Responding to former CIA Director Michael Hayden’s loaded remarks calling a Senate committee chairwoman too “emotional,” top Democrats unleashed a broad counterattack this week panning the “condescending” comments.
California Sen. Dianne Feinstein saw several Democratic colleagues come to her defense Monday after Hayden suggested the intelligence committee chairwoman was was not objective in the Senate’s report on Bush-era torture and interrogation tactics.
“Gen. Hayden condescendingly accused Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein of being too emotional,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said in a speech on the Senate floor. “She has been fearless. She has been thorough and fair. And for this man to say that because she criticizes tactics led by Gen. Hayden—that was torture—she is being too emotional? I don’t think so.”
The rift broke out over the weekend during Hayden’s appearance on on Fox News Sunday. Hayden, who helmed both the CIA and the National Security Agency under former President George W. Bush, scoffed at Feinstein’s assertions that her committee’s landmark report on CIA interrogation should be made public.
“Now that sentence that the motivation for the report may show deep emotional feeling on the part of the senator,” Hayden told host Chris Wallace. “But I don’t think it leads you to an objective report.”
Other senators lashed out at Hayden’s comments–which targeted only Feinstein and none of her male colleagues–for crossing the line.
Hayden’s “baseless smear” went “beyond the pale,” said Sen. Mark Udall, a Colorado Democrat, in a statement Monday. “I highly doubt he would call a male chairman too ‘emotional.’”









