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CIA chiefs to Obama: Cancel probe into interrogation methods

By Tony Romm - 09/18/09 01:30 PM ET

Seven former CIA chiefs on Friday urged the Obama administration to halt its investigation of the agency's interrogation methods, predicting the latest inquiry would only foster "an atmosphere of continuous jeopardy."

The retired agency heads — John Deutch, Porter Goss, Michael Hayden, James R. Schlesinger, George Tenet, William Webster and R. James Woolsey — also warned the investigation could hamper the government's intelligence-gathering abilities and deter other nations from working with the United States.

"Success in intelligence often depends on surprise and deception and on creating uncertainty in the mind of an enemy," the seven former CIA directors wrote in a letter to the president. "But, the administration must be mindful that public disclosure about past intelligence operations can only help al Qaeda elude U.S. intelligence and plan future operations."

Scrutiny and criticism almost immediately greeted Attorney General Eric Holder's announcement in August that the Justice Department would investigate the CIA's interrogation techniques. A number of former Cabinet members and lawmakers — from former Vice President Dick Cheney to these seven former CIA directors — have asked Obama to call the probe off, even alleging the inquiry is little more than a political stunt.

But the Obama administration has said it stands behind Holder's decision, arguing it has no right to interfere with the Justice Department's work. It has also insisted the special prosecutor appointed to manage the case has no partisan motivations.

Despite the White House's assurances, the former intelligence chiefs argued on Friday that previous investigations into the CIA's conduct were sufficient. Additional inquiries, they added, would only burden some agents, deter others and damage the agency itself.

"Those men and women who undertake difficult intelligence assignments in the aftermath of an attack such as Sept. 11 must believe there is permanence in the legal rules that govern their actions," the former CIA leaders wrote.

"They must be free, as the chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, Sen. Lieberman, has put it: 'to do their dangerous and critical jobs without worrying that years from now a future attorney general will authorize a criminal investigation of them for behavior that a previous attorney general concluded was authorized and legal,'” they added.

Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/59415-cia-chiefs-to-obama-cancel-interrogation-probe

Comments (26)

CIA should investigate Obama!BY BigTenAnnie on 09/18/2009 at 15:16
Stansfield Turner, CIA Director under Jimmy Carter, again disappoints by not signing. Others missing — President George H.W. Bush and Secretary of Defense Gates — you would think be giving their advice in private and there is no reason to believe it differs from the 7 who signed.BY graham on 09/18/2009 at 15:47
Uh… yeah, bigtenannie. The CIA should investigate Obama. Brilliant. That has ANYthing to do with the CIA wishing to go about, torturing people, with the American people turning a blind eye to what's being done in their name. Glad you sleep well at night.BY HonestAbe on 09/18/2009 at 16:09
IT ISNT UP TO THE PRESIDENT… THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES IS AN INDEPENDENT LAWYER FOR THE PEOPLE IF HE SAYS INVESTIGATE WELL UNLESS YOU HAVE DONE WRONG WHY CRY ABOUT IT.. DONT THE AMECAN PEOPLE DESERVE THE FULL TRUTH??BY JOHN on 09/18/2009 at 16:31
Why is it criminal to pour water over terrorist's heads who kill, maim, and destroy. But we drill a hole in an infant's head call it choice and freedom and a right to fight over. Skewed priorities!BY Winfield on 09/18/2009 at 17:06
Find out who is the most powerful man you've never heard of: David AddingtonIn November 2006, the German government received a complaint seeking the prosecution of David Addington and 15 other former U.S. government officials for alleged war crimes.David Addington once said that "we're one bomb away from getting rid of that obnoxious court," referring to the secret United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which oversees clandestine wiretapping. Addington was the author of the controlling legal and technical documents for the Bush administration's warrantless surveillance program, typing the documents on a Tempest-shielded computer across from his desk in room 268 of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building and storing them in a vault in his office.Former Secretary of State Colin Powell is alleged to have remarked in private, regarding who was responsible for the NSA wiretapping of U.S. citizens without a warrant: "It's Addington," and further, that "he doesn't care about the Constitution."BY GRACE on 09/18/2009 at 17:24
Shouldn't they have addressed it to Eric Holder?BY joonypie on 09/18/2009 at 19:42
Everyone should read the actual letter. I think my official reply would have been…"Are you *bleeping* kidding me with this? Seven former CIA directors don't want the CIA investigated for past activities…wow, I'm shocked. While I'm sure your internal investigation uncovered volumes of useful information, umm…yeah, I'm gonna have to go ahead and let the attorney general do his thing on this one."BY RooneyDee on 09/18/2009 at 20:48
Graham — Admiral Stansfield Turner — appointed by Jimmy Carter as Dir of the CIA — both were out of high level Naval positions — Naval Intelligence had been completely "turned" (compromised) by the GRU, the Soviet Military Intelligence — This became evident later on with the exposure of the Walker family — Under Carter and Turner, the CIA was decimated by the Church Committee which had devastating consequences on 9/11 — Both Carter and Turner were "encouraged" to leave public life at the end of Carter's presidency — Turner's plane was shot down over Central America approximately 5 years ago — The surmise is that it was an attempted KGB bit of "wet work" — Turner knew too much — His wife was killed instead of him — To say that Carter is loquacious is to dramatically understate — Does anyone believe he would voluntarily fade away? — In view of the above, what do you suppose would account for the thirty years of silence from Carter, until recently? — What would now account for his recent forays into "accepted" enemy territory with his statements of solidarity? — What would account for his statements regarding "racism"? — Carter was given a choice to dedicate himself to "charitable works" or be exposed — Do you really think he ever hammered a nail in one Habitat For Homes? — He feels relatively safe because those who knew the truth have died off and the documents will never come to light in our lifetime — But, he is full of vengeance and can not help himself — He is treading dangerous waters — KGB files, opened after Gorbachev, provided damning information from the other side—.BY cme on 09/18/2009 at 21:09
Politics that help the president but hurt the US. Interesting that there are a few issues that members of both sides are now in disagreement with the President on.BY Ralph Crammer on 09/18/2009 at 23:11

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