Two entire days of torture talk were enough for John Brennan. The embattled CIA director, accused of spying on Congress and concealing details about years of CIA abuses, just wants to move on.
“My fervent hope is that we can put aside this debate and move forward to focus on issues relevant to our current national security challenges.”
Because what could be less relevant than the fact that dozens of people were tortured, the CIA held no one accountable, it won’t release an internal review of the detention programs, it broke into congressional computers to spy on Senate staff, and former directors appear to have systematically misled the executive and legislative branches of government?
Yes, Brennan told reporters gathered at Langley on Thursday, mistakes were made. Some CIA officers were out of bounds, and the tactics they used were harsh, even “abhorrent.” “And we fell short when it came to holding some officers accountable for their mistakes.” But the fact is, “we are not a perfect institution,” Brennan said.
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The 500-page summary of the Senate intelligence report released earlier this week seems to confirm Brennan’s assessment.
For years, the American public has known that the CIA operated secret detention facilities that at least three men were subjected to waterboarding there and that other abuses occurred.
What was unknown before this week is that CIA officers forced rectal feedings on detainees; dragged naked and hooded men up and down corridors; stuck someone in a coffin-like box for 12 days, and deprived others of sleep for 180 hours at a time. Roughly 20% of the detainees were wrongly held; some were forced to stand for hours on broken bones; they were threatened with power drills. One man chained naked to a cold concrete floor died of hypothermia.
Were those acts of torture? Brennan wouldn’t say. “I will leave to others how they might want to label those activities.”
Did they produce valuable intelligence? Brennan can’t know.
“The cause and effect relationship,” between the use of brutal tactics “and the ultimate provision of information is unknown and unknowable,” Brennan said. Democratic senators who authored the report disagreed.
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