Former Vice President Dick Cheney is “proud” of the “tone and attitude” he set at the CIA, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said Sunday on CNN’s State of the Union, amid growing tension between the Agency and the Senate Intelligence Committee over the declassification of a Bush-era torture report that the Senate says will show the CIA misled the American public.
“I do believe that during the Bush-Cheney administration, that Vice President Cheney set a tone and an attitude for the CIA,” Pelosi said. “Many people in the CIA are so patriotic, they protect our country in a way to avoid violence, etc. But the attitude that was there was very…I think it came from Dick Cheney. That’s what I believe.”
“I think he’s proud of it,” Pelosi added.
Moments later, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers called Pelosi out for politicizing the controversy over the report ahead of the 2014 midterm elections.
“What worries me about that more than any other statement is that politicizes this in a way that’s horribly counterproductive and likely to lead people to the wrong conclusions,” Rogers said on State of the Union.









