Friday, December 5, 2014

The Battle Over the Torture Report

I have a feeling that this op ed in the Washington Post today gives a big clue as to why John Kerry suddenly called Dianne Feinstein to call off the release of the torture report. Looks to me like a shot across the bow: We are the CIA; we have the goods on all of you; don't mess with us; we know where ALL the bodies are buried; you burn us, and we'll burn you.
The report’s leaked conclusion, which has been reported on widely, that the interrogation program brought no intelligence value is an egregious falsehood; it’s a dishonest attempt to rewrite history. I’m bemused that the Senate could devote so many resources to studying the interrogation program and yet never once speak to any of the key people involved in it, including the guy who ran it (that would be me).

[...]

The interrogation program was authorized by the highest levels of the U.S. government, judged legal by the Justice Department and proved effective by any reasonable standard. The leaders of the Senate and House Intelligence Committees and of both parties in Congress were briefed on the program more than 40 times between 2002 and 2009. But Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) tried to deny that she was told in 2002 that detainees had been waterboarded. That is simply not true. I was among those who briefed her.

  Jose A. Rodriguez Jr.: WaPo
Put that report out at your own peril.

...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

UPDATE:   But wait, it gets more squirrely...


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