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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: What’s the Next Step To Stop Torture? I want you to listen to me, said George Tenet lunging forward from his chair, his index finger outstretched and pointed menacingly at CBS Scott Pelley, We dont torture people; we dont torture people; we dont torture people; we dont torture people; we dont torture people! Appearing on 60 Minutes on April 29, 2007, to hawk his memoir At the Center of the Storm, former CIA Director Tenet was imperiously definitive on the issue of CIA and torture. Could he have thought that repeating his denial five times, with the appropriate theatrics, would compel credulity? Is this the kind of assertion over reality that worked at CIA Headquarters during his disastrous tenure? The frequently pliant Pelley seemed unmoved this time since the basic facts about the CIAs waterboarding and other torture of war on terror detainees were well known by then. You would have had to be deaf and dumb to be unaware that Tenet had eagerly embraced the role of overseer in the Bush/Cheney dark side torture centers after 9/11. In the memoir a kind of apologia sans apology Tenet was less self-confident and pugnacious than on 60 Minutes. While emphasizing the importance of detaining and interrogating al-Qaeda operatives around the world, he betrayed some worry that the chickens might some day come home to roost. Enter the feathered fowl this week with the release of the Senate report on CIA torture and all the mind-numbing details about lengthy sleep deprivations, painful stress positions, waterboarding and rectal rehydration. One remaining question now is whether egg on Tenets face will be allowed to suffice as his only punishment, or whether he and his deputy-in-crime John McLaughlin will end up in prison where they, George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and several other senior officials properly belong. The usual suspects are already crying foul over an extraordinarily professional investigation by Senate Intelligence Committee staffers and committee chair, Dianne Feinstein, who refused to chicken out and abandon her investigators despite political pressure to do so. Possibly dreading this day, Tenet wrote in his memoir: We raised the importance of being able to detain unilaterally al-Qaida operatives around the world.
We were going to pursue al-Qaida terrorists in ninety-two countries.
With the right authorities, policy determination, and great officers, we were confident we could get it done.
Sure, it was a risky proposition when you looked at it from a policy makers point of view. We were asking for and we would be given as many authorities as CIA ever had. Things could blow up. People, me among them, could end up spending some of the worst days of our lives justifying before congressional overseers our new freedom to act. (At the Center of the Storm, p. 177-178.) Note, however, that Tenet didnt anticipate spending some of the worst days of our lives in a federal prison. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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