After eight years of acquiescence to the executive branch on intelligence matters, Congress is finally getting around to questioning the intelligence community’s trend of secret…
Posts Tagged ‘CIA’
C.I.A. Plan Involved Dispatching Small Teams To Assassinate Al Qaeda Leaders
WASHINGTON Since 2001, the Central Intelligence Agency has developed plans to dispatch small teams overseas to kill senior Qaeda terrorists, according to current and former government officials.
Chris Weigant: Obama’s “Drip, Drip, Drip…” Intelligence Problem
President Obama has always said he wants to look forward, not backward. This, when it comes to the actions of the previous administration, means Obama…
Tortured row
By Hilary Andersson
BBC Panorama, Washington

In making Licence to Torture, Panorama did not set out to ask whether the US practices adopted in the aftermath of 9/11 were right, wrong, justified or fruitful. We aimed to find out if they broke US and international law.
One might think that in the world’s most powerful democracy this would be the central public debate. But not in America. The debate that dominates here today is whether torture worked.
At a public forum at a southern California college, we tracked down one of the legal architects of the Bush interrogation programme, a man named John Yoo.
He pointed out that the legal advice that he and other senior lawyers in the Bush administration wrote were not policy recommendations.
Still, Mr Yoo defended the harsh interrogation techniques.
"Was it worth it" Yoo asked the crowd rhetorically. "Well, we haven’t had an attack in seven years."
The audience burst into applause.
There is a significant number of Americans who are sickened by the Bush administration’s interrogation tactics, but many are unsure if they want to see prosecutions.
Legal memos
It came as little surprise that our project, looking into the question of guilt, was not popular with some CIA and White House insiders. Nevertheless we were granted extraordinary access to a large number of key individuals who helped piece together the story, mostly off camera.
As we ploughed through legal memos, court cases, government reports and books and talked to lawyer after lawyer, it emerged that a central legal question was this: Did America’s leaders intend to torture
"There was a real sense that there was going to be a major new attack that was going to come and that we needed to somehow prevent it"
John Bellinger
Former legal adviser, US National Security Council
Did the White House approve torture "by accident", because their lawyers decided that waterboarding and confining someone in a box was not actually torture
Or was there a policy and an intent to torture behind it all
In investigations of this nature, the answer lies in the detail. In this case, chronology was the key.
America’s leaders say they only authorised the controversial techniques because their lawyers advised that they did not constitute torture. It therefore became critical for us to find out if the torture started before the key legal memos were issued.
We spoke to several people who we believed knew this very precise piece of information. But so often in our inquires, the answer came back: "I cannot recall."
Then we met John Kiriakou, the former CIA operative who had led the capture of key al-Qaeda suspect Abu Zubaydah in 2002. He had flown back to the US shortly after the capture and monitored Abu Zubaydah’s interrogation from CIA headquarters in Virginia.
Kiriakou was categorical that Abu Zubaydah was waterboarded in the early summer of 2002. This became a crucial piece for the Panorama team in the puzzle that we were slowly piecing together, because the key legal memos that approved the method were not issued until August 2002.
The CIA has told the BBC that waterboarding did not happen before that August 2002 memo but would not reveal when it did occur.
It is not clear that any oral legal advice that told White House leaders that the harsh techniques were not torture before August would amount to much of a legal defence in court.
For more than 50 years, waterboarding has been considered torture in America, and torture is illegal.
Secretive techniques
Abu Zubaydah was strapped to a board, with his face partially covered, while water was poured onto his nose and mouth.

According to his lawyer, the detainee had begun to drown until they stopped. This happened at least 82 more times.
It has emerged partly from newly-released government legal memos that the CIA borrowed some of its new interrogation techniques from a secretive US military programme called SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape).
The SERE programme teaches American soldiers how to cope in captivity. Amongst other training techniques, it simulates torture used by the Chinese on American soldiers in Korea in the 1950s.
These methods were intended for training US soldiers, not for use in the interrogation of enemy suspects.
But a recent report by the Senate Armed Service Committee traces how Donald Rumsfeld’s Department of Defense, in parallel with the CIA, also contacted the SERE programme, and modelled its interrogation plans on the same techniques.
The Pentagon says SERE techniques were never authorised.
Post 9/11 reality
All this has left many in America asking themselves how they got to this point in the first place
The reality is that on 11 September 2001 the CIA had virtually no interrogation capacity but, the BBC was told, the agency was rapidly authorised by President Bush to set up a detention and interrogation programme anyway.
A senior CIA insider said they trawled intelligence agencies worldwide in the hunt for new techniques. SERE was contacted as part of this.
Donald Rumsfeld, it was suggested, pushed for his own tough programme.
"Rumsfeld needed intelligence and he didn’t trust the CIA", said Lawrence Wilkerson, chief of staff to Colin Powell, former US secretary of state.
Critically, there was distressing intelligence in the aftermath of 9/11 that another attack was imminent.
"There was a real sense that there was going to be a major new attack that was going to come and that we needed to somehow prevent it," said John Bellinger who at the time was legal adviser to the National Security Council.
Insiders say the resulting atmosphere in the White House was that extraordinary measures were called for.
Shock waves
Within months the Bush administration announced that the Geneva Conventions, which ban cruel and degrading treatment, did not apply to suspected members of al-Qaeda.
This sent shock waves around the world.

William Taft, who was Colin Powell’s lawyer, drafted a memo arguing that detainees be treated humanely in accordance with article three of the Geneva Conventions, but he said his memo was blocked by the administration.
"I really do think at that time that the reason that they didn’t approve publishing my memo was that they intended to actually use coercive techniques," said Mr Taft.
The Bush administration said it was committed to humane treatment along the lines of Geneva, as long as it was consistent with "military necessity", a significant caveat.
"The decision was that the rules were gone" said Mr Taft.
Department of justice lawyers began to prepare legal memos that redefined torture in terms broad enough to allow harsh interrogation techniques, including waterboarding.
With the legal ground dramatically altered, widespread use of controversial interrogation techniques and systematic abuses appeared across US military bases.
Later, concern mounted inside the administration. John Bellinger, who believes existing international law is poorly equipped to deal with al-Qaeda, nevertheless worried that applying none of the Geneva conventions left a large legal grey area.
"I said well if the Geneva conventions in their entirety don’t apply, that we need to conclude that something does apply because we are a nation of laws, we’re not just a nation of men and of policies".
Panorama has been told by other insiders that President Bush personally authorised the CIA’s interrogation programme soon after 9/11, and that he may have personally approved the specific programme by the early summer of 2002.
The net of responsibility could go much wider. The CIA says that over the years more than 50 members of Congress were briefed on elements of the CIA’s tactics. Objections were few. But exactly what Congress was told and when is hotly disputed, particularly with recent allegations that the CIA misled Congress during the Bush era.
The Obama administration has not ruled out criminally investigating the lawyers involved in all this. Even interrogators who may have acted beyond the controversial legal advice could face investigation. A major CIA watchdog report with more information, is due to be released this summer.
But with mounting evidence pointing to fundamental responsibility at a very high level, President Obama appears little inclined to pursue anyone who was senior.
Panorama: Licence to Torture, BBC One, Monday 13 July at 2030 (1930 GMT).</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
US ‘waterboarding’ row rekindled
Fresh claims have emerged that a key al-Qaeda suspect was waterboarded before the Bush government lawyers issued written authorisation to do so.
A former CIA agent has told the BBC that Abu Zubaydah was waterboarded by the CIA in May or June 2002.
The date was provided by former CIA agent John Kiriakou. The practice was sanctioned in written memos by Bush administration lawyers in August 2002.
The CIA says waterboarding did not take place before August 2002.
Officials have refused to tell the BBC when it did occur.
Legal memos
Mr Kiriakou led the CIA team that captured Abu Zubaydah in Pakistan on 28 March 2002, and was the first to speak to the badly injured captive before returning to the US.

There he monitored the internal communications that came in (cable traffic) on Abu Zubaydah’s interrogation at a secret CIA prison from the organisation’s headquarters in Virginia.
Asked by the BBC’s Panorama programme when the waterboarding phase of the interrogation began, Mr Kiriakou said: "That would have been at the very end of May or the very beginning of June 2002."
The key legal advice by Bush administration lawyers that deemed it acceptable was not written until August 2002.
Mr Kiriakou said he had information that by early summer, 2002, President Bush had given his written approval for the use of waterboarding.
The BBC could not corroborate Mr Kiriakou’s assertions independently. The date of Abu Zubaydah’s waterboarding remains a closely guarded secret.
Mr Kiriakou has been criticised in the past for downplaying the extent of the waterboarding and emphasising its efficacy.
Torture redefined
Waterboarding had long been treated as torture under American law – and torture is illegal under both American and international law.
President George W Bush’s administration have steadily maintained that they did not break the law because they received legal advice which determined that waterboarding and other harsh techniques were not torture.
"Simply having a lawyer say that something is okay is not a defence, or is not much of a defence anyway"
Chris Anders
American Civil Liberties Union
Those legal memos redefined torture very broadly to mean some extremely painful techniques could be used and still not technically constitute "torture".
Chris Anders of the American Civil Liberties Union (Aclu), said the timing is significant for those who believe that members of the Bush administration should face trial for authorising torture.
"If waterboarding was being used then, there’s no one who would be able to say that they were relying on a legal opinion because there was no legal opinion at that point to rely upon," Mr Anders said.
Officials may have been given the legal go-ahead verbally prior to August, but it is not clear how much weight that would have in courts should a decision be taken to prosecute those who authorised or carried out the harsh methods.
"Simply having a lawyer say that something is okay is not a defence, or is not much of a defence anyway", said Anders.
Prosecutions possible
US President Barack Obama announced in April that he would not seek to use anti-torture laws to prosecute CIA agents who relied in good faith on Bush administration legal opinions issued after the 11 September attacks.

Mr Obama’s assurance came after the release of memos detailing those legal opinions on the range of techniques the CIA was allowed to use during the Bush administration, including waterboarding.
In his first week in office, Mr Obama banned the use of waterboarding. Rights groups have criticised the decision not to seek prosecutions.
Mr Obama has not closed the door on the possibility of prosecuting those who gave the controversial legal advice.
His administration has described waterboarding as torture. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Cheney ‘hid plans to kill al-Qaida’
• Ex-CIA officials say foreign leaders were also in dark
• Investigation demanded into post-9/11 strategy
Dick Cheney, the former vice president, ordered a highly classified CIA operation hidden from Congress because it pushed the limits of legality by planning to assassinate al-Qaida operatives in friendly countries without the knowledge of their governments, according to former intelligence officials.
Former counter-terrorism officials who retain close links to the intelligence community say that the hidden operation involved plans by the CIA and the military to launch operations, similar to those by Israel’s Mossad intelligence service, to hunt down and kill al-Qaida activists abroad without informing the governments concerned, even though some were regarded as friendly if unreliable.
The CIA apparently did not put the plan in to operation but the US military did, carrying out several assassinations including one in Kenya that proved to be a severe embarrassment and helped lead to the quashing of the programme.
A former intelligence official said the plan was hatched in the cauldron of the September 11 attacks when officials were pushing various forms of unilateral action and some settled on the Israelis as an example.
“One of the most sensitive areas has been what we do in friendly countries that don’t want to co-operate or maybe we don’t have enough confidence to entrust them with information. If you have an al-Qaida guy wandering around certain bits of the world we might decide that we need to deal with that ourselves, directly, without making a lot of noise,” he said. “There was a plan to deal with that. It was much talked about in the CIA and the military had its own operation.”
Another former senior intelligence official responsible for dealing with al-Qaida said that assassination plans were reined in after similar covert operations by the military were botched and proved to be embarrassing, particularly the killing in Kenya. He did not give details of the operation.
The official said he believes from conversations with serving members of the CIA that the area of real concern in Congress is that the planned operations may also have involved the covert surveillance of American citizens.
There appears to be common agreement among knowledgeable former intelligence officials that the controversy goes beyond the immediate question of assassination and capture of al-Qaida operatives as there have been numerous killings and detentions since the 9/11 attacks.
One former official said that the Bush administration discussed assassinations in the context of a ban introduced in the 1970s that responded to several failed CIA attempts to murder Fidel Castro, and concluded that as the US had declared itself at war with al-Qaida and the Taliban, this ban did not apply.
Peter Bergen, a senior security analyst at the New America Foundation, said that the secret operation must have gone further than that to have created such a backlash in Congress: “If it’s an assassination programme of al-Qaida leaders that is hardly surprising. Clinton had an assassination programme against bin Laden. There have been 27 drone missile strikes against al-Qaida alone this year.”
The CIA has declined to comment and members of Congress who were finally briefed about the issue by the CIA director, Leon Panetta, last month are bound by confidentiality.
Some former intelligence officials and Republicans have attempted to portray the programme as barely getting out of the planning stages but others in the intelligence community have said it is highly unlikely that the CIA would have kept such an operation going for eight years without advancing it.
The evident anger in Congress is fuelling demands for a full blown investigation in to the CIA’s failure to disclose the programme and Cheney’s role in the cover up. The Senate majority whip, Dick Durbin, said the programme could have been illegal: “The executive branch of government should not create programs like these programs and keep Congress in the dark. To have a massive program that was concealed from the leaders in Congress is not only inappropriate, it could be illegal.”
Anna Eshoo, a senior Democrat on the House of Representatives intelligence committee, is also calling for a probe. “We, by no means, have the full story. We don’t know who gave the order. We don’t know where the money came from. We don’t know all the people who were involved,” she told Politico. “We need a full investigation. My preference is that we hire an attorney to come in and run this, someone that is known for their prosecutorial knowledge as well as their knowledge of this particular area of the law.”
Why Cheney Kept Everyone in the Dark About the Secret Program
Why did Cheney keep then-current CIA head Tenet and current CIA head Panetta, as well as Congress, in the dark about the secret counterterrorism program?Because – as Seymour Hersh has previously explained – the lesson which Cheney learned from the Iran…
Cheney’s Secret “Unit Was So Secret That Even The Former CIA Director George Tenet Did Not Control Its Activitiesâ€
We know that the new director of the CIA, Leon Panetta, was kept in the dark for months about the secret counterterrorism program. But Scotland’s leading newspaper – the Scotsman – has a stunning new revelation: The unit was so secret that even the for…
Cheney ‘ordered CIA to hide plan’

Former US Vice-President Dick Cheney gave direct orders to the CIA to conceal an intelligence programme from Congress, US media reports say.
The existence of the programme, set up after 9/11, was hidden for eight years and even now its nature is not known.
CIA director Leon Panetta is said to have abandoned the project when he learnt of it last month.
He has now told a House committee that Mr Cheney was behind the secrecy, the unnamed US sources say.
There has been no comment from Mr Cheney.
War of words
The claims come amid an increasingly bitter row between the CIA and Congress over whether key information was withheld about other aspects of the agency’s operations.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has claimed that the CIA misled her about interrogation methods including waterboarding, while other senior Democrats have quoted Mr Panetta as admitting that his agency regularly misled Congress before he took office.

Details of the newly-revealed secret programme have still not been divulged, but sources say it did not relate to the CIA’s rendition programme, interrogation methods or a controversial domestic surveillance project.
Officials quoted by the New York Times say the programme was launched by anti-terror operatives at the CIA soon after the 2001 attacks, and involved planning and training but never became fully operational.
Another unnamed official told AP it was an embryonic intelligence-gathering effort, aimed at yielding intelligence that would be used to conduct a covert operations abroad.
Sources have told a number of US media outlets Mr Cheney personally instructed the CIA to withhold information about the programme from Congress.
Mr Panetta – who took over directorship of the CIA under President Obama’s administration – is said to have learnt about the programme only on 23 June.
The next day he called an emergency meeting with congressional intelligence committees to tell them about its existence and to say that it was being cancelled, the reports say.
Veto threat
The allegations come as the Democrats in Congress are trying push through new rules that would increase the number of members of Congress who are told about covert operations.
The White House is threatening to veto the bill, fearing that operational secrecy could be compromised.
The CIA has not commented on the reports of Mr Cheney’s role.
"It’s not agency practice to discuss what may or may not have been said in a classified briefing," said spokesman Paul Gimigliano.
"When a CIA unit brought this matter to Director Panetta’s attention, it was with the recommendation that it be shared appropriately with Congress. That was also his view, and he took swift, decisive action to put it into effect."
A CIA spokesman insisted earlier this week that "it is not the policy or practice of the CIA to mislead Congress." </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
CIA Secret Program Was To Capture Or Kill Al Qaeda Operatives
A secret Central Intelligence Agency initiative terminated by Director Leon Panetta was an attempt to carry out a 2001 presidential authorization to capture or kill al Qaeda operatives, according to former intelligence officials familiar with …
Andy Worthington: Will Eric Holder Be The Anti-Torture Hero?
In an important article for Newsweek, “Independent’s Day,” Daniel Klaidman manages not only to present a convincingly intimate and sympathetic first-hand portrait of Eric Holder,…
Why Isn’t Cheney in Jail?
As I wrote yesterday about the CIA program that Panetta recently disclosed to Congress:As a former CIA agent says, the real question is who ordered the CIA to withhold the information from Congress . . .In a nation of laws, Bush, Cheney – or whoever in…
Cheney Told CIA To Hide Program From Congress
WASHINGTON — Former Vice President Dick Cheney directed the CIA eight years ago not to inform Congress about a nascent counterterrorism program that CIA Director Leon Panetta terminated in June, officials with direct knowledge of the mat…
Michael B. Laskoff: America’s Other Swine Flu
The same members of Congress who failed in their duty to provide checks and balances are in no rush to legally investigate their own passivity in the wiretapping program. This lack of accountability is an infectious disease.
Scott Atran: The Moral Failure of Our National Intelligence
A new government report on the Bush administration’s surveillance of personal commmunications reveals a familiar pattern of intellectual deafness and moral abuse of the country.
The CIA’s Rogue Operation
Everyone is playing the guessing game regarding the secret program which the CIA hid from Congress.The Huffington Post’s Sam Stein is guessing that it is Cheney’s executive assassination squad. Yesterday, I guessed it might have been continuity of gove…
What Did the CIA Lie to Congress About?
CIA director Panetta admitted to Congress that the CIA misled Congress concerning “significant actions” from 2001 to the present. As Congress wrote to Panetta yesterday:”Recently you testified that you have determined that top CIA officials have conce…
CIA officials called to testify over spoiled tapes
• 92 video tapes may have been illegally destroyed
• London station chief included in inquiry
Senior Central Intelligence Agency officials, including the London station chief, have been brought before a grand jury in Virginia investigating the potentially illegal destruction of 92 video tapes recording the torture and interrogation of al-Qaida detainees.
A special prosecutor, John Durham, has called the CIA officials as part of an 18-month-long criminal probe in to the destruction of evidence of the agency’s interrogators using waterboarding and other forms of torture against Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al Nashiri who are described by the Americans as “high value” detainees now held at Guantánamo Bay.
Those ordered to testify include the former CIA chief, Porter J Gross. Another is a woman who is not publicly named who heads the agency’s London station. She previously worked as the chief of staff for the head of the CIA’s clandestine branch, Jose Rodriguez, who is the focus of the investigation.
The New York Times reports that former CIA officers have identified the woman as having helped carry out Rodriguez’s order to destroy the tapes which had been kept in a safe in at the agency’s station in Thailand where the torture and interrogations were carried out.
Rodriquez is reported to have been concerned that agents might have been identified and endangered if the tapes leaked.
But the CIA will also have been concerned that some of its agents may have been open to prosecution under domestic and international laws against torture besides the enormous damage to its already battered reputation if video were made public of the extended torture and brutal techniques used against the captives. The impact is likely to have been much greater than the outcry caused by the pictures of abuse by US soldiers at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison.
President Obama has since pledged not to prosecute individual agents for their part in torture and interrogations because they were assured by the Bush administration that their actions were legal.
The investigation was launched because the destruction of the tapes may amount to a criminal offense because it was evidence that could have been used in any prosecutions for torture. Robriquez has told colleagues that he received legal guidance from CIA lawyers who told him he had the authority to order the destruction of the tapes.
However it remains open to question whether anyone will be brought to trial for that or other alleged offenses given the Obama administration’s desire to reassure CIA agents that they will not be pursued over past crimes.
The existence of the tapes was only made public after they were destroyed.
On Thursday, the Obama administration said it will delay until the end of next month the release of a 2004 CIA report detailing the torture and other abuse of prisoners held in clandestine prisons oversees.



