Paper Trail
In 2003, according to the former and current officials, senior officers of the National Clandestine Service, the CIA division that conducts undercover espionage operations overseas, began expressing concern to CIA lawyers and management about what should be done with the tapes. As a result of these concerns, discussions were held between top Clandestine Service executives and the most senior CIA managers about the tapes' future. Initially, according to a former official, the most senior CIA official involved in the discussions was agency director George Tenet. When Tenet left the agency in 2004 and was replaced as chief by former House Intelligence Committee chairman Porter Goss, the Clandestine Service officers then raised the issue of what to do about the tapes with Goss.
Throughout the same period, said one of the former officials, a senior CIA lawyer, John Rizzo, now the agency's acting general counsel, was also conducting discussions on what to do with the tapes with White House lawyer Harriet Miers. Two sources said that Rizzo also discussed the issue with officials at the Justice Department, which had issued classified guidelines outlining how the CIA's interrogation program should operate.
The reason CIA officials involved the White House and Justice Department in discussions about the disposition of the tapes was that CIA officials viewed the CIA's terrorist interrogation and detention program—including the use of "enhanced" interrogation techniques—as having been imposed on the agency by the White House. "It was a political issue," said the former official, and therefore CIA officials believed that the decision as to what to do with the tapes should be made at a political level, by Miers—a former personal lawyer to President Bush and later White House staff secretary and counsel—or someone else directly representing the president.
The current and former officials said that discussions between Clandestine Service officials and their superiors and between the CIA and White House unfolded in what one source described as "fits and starts" between 2003, when the matter first arose, and late 2005, when Jose Rodriguez Jr., then head of the Clandestine Service and still a CIA officer today, made the final decision that the tapes should be destroyed. People who are familiar with the views of both former CIA chiefs Tenet and Goss (and who spoke to NEWSWEEK anonymously because of the sensitivity of the issue) have said that at the time the question of the tapes' destruction was under discussion, both CIA directors indicated that they believed it would be unwise to destroy the tapes. The tapes' destruction actually occurred when Goss headed the agency—but one of the sources familiar with his views said that Goss thought he had an "understanding" with Clandestine Service officials that the tapes would be preserved and was unhappy to learn after the fact that the tapes had indeed been destroyed.
Rodriguez could not be reached for comment. Mark Mansfield, the CIA's chief spokesman, said that because the tapes controversy was now the subject of a preliminary investigation by the Justice Department and the CIA's own inspector general, it would be "inappropriate" for him to comment on details related to the issue. Asked for comment on the role of Miers or other administration officials in discussions about how to dispose of the tapes, Tony Fratto, a White House spokesman, told NEWSWEEK, "While the CIA and [Justice Department]worked jointly to gather facts, we're going to support their efforts … and part of that support means that we're not commenting further on this." Miers did not respond to NEWSWEEK's request for comment.
Current and former officials familiar with Rizzo's views said he was never comfortable with the idea of the tapes being destroyed. But Clandestine Service officials involved in the matter believe they never got explicit instructions from him to preserve the tapes.
Member Comments
Posted By: moyafoyah @ 01/14/2008 12:11:59 AM
Comment: According to information posted on the website www.asecondlookatthesaudis.com, Zubaidah's interrogation was designed to trick him into believing he'd been handed over to the Saudis with the idea that fear of their well-known torture techniques would scare him into revealing information. To their surprise, he was relieved to think this, and promptly gave his interrogators, from memory, the personal cell phone numbers of very high ranking members of the Saudi Royal family and said they would be given instructions. Public knowledge of this would expose the relationship between the Saudi govenment and Al-Qaeda. American oil interests (the Bush family) are too dependent on the House of Saud to allow this to happen, therefore the tapes were ordered destroyed.
Posted By: faminchin @ 01/03/2008 7:08:01 PM
Comment: There have been many things that have confused me over the past 6 years, but this has to be the one that takes the cake. So the same congress people that demanded Scooter Libby be imprisioned for leaking Plame's name, now demand who ever destroyed these tapes to hide the idenity of the CIA operatives be punished as well. It's a damned if you do and damned if you don't!
For those who consider waterboarding to be torture, consider this fact. The CIA waterboard's their own operatives as part of their training.
What I would like to see one time is some of these congressmen express their outrage over our enemy beheading innocent civilians. If Democrats would just go after our enemies, with the same determination they have went after Bush, we would have defeated terrorism years ago and all our troops would already be home!
Posted By: Texas Jake @ 12/28/2007 8:52:10 AM
Comment: PEOPLE have been abusing other people through out all of history. Both the moral and immoral individuals have done so equally. What the tapes actually show cannot truly surprise anyone, so who cares what is on them, ore what happened to them. My position is simply to protect myself, and keep my loved ones out of harm???s way. Besides, whatever is on the tapes is in the past. Currently, we are paying for a SCAM of an investigation into the matter, costing us billions and accomplishing nothing. Currently, we are reading legitimate news articles from respected publications citing ???unnamed sources speaking under a condition of anonymity because of (fill in the reason)???, and accepting it as real. Americans are living under a nameless, faceless government where opposing versions of the truth are offered to distract us from our own TORTURE: The money is being siphoned off and we are all bound and gagged to the machine. It is time for a Boston Tea Party!