Democratic senators lashed out at the Central Intelligence Agency Tuesday about redactions to the Senate Intelligence Committee’s report on Bush-era torture techniques.
“The redactions that CIA has proposed to the intelligence committee’s report on CIA interrogations are totally unacceptable,” said Michigan Democratic Sen. Carl Levin, chair of the armed services committee, which conducted its own inquiry into Bush-era interrogation. “Classification should be used to protect sources and methods or the disclosure of information which could compromise national security, not to avoid disclosure of improper acts or embarrassing information.”
California Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the chair of the intelligence committee, played good cop — but her frustrations were still apparent. She indicated in a statement wanting to work with the administration to excise “redactions that eliminate or obscure key facts that support the report’s findings and conclusions.”
The Senate Intelligence Committee’s report is said to be highly critical of the so-called “enhanced interrogation” program, concluding it was brutal and useless. The redactions to the Senate investigation is just the latest example of how far the CIA has gone to defend its conduct during the Bush era. The intelligence committee’s investigation was completed by 2012, but delayed by the CIA’s objections.
CIA Director John Brennan was forced to apologize last week, admitting that CIA officials had breached a computer network set up for committee staffers. Intelligence committee staff had discovered an internal CIA document that undermined agency criticisms of the report and supported the committee’s conclusions.









