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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: WSJ Says CIA Chief Wouldn’t Do Anything ‘Inappropriate’—Despite Record of Torture and Coverup WSJ: Under CIA Chief Gina Haspel, an Intelligence Service Returns to the Shadows The Wall Street Journal (5/25/19) says returns to the shadows like thats a good thing. A Wall Street Journal report (5/25/19) by Warren Strobel whitewashed CIA Director Gina Haspels career and put a positive spin on the CIAs insulation from public accountability with its turn towards its greatest opacity in decades. While one might expect CIA officials to support greater secrecy around the organization, its odd that ostensibly independent journalistswith a mission to hold official organizations accountable by informing the publicwould treat less information coming from the agency as a positive development. Yet thats exactly what the Journal report did, depicting Haspels strategy of avoiding backlash from the Trump administration by not publicly contradicting its dubious claims as protecting the agency from the domestic threat of a toxic US political culture. She and her agency have adopted their lowest public profile in decades, Strobel writesjust before summing her up as a CIA director who has been warmly received by the workforce she has spent her life among. In other words, for the Journal, a public intelligence agency sharing its intelligence with the public is a bad thing, unless it supports US foreign policy by agreeing with whatever the Trump administration is saying. This position is echoed in the piece by official sources, like former CIA official and staff director of the House Intelligence Committee Mark Lowenthal, who assures us, Its not going to be any good for her [Haspel] to be out there attracting lightning bolts. However, the most egregious part of Strobels report is its whitewashing of Haspels disturbing record in the CIA by uncritically transmitting glowing endorsements by other CIA officials: Former CIA Deputy Director Michael Morell said he is absolutely confident that Ms. Haspel will push back if policy makers ask the agency to do something it shouldnt. I was told that somebody asked that the agency do something that was inappropriate. Her response was, No. And dont ask again, said Mr. Morell, who hosts the Intelligence Matters podcast. He said he did not have details of the incident. Strange: Thats precisely the opposite of what Haspel did when she was asked to violate domestic and international law by torturing post-9/11 prisoners (euphemized by Strobel as controversies over treatment of detainees), and peddling lies about tortures effectiveness (National Security Archives, 4/26/18). Nor did Haspel say No. And dont ask again, when told to destroy videotape recordings of the CIA inflicting torture on its captives, which was condemned as obstruction by 9/11 Commission chairs Lee Hamilton and Thomas Kean (Intercept, 3/13/18; New York Times, 1/2/08). Haspel actually supervised Detention Site Green in Thailand, one of the USs notorious black sites where suspects were sent to be tortured after being kidnapped and held in another country to evade legal accountability in the US (Washington Post, 11/2/05). Sondra Crossby, a US Navy Reserve doctor with extensive experience treating torture victims around the world, described one of Haspels prisoners as one of the most traumatized individuals I have ever seen. John Kiriakou, a former CIA official not cited in this laudatory profile, said that Haspel was known to other colleagues as Bloody Gina because people like her tortured for the sake of torture, not for the sake of gathering information (Democracy Now, 3/14/18). Donald Trump, John Bolton and Gina Haspel Detail of Wall Street Journal photo (5/25/19) of Gina Haspel with Donald Trump and national security advisor John Bolton, all overseen by the spirit of Andrew Jackson. (photo: Zuma Press) Many of Haspels champions have offered the irrelevant and unacceptable Nuremberg Defense of just following orders to shield her from criticism. Morell himself is one of those people, as he praised her nomination as deputy director specifically because she obediently follows immoral orders (Cipher Brief, 2/2/17): Haspel does not shy away from the toughest jobs; in fact, she gravitates toward them. Some of the assignments that she took on have later come under political fire, but in each case she was following the lawful orders of the president. Morell, as FAIR (10/29/13) has noted, is a propagandist who denies that the CIA engaged in what is indisputably torture, and echoes CIA lies about drone strikes being a very precise weapon, with very low collateral damage. Such dishonesty is par for the course for CIA higher-ups (Guardian, 1/7/13). Strobel presumably knows this, as FAIR (Extra!, 4/06) has also noted that Strobel provided some of the most critical reporting on the Bush Jr. administrations WMD hoax in real time, as Morell was doing his best to advance it. That Morell would defend Haspel is predictable, given that he conducted an internal investigation clearing her of any wrongdoing (Intercept, 5/14/18). Since Strobels report depends on current and former intelligence officials as sources, its unsurprising that Haspel is considered to be a good steward of the CIA precisely because she wont be a transformational leader who would dare to do radical things like respecting the US Constitutions rejection of cruel and unusual punishment and international humanitarian law. The piece downplays the CIAs illegal activities as mere controversies, and presents Haspel and the CIAs attempts to avoid scrutiny and accountability as no small accomplishment. Perhaps if outlets like the Wall Street Journal provided less adulatory coverage of the CIAs leaders and the organizations illicit activities, it would be harder for its members like Bloody Gina Haspel to get away with lying. Perhaps instead of getting promotions, theyd face accountability for their actions (FAIR.org, 5/20/09; NBC, 2/9/11). You can send letters to the editor of the Wall Street Journal at wsj.ltrs@wsj.com. 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