Despite early signs of support, Republicans aren’t united in backing California Democrat Sen. Dianne Feinstein in her dispute with the Central Intelligence Agency.
Tuesday morning Feinstein accused the CIA of potentially violating the law, the Constitution, and an executive order barring the agency from domestic spying, saying the CIA had without permission searched computers being used by Senate intelligence committee staffers to investigate the Bush-era torture program. The CIA has accused the committee staff of improperly accessing CIA documents.
Some Senate Republicans backed Feinstein in a series of early statements. “This is dangerous to a democracy,” South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said on Tuesday. “Heads should roll. People should go to jail, if it’s true. The legislative branch should declare war on the CIA, if it’s true.” Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain called for a “thorough and complete investigation.”
Graham and McCain, however, may be outliers: Both senators have in the past publicly criticized the CIA over the subject of the investigation — the Bush-era detention and coercive interrogation program — which sets them apart from their colleagues. Other high-profile Republicans, like Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, have simply declined to comment. And there are indications that, despite the seriousness of Feinstein’s allegations, Republican may side with the CIA.
Wednesday afternoon, Georgia Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss, the vice-chair of the Senate intelligence committee, gave a superficially neutral-sounding speech on the Senate floor stating that “there are still a lot of unanswered questions that must be addressed.”
But Chambliss’s speech nevertheless subtly backed the CIA’s version of events. Namely, Chambliss referred to the computers set up for the committee investigation as “CIA computers,” rather than the committee’s computers. That characterization is important, because if they’re the CIA’s computers, than the CIA didn’t engage in any spying when it searched them. Chambliss also said a “special investigator” may be needed, despite the fact that the Department of Justice is already looking into the matter.
Chambliss also noted that Republican staffers didn’t participate in the Senate investigation into Bush-era torture. In fact, Chambliss was the only member of the committee who voted against opening the investigation in the first place. Republicans on the committee later withdrew from the investigation, after Attorney General Eric Holder began probing into whether anyone at the CIA had broken any laws. Holder’s investigation ended fruitlessly.
That didn’t stop Chambliss for crediting torture with the operation that ended with Osama bin Laden’s death in 2011. “There has been a lot of debate in this country about our detention and interrogation policy, but this is probably one of the clearest examples of the extraordinary value of the information we have been able to gather from the CIA’s detention and interrogation program,” Chambliss said at the time. “If we did not have access to this information, Osama bin Laden would likely still be operating undetected today.”









