December 15, 2007

Mukasey refuses to call in a special prosecutor to investigate CIA torture tapes. IMPEACH THE LOT OF THEM! Really.

The hypocracy and lies are really too, too much in the story below, but of course the WaPo knows that.

Destroying those tapes means that some victims of the DoJ will never receive fairness, as in Jose Padillo.

There is too much politicization of this issue, and the DoJ should disqualify itself - Michael Mukasey's supposed neutrality or NO.

I mean any fool can see that. I'll do some checking later to see what the Center for Constitutional Rights is saying about THIS.

V

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Congress's Probe of CIA Tapes Resisted

Both Parties Decry Justice Dept. Move

By Dan Eggen and Joby Warrick
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, December 15, 2007; A01

The Justice Department moved yesterday to delay congressional inquiries into the CIA's destruction of interrogation videotapes, saying the administration could not provide witnesses or documents sought by lawmakers without jeopardizing its own investigation of the CIA's actions.

Congressional leaders from both parties alleged that Justice is trying to block their investigation and vowed to press ahead with hearings.

A pair of letters from Justice and CIA officials to leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees intensified the conflict between the Bush administration and Congress, which is seeking to force current and former CIA leaders to testify as early as next week. The lawmakers want CIA officials to account for the decision to destroy tapes that depicted the use of harsh interrogation tactics on terrorism suspects.

The growing feud is the first major confrontation with Congress for new Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey, who was narrowly confirmed last month amid controversy over his refusal to describe waterboarding -- a severe interrogation tactic that simulates drowning -- as torture.

"We fully appreciate the committee's oversight interest in this matter, but want to advise you of concerns that actions responsive to your request would represent significant risk to our preliminary inquiry,"
Kenneth L. Wainstein, assistant attorney general for national security, and CIA Inspector General John L. Helgerson wrote in a letter to House intelligence committee leaders.

The top Democrat and Republican on the House intelligence committee issued a joint statement that labels Justice's stance an effort to obstruct the congressional probe.

"We are stunned that the Justice Department would move to block our investigation,"
Reps. Silvestre Reyes (D-Tex.) and Peter Hoekstra (R-Mich.) said in the statement. "Parallel investigations occur all of the time, and there is no basis upon which the Attorney General can stand in the way of our work."

They vowed to "use all the tools available to Congress, including subpoenas" to compel the CIA to produce documents and require key officials to testify about the tapes.

The exchange followed a letter earlier in the day from Mukasey that rebuffed congressional demands for details about the joint Justice-CIA inquiry into the tapes' destruction and rejected calls for the appointment of an independent prosecutor. Mukasey said that providing the information to Congress would make it appear that the department is "subject to political influence."

"At my confirmation hearing, I testified that I would act independently, resist political pressure and ensure that politics plays no role in cases brought by the Department of Justice," Mukasey wrote in a letter to Sens. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) and Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), chairman and ranking minority member of the Judiciary Committee.

In recent weeks, lawmakers, primarily Democrats, have showered the Justice Department with demands for investigations or information on topics including baseball's steroids scandal and allegations of rape by a former military contractor employee.

Mukasey replaced Alberto R. Gonzales, who left office in September after the furor over his handling of the firings of nine U.S. attorneys and allegations that he misled Congress in sworn testimony.

The CIA disclosed last week that it destroyed videotapes in 2005 depicting interrogation sessions for alleged al-Qaeda operative Zayn al-Abidin Muhammed Hussein, commonly known as Abu Zubaida, and another suspect, later identified by officials as Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri. Administration officials have said that lawyers at the Justice Department and the White House, including then-counsel Harriet E. Miers, advised the CIA against destroying the tapes but that CIA lawyers ruled their preservation was not required.

CIA officials said the agency's director, Michael V. Hayden, is prepared to cooperate with all investigators.

"Director Hayden has said the Agency will cooperate fully with both the preliminary inquiry conducted by DOJ and CIA's Office of Inspector General, and with the Congress," agency spokesman Mark Mansfield said. "That has been, and certainly still is, the case."

The Justice Department announced Dec. 8 that it had joined the CIA's inspector general in launching a preliminary inquiry into the tape destruction. Prosecutors asked the CIA to preserve any related evidence.

Leahy and Specter asked Mukasey on Dec. 10 for "a complete account of the Justice Department's own knowledge of and involvement with" the tape destruction. The two senators included a list of 16 separate questions, including whether the Justice Department had offered legal advice to the CIA about the tapes or had communicated with the White House about the issue.

Mukasey wrote to the lawmakers that Justice "has a long-standing policy of declining to provide non-public information about pending matters.

"This policy is based in part on our interest in avoiding any perception that our law enforcement decisions are subject to political influence," Mukasey wrote to lawmakers.

The tape investigation is being led by Wainstein, who held his first substantive meeting on the case Wednesday with the CIA inspector general's office, according to a law enforcement official.

Several Democrats have raised questions about the propriety of an inquiry run by the Justice Department, whose lawyers were involved in offering legal advice about the tapes, and the CIA inspector general, whose office reviewed the tapes before they were destroyed.

Hayden said last week that the inspector general's office examined the tapes in 2003 "as part of its look at the agency's detention and interrogation practices."

Among those whom lawmakers want to testify is the CIA official who made the decision to destroy the tapes, Jose Rodriguez. The former director of clandestine operations has obtained private counsel and is studying his options.

His attorney, Robert Bennett, said: "If I determine that he has a good story, we're going to tell it. But I'm not going to let him be a piata for people with a political agenda during an election year."

Staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh for crying out loud. Water-boarding's not torture, and now thanks to all the hand-wringing wimps in congress and the press, complete with demonstrations, every thug worldwide knows it. All they have to do is train for it, like our service members are required to do, and the technique is essentially useless.

Fabulous. What other secrets and methods should we advertise to the world? Let's just open up all CIA files to public inspection.

The CIA's trying to protect agent's identities, and the methods (not torture - consult radical Islam for that) they use to obtain information with which to keep these ungrateful wimps safe, fat and happy.

ladybroadoak said...

There are roughly two dozen items on this blog, Mike, dealing with waterboarding - the good, the bad and the ugly.

Why did you choose the one that is dealing with Mukasey needing to choose a special prosecutor to put your ridiculous comment on? I mean seriously.

I realize you are either a tool OR deluded; maybe both. You are dessentized in the extreme. TORTURE IS TORTURE IS TORTURE. and it STINKS and is cruel no matter how you "spin" it. If one wouldn't do it to a vulnerable child, one shouldn't so it PERIOD because it is TRAUMATIZING - "practice" or not "practice". This world needs more healing and more art, not more TORTURE.

As for opening up ALL CIA files - hey! why not? They are just rife with NAZI (operation paperclip) bullshit, all sorts of bullshit projects to get everyone killing each other, so yeah, let's open them ALL up. The CIA has been real good at protecting the Rich Fat Catz, but sure as shit hasn't done much to protect anyone else.

Anonymous said...

No, my post is not ridiculous, but what IS ridiculous is how this issue is being SELECTIVELY used as a political hammer. Back when the nation was briefly united, these same howlers were just fine with waterboarding, as they should have been.

It was used on a grand total of three terrorists. People act like it's as routine as taking fingerprints. But now everybody KNOWS about it, and now that its true nature has been exposed, everybody KNOWS it's not that bad. If people KNOW they're not really gonna drown, and they KNOW they're not really gonna die, and have trained for it, they have the mental ability to withstand the procedure and NOT give up information. Yes, when one gets himself into the position of being a detainee of the CIA or the U.S. military, there is the inherent possibility of some "TRAUMATIZING". Pardon me if I don't shed any tears over these guys, who would happily wipe out every non-Muslim in the world, if they somehow had the power -- that they do indeed seek. (hence, the waterboarding)

This appears to be a very rare, reluctantly used proceedure, but one that has produced results. It was successful in getting the mastermind of 9/11 to talk about a lot of things directly bearing on our security. The fact that this procedure was selected, one that doesn't kill, hobble, injure or scar -- only scare -- speaks to the inherent goodness of America, not the opposite.

If you don't recognize methods such as this (and keeping them SECRET* - this is key) as being an unfortunate but sometimes necessary part of maintaining your freedom to have a blog and write WHATEVER you want, you simply don't have any concept of the type of evil there exists in the minds of certain individuals and groups in this world. It's the kind of evil responsible for the deaths of some quarter billion people (mostly their own) in the 20th century alone, the kind of evil that practices waterboarding with glee as a FIRST resort, not reluctantly as the last.

* "That decision reflected the White House's decision that the "enhanced interrogation" program would be treated as one of the nation's top secrets for fear of warning al-Qaeda members about what they might expect....."

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