion in Al-Qaeda's first major international attack near the US embassy and a bank in Nairobi on August 7, 1998 that killed about 200 people and left more than 1,000 injured.
The news service says its account is based on interviews with half-a-dozen current and former US officials.
Until now, “their service remained a secret in both life and death, marked only by anonymous stars on the wall at CIA headquarters” outside Washington, the AP writes.
In the Nairobi CIA station, which operated secretly inside the US embassy, Ms Hardy handled finances, “including the CIA’s stash of money used to pay sources and carry out spying operations”, the AP reports.
Mr Shah worked for the CIA’s Iraq Operations Group, which spied on Saddam Hussein’s regime, the story says.
He had come to Kenya to meet a top Iraqi official, who was said to be willing to supply intelligence in exchange for a new life in the US.
“The meetings were set up in Kenya, former officials said, because it was considered relatively safe from Middle East intelligence services,” says the AP report, adding:
“It was perhaps the most important operation being run under the Africa Division at the time, current and former officials said.”
Mr Shah, the only child of an Indian immigrant father and a US mother, had to disguise his normally outgoing personality while working undercover in Nairobi, the report adds.
“This is the glory and the tragedy of discreet work,” the AP quotes former US ambassador Prudence Bushnell saying.
“You keep a very low profile and you don’t do things that make you memorable.”
Mr Shah was 38 at the time of his death. Ms Hardy was 51.
Two hundred Kenyans died in the Nairobi attack, and 10 more Africans lost their lives in the simultaneous bombing of the US embassy in Tanzania.
Osama bin Laden attempted to justify the Nairobi blast partly on the grounds that the embassy harboured a major CIA station.
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