US senator
and intelligence committee chair accuses CIA of intimidation in effort to block
publication of controversial torture report
theguardian.com, Dan Roberts and Spencer Ackerman in Washington, Tuesday 11 March 2014
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| Senator Dianne Feinstein speaks to reporters after accusing the CIA of cover-up and criminal activity in a speech on the Senate floor. Photograph: Mark Wilson/Getty |
The
chairwoman of the Senate intelligence committee, Dianne Feinstein, on Tuesday
accused the Central Intelligence Agency of a catalogue of cover-ups,
intimidation and smears aimed at investigators probing its role in an
“un-American and brutal” programme of post-9/11 detention and interrogation.
In a
bombshell statement on the floor of the US Senate, Feinstein, normally an
administration loyalist, accused the CIA of potentially violating the US
constitution and of criminal activity in its attempts to obstruct her
committee’s investigations into the agency’s use of torture. She described the
crisis as a “defining moment” for political oversight of the US intelligence
service.
Her
unprecedented public assault on the CIA represented an intensification of the
row between the committee and the agency over a still-secret report on the
torture of terrorist suspects after 9/11. Resolution of the crisis, Feinstein
suggested, may come this week at the White House.
Feinstein,
who said she was making her statement “reluctantly”, confirmed recent reports
that CIA officials had monitored computer networks used by Senate staff
investigators. Going further than previously, she referred openly to recent
attempts by the CIA to remove documents from the network detailing evidence of
torture that would incriminate intelligence officers.
She also
alleged that anonymous CIA officials were effectively conducting a smear
campaign in the media to discredit and “intimidate” Senate staff by suggesting
they had hacked into the agency’s computers to obtain a separate, critical
internal report on the detention and interrogation programme.
Staff
working on the Senate investigation have been reported to the Department of
Justice for possible criminal charges by a lawyer at the CIA who himself
features heavily in the alleged interrogation abuses. The CIA’s inspector
general has another inquiry open into the issue.
Feinstein said
this was a possible attempt at “intimidation” and revealed that CIA officials
had also been reported to the Department of Justice for alleged violations of
the fourth amendment and laws preventing them from domestic spying.
“This is a
defining moment for the oversight role of our intelligence committee ... and
whether we can be thwarted by those we oversee,” said Feinstein in a special
address on the floor of the the US Senate.
“There is
no legitimate reason to allege to the Justice Department that Senate staff may
have committed a crime... this is plainly an attempt to intimidate these staff
and I am not taking it lightly.”
Last week,
CIA director John Brennan, a former White House counterterrorism aide to
President Obama, issued a rare scathing public statement on the deepening
crisis, suggesting that unspecified “wrongdoing” had occurred in “either the
executive branch or legislative branch.”
Brennan,
who initially withdrew from consideration as CIA director in 2008 out of
allegations he did not consider torture to be a serious offence, said last week
he was “deeply dismayed that some members of the Senate have decided to make
spurious allegations about CIA actions that are wholly unsupported by the
facts.”
The
committee’s report is still classified, and several of its conclusions are
sharply contested by the CIA.
Feinstein
said that she would immediately appeal to the White House to declassify the
report’s major findings. The White House, which did not immediately respond to
a request for comment, is formally on record as supporting the
declassification, which the president has the power to order.
The CIA had
no immediate comment on Feinstein’s remarks. Brennan was scheduled to give a
speech reflecting on the first year of his tenure later on Tuesday morning.
Patrick
Leahy, chairman of the senate judiciary committee and the longest serving US
senator, described Feinstein’s speech at the most important he had witnessed in
his time in Congress.
“I cannot
think of any speech by any member of any party as important as the one the
senator from California just gave,” Leahy said.
Feinstein
described repeated attempts by the CIA to frustrate the work of Senate
investigators, including providing the committee staff with a “document dump”
of millions of non-indexed pages, requiring years of work to sort through – a
necessity, Feinstein said, after former senior CIA official Jose Rodriguez
destroyed nearly 100 videotapes showing brutal interrogations of detainees in
CIA custody.
“We are not
going to stop our investigation and have sent our report to the president in
the hope it can be declassified and published for the American people to see,”
Feinstein said on the Senate floor.
She said
the goal of declassifying the report, exposing the “horrible details of a CIA
programme that never, never should have existed,” was to prevent torture from
ever again becoming American policy.
Zeke
Johnson of Amnesty International called on the White House to publish the
committee’s report. “President Obama, who has claimed to have the most
transparent administration in history, should move immediately to declassify
and release the report. Otherwise, the legacy of torture he inherited will
become his own,” he said.

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