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Why a "Gang of Seven" Former CIA Directors Are Trying to Block Holder's Torture Investigation

Seven former CIA directors are asking Obama to "reverse Attorney General Holder's August 24 decision to re-open the criminal investigation of CIA interrogations."
September 21, 2009  |  
 
 
 
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For the CIA supervisors and operatives who were responsible for torture, the chickens are coming home to roost. That is, if President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder mean it when they say no one is above the law -- and if they have the courage to stand up to brazen intimidation.

Unable to prevent Attorney General Eric Holder from starting an investigation of torture and other war crimes that implicate CIA officials past and present, some of those same CIA officials, together with what in intelligence circles are called "agents of influence" in the media, are pulling out all the stops to quash the Department of Justice's preliminary investigation.

In what should be seen as a bizarre twist, seven CIA directors -- including three who are themselves implicated in planning and conducting torture and assassination -- have asked the President to call off Holder.

Can someone please tell me how could the whole thing be more transparent?

The most vulnerable of the Gang of Seven, George Tenet, is not the brightest star in the heavens, but even he was able to figure out years ago that he and his accomplices might end up having to pay a heavy price for violating international and U.S. criminal law.

In his memoir, At the Center of the Storm, Tenet notes that what the CIA needed were "the right authorities" and policy determination to do the bidding of President George W. Bush:

Sure, it was a risky proposition when you looked at it from a policy maker's point of view. We were asking for and we would be given as many authorities as CIA had ever had. Things could blow up. People, me among them, could end up spending some of the worst days of our lives justifying before congressional overseers our new freedom to act." (p. 178)

Tenet and his masters assumed, correctly, that given the mood of the times and the lack of spine among lawmakers, congressional "overseers" would relax into their accustomed role as congressional overlookers. Unfortunately for him, Tenet seems to have confined his concern at the time to the invertebrates in Congress, not anticipating a rejuvenated Department of Justice that might take its role in enforcing the law seriously.

Taking the Gloves Off

Tenet proudly quotes his former counterterrorism chief, Cofer Black (now a senior official at Blackwater): "As Cofer Black later told Congress, 'The gloves came off that day.'" That day was September 17, 2001, when "the president approved our recommendations and provided us broad authorities to engage al-Qa'ida." (p. 208)

Presumably, it was not lost on Tenet that no lawmaker dared ask exactly what Cofer Black meant when he said "the gloves came off." Had they thought to ask Richard Clarke, former director of the counterterrorist operation at the White House, he could have told them what he wrote in his book, Against All Enemies.

Clarke describes a meeting in which he took part with President George W. Bush in the White House bunker just minutes after his TV address to the nation on the evening of 9/11. When the subject of international law was raised, Clarke writes that the president responded vehemently: "I don't care what the international lawyers say, we are going to kick some ass." (p. 24)

It took Bush and Cheney only six days to grant the CIA the "broad authorities" the agency had recommended. It then took White House counsel Alberto Gonzales, Vice President Dick Cheney's lawyer David Addington, and William J. Haynes II, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's lawyer, four more months to advise the president formally that, by fiat, he could ignore the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war.

This gang of lawyers so advised at the turn of 2001-2002, beating down objections by William Howard Taft IV, Secretary of State Colin Powell's lawyer. Bush chose to follow the dubious advice of those imaginative lawyers in his and Dick Cheney's employ; namely, that 9/11 ushered in a "new paradigm" rendering the Geneva protections "quaint" and "obsolete."

We Need to Tell You Also…

Addington and Gonzales did take care to warn the president, by memorandum of Jan. 25, 2002, of the risk of criminal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. 2441, the War Crimes Act of 1996. The memo said:


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Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern is co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity.
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Depressing
Posted by: QQOblivion on Sep 21, 2009 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These seven are EVIL, pure and simple. Yes, pure evil.

But this whole story greatly depresses me, because more likely than not, Obama WILL give in to the seven's desires for a cover-up.
That's the MO of BO.

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Torture is not new
Posted by: Defenestrator on Sep 21, 2009 1:23 PM   
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Declassified document detailing the techniques used at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo: KUBARK Interrogation Manual, 1963

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See how all these pigs
Posted by: outsideagitator on Sep 23, 2009 9:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
begin to squeal! They see the coming of their possible demise at the slaughter house and can smell the odor of their own crimes and deceit! Extraordinary rendition is on the schedule for these swine who ok'd the practice and invented the term "Extraordinary Rendition". Now it is their turn, we hope, to end up in the rendering
vat themselves!

These crude enablers and creators....see how they have all strutted their hours upon the stage...and continue to be heard!

No More!

We need justice...up against the wall with these perpetrators!

Justice

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» RE: See how all these pigs Posted by: mainspark

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Tenet said "NEW authorities to act"
Posted by: hardwroc on Sep 23, 2009 12:44 PM   
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This tells ME, that they were breaking ground with new limits or lack thereof.

And I would also beleive that 100% of our criminals incarcerated now wish they could have stopped the investigations into their crimes too.

My military time was NOT spent to protect this type of action in MY or my countries name.
Remember,they are acting in YOUR name doing things they used as reasons Saddam needed to be unseated.
So, Saddam needed to be ousted because HE tortured, and yet, when WE do the same thing, ironically, in the same building, it is NOW ok?
Why? Is it our spiffy flag, or interesting uniforms that makes it better when WE do it?

Let's just say, had ANY of the Bush regime actually been veterans we likely would NOT have seen this cowardly action in our name. And NO, I hardly see Dubya's summer in Jet Camp as a military service. He cheated to get into the guard without waiting his turn, and then neglected to complete his rugged tour of service stateside, reverting to his cheerleader duties in a political campaign. Wondering if they issue purple hearts for paper cuts?

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Levels
Posted by: tomu4ia on Sep 23, 2009 1:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are five levels of criminals; those who:
1. tortured in excess of the illegal guidelines established by the Department of Justice,
2. tortured in compliance with the guidelines,
3. issued the DOJ guidelines,
4. within the management of the CIA, FBI, NSA, DSA (the Army's Defense Security Agency) and all applicable military branches, instructed subordinates to torture, and
5. within the bush/cheney administration, gave carte blanche power to -OR- specific instructions to those who issued the torture guidelines.

Holder (and Obama) are only going after those in the first tier. By so doing, they vindicate all the other criminals, justify the use of torture by the rest of the criminals, lower the bar of American humanity, and put urine stains on the Constitution, the Geneva Conventions, the achievements of the Nuremberg Trials and the good name of our country.

This all--including the elephant tears of the former CIA directors--is pure kabuki theater. Satisfied, America? Now go back to your soaps, palin chronicles and U.S. history textbooks that extol the virtues of America.

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» You have put it Posted by: outsideagitator

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Nation had a good article on Church Committee
Posted by: whealeydj on Sep 24, 2009 9:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
which suggested it is time for another Select Committee on Intelligence. I fear however, that Pelosi has secrets to hide adn will never agree to one. What would be good for my morale is to have those responsible for the Bush torture policy be held accountable. I hope Holder tells Gang of Seven thanks for sharing but this is a nation of laws and investigations into torture by government employees and contractors are required by law.

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