Ahmad Muaffaq Zaidan, Al Jazeera's longtime Islamabad bureau chief, has been singled out as a member of the terrorist group in the new document detailing US intelligence efforts to track al-Qaeda couriers by analysing metadata, reported online news site The Intercept.
Zaidan, a Syrian national, has focused his reporting throughout his career on the Taliban and al-Qaeda, and has conducted many high-profile interviews with al-Qaeda leaders, including Osama bin Laden.
"A slide dated June 2012 from a National Security Agency PowerPoint presentation bears his photo, name, and a terror watch list identification number, and labels him a 'member of Al-Qaeda' as well as the Muslim Brotherhood," the report said.
"It also notes that he 'works for Al Jazeera'," it said.
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In a brief phone interview with The Intercept, Zaidan has "absolutely" denied he is a member of al-Qaeda or the Muslim Brotherhood.
In a statement provided through Al Jazeera, Zaidan noted that his career has spanned many years of dangerous work in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and required interviewing key people in the region -- a normal part of any journalist's job.
The NSA uses its version of SKYNET to identify people that it believes move like couriers used by al-Qaeda's senior leadership, according to the presentation.
Peter Bergen, CNN's national security analyst and author of several books on al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, told The Intercept, "I've known [Zaidan] for well over a decade, and he's a first class journalist."
"He has the contacts and the access that of course no Western journalist has," said Bergen.