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‘Holy Hell’ Over Torture Memos

Attorney General Eric Holder wants to release classified Bush-era interrogation memos. But U.S. intel officials are fiercely lobbying the White House to block him from moving forward.

 

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A fierce internal battle within the White House over the disclosure of internal Justice Department interrogation memos is shaping up as a major test of the Obama administration's commitment to opening up government files about Bush-era counterterrorism policy.

As reported by NEWSWEEK, the White House last month had accepted a recommendation from Attorney General Eric Holder to declassify and publicly release three 2005 memos that graphically describe harsh interrogation techniques approved for the CIA to use against Al Qaeda suspects. But after the story, U.S. intelligence officials, led by senior national-security aide John Brennan, mounted an intense campaign to get the decision reversed, according to a senior administration official familiar with the debate. "Holy hell has broken loose over this," said the official, who asked not to be identified because of political sensitivities.

Brennan is a former senior CIA official who was once considered by Obama for agency director but withdrew his name late last year after public criticism that he was too close to past officials involved in Bush administration decisions. Brennan, who now oversees intelligence issues at the National Security Council, argued that release of the memos could embarrass foreign intelligence services who cooperated with the CIA, either by participating in overseas "extraordinary renditions" of high-level detainees or housing them in overseas "black site" prisons.

Brennan succeeded in persuading CIA Director Leon Panetta to become "engaged" in his efforts to block release, according to the senior official. Their joint arguments stalled plans to declassify the memos even though White House counsel Gregory Craig had already signed off on Holder's recommendation that they should be disclosed, according to an official and another government source familiar with the debate. No final decision has been made, and it is likely Obama will have to resolve the matter, according to the sources who spoke to NEWSWEEK.

The continued internal debate explains the Justice Department's decision late Thursday to ask a federal judge for another two-week delay (until April 16) to file a final response in a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union seeking the release of the memos. The ACLU agreed to the two-week delay only after Justice officials represented that "high-level Government officials will consider for possible release" the three 2005 memos as well as another Aug. 1, 2002, memo on torture, that has long been sought by congressional committees and members of Congress, according to a motion filed by Justice lawyers with U.S. Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein in New York, who is overseeing the case.

The 2002 memo, written by former Justice lawyers Jay Bybee and John Yoo, concluded that waterboarding and other harsh interrogation techniques could be used against Qaeda suspects without violating a federal law that prohibits torture. That memo was publicly withdrawn by the Justice Department in 2004 after its existence became publicly known and sparked a public controversy. But a new set of Justice lawyers—led by Steven Bradbury, the newly installed chief of the department's Office of Legal Counsel—later secretly authored additional memos in the spring of 2005 that essentially approved the same techniques, permitting the agency to barrage terror suspects with a combination of physical and psychological tactics, including head-slapping and frigid temperatures, according to a 2007 New York Times account. Those memos concluded that the harsh interrogation techniques used by the CIA would not violate Geneva Conventions restrictions on "cruel, inhuman and degrading" treatment of prisoners.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: fsteph @ 05/03/2009 4:32:34 PM

    Further evidence of the political myopia of Democrats that will assure their defeat at the polls. To Americans who have fled the Balkanized ranks of the Democratic party, who decry the endless nannytization of the United States pushed on them by socialist democrats, and who believe in the principle that The enemy of my enemy is my friend, the Republican party has provided a welcome home. Republicans have also asked and answered the question ???What credibility can a party that is steered by the moral leadership of Ted Kennedy, enthusiastically embraces the egalitarian fantasies of Earth Father Al Gore, gives a platform to a self-promoting clown like Jesse Jackson, and takes seriously the rantings of Al Sharpton,??? have to those who love America?

  • Posted By: memo2 @ 04/23/2009 8:30:26 AM

    Honest I don't care about all this people, remember we are dealing with inexperience people this administration have no rigth to act and release document's regarding terrorism to the public just like that, to me this is only a psychological-war fare against us, no matter what they do nothing is going to change this people's maind with all this people the only thing have in mind is how to keep you a live with fear, probable next time we capture more terrorist's this administration should provide better facility's with maid's or valet's, kind of sarcasm from me but what they realy doing with all this ? some one can explain !....

  • Posted By: charliefromtexas @ 04/22/2009 2:37:50 PM

    I really want to see John Yoo and Dick Cheney and john Bolton and a few others go to jail.

    Oh, before going to jail, they should be subjected to the methods (waterboarding etc.) until they tell the 'truth'. Then they should be sentenced and locked up in jail.

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