Former CIA Director Michael Hayden charged Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Dianne Feinstein with getting too “emotional” over the Senate’s report on Bush-era enhanced interrogation techniques, compromising the objectivity of the investigation as a result.
Pointing to Feinstein’s reasoning that the report should be made public to “ensure that an un-American, brutal program of detention and interrogation will never again be considered or permitted,” Hayden, who led the CIA and NSA under former President George W. Bush, told Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace, “Now that sentence that the motivation for the report may show deep emotional feeling on the part of the Senator. But I don’t think it leads you to an objective report.”
Wallace countered, “Forgive me because you and I both know Senator Feinstein. I have the highest regard for her. You’re saying you think she was emotional in these conclusions?”
Hayden — who didn’t use the word to describe any of the men on the Senate committee — said only that the leaked portions of the report don’t tell the full story.
Feinstein responded in a statement Sunday, saying her committee’s report is “objective, based on fact, thoroughly footnoted, and I am certain it will stand on its own merits.”
She pointed to the committee’s 11-3 vote to declassify parts of the report as a bipartisan agreement to let the public “see the facts and reach their own conclusions about the program.”
“The only direction I gave staff was to let the facts speak for themselves,” Feinstein said.









