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Delay in Releasing CIA Report Is Sought
Justice Dept. Wants More Time to Review IG's Findings on Detainee Treatment
The Justice Department needs a week to complete its review of a 2004 CIA inspector general's report before releasing it in redacted form to civil liberties advocates, officials said yesterday.
File photo shows leg shackles at the US Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Abu Zubaydah, an accused top Al-Qaeda operative, "nearly died four times" when CIA interrogators tortured him into providing statements, according to government transcripts. (AFP/Pool/File/Brennan Linsley) Government lawyers notified the American Civil Liberties Union of the delay yesterday afternoon, citing a longer-than-expected review process at the CIA. Activists requested the report as part of a longstanding Freedom of Information Act lawsuit focusing on the U.S. government's detention and treatment of terrorism suspects after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
CIA officials sought to redact many sensitive and classified elements of the lengthy report, including details about the use of waterboarding, sleep deprivation and other harsh measures against detainees. The report by the agency's internal watchdog raised questions about the legality of the CIA's strategy and ignited a fierce debate within the agency and the Bush administration after it was completed five years ago.
Tension over how much to disclose in the fight against terrorism continues to roil the highest levels of the Obama administration. After a behind-the-scenes fight, authorities released earlier this year four memos by the Bush Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel that paved the way for information-gathering techniques that critics assert are torture. But at the urging of Defense Department officials, the White House has sought to bar the release of photos depicting detainee abuse on the ground that they could incite violence against U.S. forces.
The report is the most definitive official account to date of the CIA's interrogation system. A heavily redacted version, consisting of a dozen or so paragraphs separated by heavy black boxes and lists of missing pages, was released in May 2008 in response to the ACLU lawsuit. The broad conclusions of the report, as well as its specific assertion that some interrogators exceeded limits approved by the Justice Department, have been disclosed.
Administration officials have been cool to the idea of a congressionally chartered "truth commission" that would explore the origins and effects of the interrogation program. But they have repeatedly been forced to respond to lawsuits they inherited, filed by interest groups that seek sensitive government documents from the Bush era.
New leaders at the Justice Department generally lean toward disclosure, but they are playing a secondary role in the case of the CIA inspector general's report because they did not have a hand in investigating or preparing the report.
Amrit Singh, an ACLU lawyer, said the group is disappointed by the delay. "We can only hope that this delay is a sign that the forces of transparency within the Obama administration are winning over the forces of secrecy and that the report will ultimately be released with minimal redactions," she said. "The CIA should not be permitted to use national security as a pretext for suppressing evidence of its own unlawful conduct."
CIA spokesman George Little said the process "is working just as it should." He rejected the ACLU's allegations of suppressed evidence as "wrong and offensive."
Staff writer Joby Warrick contributed to this report.
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5 Comments so far
Show AllSince this is not a new report, I have to believe the CIA is trying very hard to protect the guilty. Waterboarding is not a secret technique, nor is sleep deprivation, so if they simply redact the references to details of the other techniques, certainly there would be little "revelation" of secret methodology. I would even go so far as to suggest they can redact every proper noun. That way they don't have to reveal the actual identity of any person, living or dead, who was directly or indirectly involved. Even dates could be redacted to only divulge a year since we know the report was prepared in 2004, there isn't too much about the time frame that could be shocking -- it all happens between 9/11/01 and 1/12005. As to the "where" of torture being administered, I don't think anyone would be too inconvenienced not to know the precise site. After all, it is more about the infliction, not the zip code.
My reaction to the CIA foot-dragging is that the scope and volume of US mistreatment must be monumental. It couldn't rival the Nazis. Or could it? How bad must it be that the CIA is so unwilling to reveal anything? Their behavior implies great wrong-doing and fear and loathing of the truth being revealed. They must be so in dread of the consequences for their activities that even casting a shadow over their reputation by their stonewalling is better than revealing the facts of their actions. Whose backside are they protecting?
JH
Very,very interesting points. You bring up an excellent theory. I can't wait to see what they finally hand over.
the accompanying stock photo shows padding on the shackles.
doesn't this prove the government's intention not to hurt anyone?
(CIA spokesman George Little said the process "is working just as it should." )
translation: you'll never know the whole truth.
I thought that we changed America's Torturer-In-Chief. Seems not.
The people being protected, the American torturers, will eventually come home to our neighborhoods, go to bars, get drunk, and tell about their participation to their fellow barflies.
The neighborhoods of America need to know through a better method who the pedophiles are and where they live. We also need to know through a better method who the torturers are and when they move into houses on our street.
Soft and furry leg irons are still shackles. Nasogastric tubes inserted into a prisoner's stomach while he is strapped, shackled, and bound into force-feeding chairs (E.R.C.s manufactured in Denison, IA) are against the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
I don't want to have one of these people live in my neighborhood.