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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Gina Haspel, Trump’s Pick to Lead the CIA, ‘Ran the Interrogation Program,’ Said Former CIA Lawyer Gina Haspels disputed role in torture threatens to derail her nomination to head the CIA. In 2014, a senior ex-CIA official was unequivocal: She was in charge of interrogations. Long before Donald Trump ever nominated Gina Haspel to run the CIA, a memoir from a former CIA top attorney contained a line with the power to do serious damage to her chances. Haspels informal nomination ran into immediate jeopardy last month over her 2002 supervision of the agencys first secret black-site prison, located in Thailand, where two early detainees, Abu Zubaydah and Abdul Rahim al-Nashiri, were tortured. (She directly ran the black site, though after Zubaydahs most intense period of torture that year.) ADVERTISING inRead invented by Teads But in his 2014 book, John Rizzo, a longtime senior CIA lawyer, indicated that Haspel was responsible for the incommunicado detention and torture not of two men, but of dozens, potentially. Former intelligence officials interviewed by The Daily Beast have portrayed Haspels experience similarly. Rizzo, in his memoir, Company Man, looked back on his time in a Langley controversy he likened to a big turd dumped on my desk: the fateful November 2005 decision, made by Haspels then-boss Jose Rodriguez with her support, to destroy 92 videotapes depicting the 2002 torture of Zubaydah and al-Nashiri. Rizzo wrote that Rodriguezs then-chief of staffwho was Haspel, though he didnt name her, as her identity was then an official secretwas deeply involved in the agencys torture program. Jose installed as his chief of staff an officer from the Counterterrorist Center who had previously run the interrogation program, Rizzo wrote. Thats a substantially broader declaration than the history already dogging Haspel, the agencys deputy director, whom the White House formally nominated as its next CIA director late on Tuesday. Related in Politics Intel Chief Wont Pledge Full Release of Haspel Torture File Why Should Gina Haspel Take the Fall for All the Bad Guys? Trumps Dream Cabinet Thinks Hes Wrong About Everything It would be years before Rizzos passage caused any controversy. The CIA did not challenge it when it was published. (The book went through the CIAs pre-publication review, though that only inspects for classified information and isnt a fact-check.) But asked about it on Wednesday, with Haspels role in interrogations still a high-stakes official secret, the agency disputed Rizzos characterization. Much of the public narrative about Deputy Director Haspels career is inaccurate, including this specific claim, said CIA spokesperson Ryan Trapani. Gina Haspel is one of the most qualified persons nominated to be CIA Director. Shes a tested and respected leader who will lead consistent with our mission, expertise, values, and the law. Rizzo, who was acting CIA general counsel during much of the time the torture program occurred, insisted that the passage was correct thenand is still right today. All I can say is that I stand by everything I wrote in my book about the tapes episode, and no one from the Agency has asked me to correct anything I wrote, Rizzo told The Daily Beast. He did not answer follow-up questions. Get The Beast In Your Inbox! Daily Digest Start and finish your day with the top stories from The Daily Beast. Cheat Sheet A speedy, smart summary of all the news you need to know (and nothing you don't). By clicking Subscribe, you agree to have read the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy The sudden dispute underscores the precariousness of Haspels potential directorship. Haspel, a three-decade CIA officer, faces enormous obstacles in the Senate, where intelligence committee members are demanding substantial disclosure of her involvement in post-9/11 renditions, detentions and interrogations. Much of Haspels background during the torture program, as well as her specific role in it, remains classified. To the best of my understanding, she ran the interrogation program... Her becoming director absolutely terrifies me. Once I heard her name, I immediately thought, Oh, God. former CIA official [T]he more we review the classified facts, the more disturbed we are, three key Democratic senators on the panel, Dianne Feinsteinwho led the committees years-long torture inquiryRon Wyden, and Martin Heinrich wrote to CIA Director Mike Pompeo on Monday (PDF). They said they were disturbed both by the actions she has taken during her career and by the CIAs failure to allow the public the opportunity to consider them. Wyden followed up in a USA Today interview Tuesday charging the CIA with a cover-up of Haspels torture record, adding that his concerns about her are are significantly broader than what has been alleged in the press. Declassified documents and Daily Beast sources indicate that Haspel joined the agencys Counterterrorism Center shortly after the 9/11 attacks. Rodriguez, then the self-proclaimed chief operations officer who began running the center in May 2002, writes in his book of taking over a superstar woman to whom he assigned the cover name Jane. Rodriguez had her head one of our earliest black sites, he writes in his 2011 memoir, Hard Measures. In a biographical detail that corresponds to the public record about Haspels career, later she became my right arm as chief of staff when I led the clandestine service. That was in November 2004, when Rodriguez became the CIAs deputy director for operations, a job that got a name change to head of the National Clandestine Service. While its not exactly clear when Haspel left the Counterterrorism Center to rejoin her mentor, Haspel remained at the Center in 2003 and 2004, the period during which CTC was most intensely involved in torture. Rodriguez did not respond to messages seeking comment about Haspel. His co-author, Bill Harlow, a former senior aide to CIA Director George Tenet, said he had no reason to disbelieve anything [Rodriguez] wrote. But Harlow added he wasnt in a position to discuss Haspels agency tenure. Im not specifically aware of the exact timing of her various assignments and couldnt talk about it if I were. As far as I know the agency hasnt declassified it, Harlow told The Daily Beast. But the specifics of Haspels involvement in interrogations is now a frontburner issue for the Senate intelligence committee, and a test for both the committee and the agency about the legacy of torture now that Donald Trump, who has expressed enthusiasm for torture, is president. This isnt the first time that legacy has been a problem for Haspel. In 2013, she was unable to take her old boss Rodriguezs position in 2013. At the time, a knowledgeable former CIA official recalled, there was confusion and surprise that someone with Haspels background in torture could have been a credible candidate for such a senior position. To the best of my understanding, she ran the interrogation program, the official said. Her becoming director absolutely terrifies me, continued the former CIA official. Once I heard her name, I immediately thought, Oh, God. Back then, in a story first reported by The New York Times, Feinsteinthen the Senate committee chairmade it clear to then-director John Brennan that she objected to Haspel leading the CIAs clandestine service. Brennan chose another chief. But by 2017, those obstacles to Haspel had shrunk, apparently. Trump tapped Haspel to be deputy director of the CIA. And despite an attempted deposition of her by two contractor psychologists who designed the torture program, the opposition to that elevation was relatively muted. [T]he more we review the classified facts, the more disturbed we are... both by the actions she has taken during her career and by the CIAs failure to allow the public the opportunity to consider them. Three Democratic senators Over the past month, the CIA and its senior alumni have attempted to redefine Haspel after her impending nomination saw a wave of critical coverage over her role in torture. The agency permitted the release of saccharine biographical details to reporters, like her affinities for Johnny Cash and University of Kentucky basketball, while shedding no light on her history with renditions, detentions, or so-called enhanced interrogations. The agency portrayed her as a gender pioneer whose thwarted ambition to attend West Point, at the time closed to women cadets, would be avenged by her ascension as the agencys first women director. Its public-affairs department blasted this out to reporters with the subject line, CIA Introduces Gina Haspel to the American People. Haspel, if confirmed, would be the first director to rise from the CIAs operational ranks with uninterrupted service since William Colby in 1973, which helps explain her depth of support from within the agency. But shes also the first potential director from the CIA generation involved in post-9/11 torture, making her nomination inescapably a referendum on a dark period of history that the agency wants definitively resolved and human rights advocates say demands vastly more accountability than its received. (Thats another uncomfortable parallel with Colbys tenure.) If Ms. Haspel is confirmed, it will send a terrible message to the world broadly, and to the officers of the CIA more superficially, a former U.S. intelligence official said. The CIA, and its former officers, are pushing so hard for Ms. Haspel to be director because if shes confirmed, it essentially exonerates her, the CIA and all of these former senior CIA officials from their involvement in or their defense of the torture program. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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