Friday, April 4, 2014

U.S. releasing CIA 'torture' report




  • NEW: The panel voted 11-3 for declassification of some of the report

  • Intelligence Committee report covers CIA interrogation programs during the Bush era

  • Panel will submit entire report to the White House, which has final say on declassification

  • This is the report that triggered allegations of CIA spying on the Intelligence Committee



(CNN) — The Senate Intelligence Committee voted Thursday for the public release of key parts of a report on the notorious CIA detention and interrogation program launched after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.


A final decision on declassifying the information now rests with the White House, and it was unclear how long such a process would take.


Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California said the panel she leads voted 11-3 in a closed-door session to declassify the 480-page executive summary and 20 findings and conclusions of the five-year study.


Feinstein called the report’s findings “shocking,” saying it “exposes brutality that stands in stark contrast to our values as a nation.”




CIA and Senate at war over torture


“A stain on our history”


“It chronicles a stain on our history that must never again be allowed to happen,” she said. “This is not what Americans do.”


The committee’s ranking Republican, Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, said he voted to declassify the information in order to move past the politically volatile issue from the GOP administration of former President George W. Bush.


“This is a chapter in our past that should have already been closed,” he said.


Two other Republicans on the panel — Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Jim Risch of Idaho — said they voted against declassification of the report they labeled as “one-sided” and “partisan,” adding the public release of the information would fail to end the debate.


Critics of the CIA detention and interrogation program, including President Barack Obama, have called the use of controversial techniques including waterboarding a violation of laws prohibiting torture.


Obama banned the practices when he took office in 2009, after the CIA had already stopped using them.


Defenders say the program started in response to the terror attacks yielded valuable intelligence that led to major victories in the fight against al Qaeda, including the operation that killed Osama bin Laden.


Feinstein said her panel also was sending the full 6,200-page report to the White House for possible declassification sometime in the future.


Usually one of the CIA’s staunchest backers, Feinstein has recently lashed out at the agency in a dispute over the committee staff’s preparation of the report, which has been complete since 2012.


The CIA has asked the Justice Department to investigate whether Senate staffers violated the law by accessing classified internal information based on the same documents the agency turned over to the Senate for its review.


Spying dispute


Feinstein accused the CIA of snooping on computers used by the Senate staffers, which were in a CIA facility designated for the committee’s use.


Her statement Thursday detailed harsh criticism of the CIA in the report, which said “points to major problems with CIA’s management of this program and its interactions with the White House, other parts of the executive branch and Congress.”


“The release of this summary and conclusions in the near future shows that this nation admits its errors, as painful as they may be, and seeks to learn from them,” Feinstein said. “It is now abundantly clear that, in an effort to prevent further terrorist attacks after 9/11 and bring those responsible to justice, the CIA made serious mistakes that haunt us to this day.”


In a Senate floor speech last month, Feinstein outlined part of the reason to make the report public.




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