Continued White House foot-dragging on the declassification of a much-anticipated Senate torture report is raising concerns that the administration is holding out until Republicans take over the chamber and kill the report themselves.
Senator Dianne Feinstein’s intelligence committee sent a 480-page executive summary of its extensive report on the CIA’s abuse of detainees to the White House for declassification more than six months ago.
In August, the White House, working closely with the CIA, sent back redactions that Feinstein and other Senate Democrats said rendered the summary unintelligible and unsupported.
Since then, the wrangling has continued behind closed doors, with projected release dates repeatedly falling by the wayside. The Huffington Post reported this week that White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, a close ally of CIA Director John Brennan, is personally leading the negotiations, suggesting keen interest in their progress — or lack thereof — on the part of Brennan and President Obama.
Human-rights lawyer Scott Horton, who interviewed a wide range of intelligence and administration officials for his upcoming book, “Lords of Secrecy: The National Security Elite and America’s Stealth Foreign Policy,” told The Intercept that the White House and the CIA are hoping a Republican Senate will, in their words, “put an end to this nonsense.”
Stalling for time until after the midterm elections and the start of a Republican-majority session is the “battle plan,” Horton said. “I can tell you that Brennan has told people in the CIA that that’s his prescription for doing it.”
Republicans are widely expected to win control of the Senate Nov. 4.
Victoria Bassetti, a former Senate Judiciary Committee staffer, wrote this week that the administration is playing “stall ball” and that Senate staffers expect Republicans would “spike release of the report” should they take over the chamber.
Asked if the White House is slow-walking the negotiations on purpose, National Security Council spokesperson Bernadette Meehan replied:
The President has been clear that he wants this process completed as expeditiously as possible and he’s also been clear that it must be done consistent with our national security. The redactions to date were the result of an extensive and unprecedented interagency process, headed up by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, to protect sensitive classified information. We are continuing a constructive dialogue with the Committee.
She notably did not rule out the possibility that negotiations will extend beyond the 113th Congress.
The report, which Senate Democratic staffers worked on for five years, is over 6,000 pages long and is said to disclose new details about both the CIA’s brutal and systemic abuse of detainees and the pattern of deceit CIA officials used to hide what they had done.
The CIA’s hostility toward the Senate investigation burst into public view in March, when Feinstein disclosed that the CIA had improperly searched computers being used by her staffers — and then had leveled false charges against those staffers in an attempt to intimidate them. Brennan at first angrily denied those charges, then apologized, then angrily qualified his apology for the CIA’s actions.
Critics of the Bush administration’s torture regime are hoping the report’s release will lead to a long-sought moment of accountability. That, of course, is exactly what Republicans and people who were part of the regime — many of who are still in top positions in the intelligence community, and close to Obama — don’t want.
But the committee’s investigation was narrowly limited to the CIA’s involvement in torture programs. That will leave the people who gave the CIA its orders — starting with Dick Cheney and George Bush — essentially off the hook.
The findings also don’t address the considerably more widespread and common use of torture by the military at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere. A bipartisan Senate Armed Services Committee report in December 2008 definitively blamed senior Bush administration officials for sanctioning those practices. But coming at a time when the nation was anticipating a period of intense change as Obama succeeded Bush, the reaction was muted.
Should Republicans win control of the Senate as expected, the chairmanship of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence would be expected to go to Richard Burr of North Carolina. (The current ranking member, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, is retiring.)
Burr’s office declined to comment about what he would do as chairman if the release of the report were still unresolved. But his hostility toward the report is clear. Although he voted in favor of declassifying it in April, he said he was doing so people could see how wrong it was:
In December 2012, I joined several of my colleagues in voting against this report. At that time, I was deeply concerned about the factual inaccuracies contained within the report, including inaccurate information relating to the details of the interrogation program and other information provided by detainees. I had hoped that the authors of the report would ensure that the American public was provided facts, not fiction. I am extremely disappointed in the flawed and biased results of their work.
However, I voted today to declassify the report to give the American people the opportunity to make their own judgments. I am confident that they will agree that a 6,300 page report based on a cold document review, without a single interview of Intelligence Community, Executive Branch, or contract personnel involved, cannot be an accurate representation of any program, let alone this one…
I believe in our Intelligence Community professionals. I believe that they endeavor to make decisions in accordance with the law and in the best interests of our Nation. I believe that this Committee conducts vigorous oversight of Intelligence Community activities and programs, and will continue to do so. And I believe that there are many honorable people who have dedicated their lives to protect our country and we need to allow them to get back to work.
Should the report’s release continue to be delayed by the White House, Senate Democrats could of course take matters into their own hands, either by unilaterally releasing the (already carefully edited) report, which would be constitutionally protected “speech and debate” — or by leaking it.
Photo: Mark Wilson/Getty Images


Ms F. I have a poem for you…
I caught a cop snooping in my house so my husband called the FBI.
What my love didn’t know is that I wrote a letter to those I know.
It had some jabs, some stabs, some corporate info.
But this my dear man didn’t know.
It started a investigation of the nation for a scarlet letter of great intention but without a return address much less
the indignation of some cockeyed situation
that decades of torture would be my subjugation
If there is a letter to be learned its that a terrorist is on the mommy turn
So be aware you cop, congressman, senator, governor and nation
Torture isn’t for Federal Marshals loud noise
Blinking eyes
Gassing toys
These freedoms that are won are made of a bad ass vixon that had nothing to do with Nixon
But it was a war fought by mommie and the Air Force and the surrender was of course
What the health care needed
For a shot she pleaded
So it would all end
And the letters made a friend
He called me Little Weed Star
My my you have come quite so far and we just want you to know that every drop of rain is letting us in on what the hell was to begin a world of spies with prying eyes and now we sing Wide Awake cause Edward Snowden opened the gate…
Lauren would personally like to know what Diane thinks of torture and she is interested in seeing what will be published. But she agrees it will be a fruitless endeavor. Just like the fruit you would like to think her brain is. But it isn’t. Lauren is the hydrogen bomb. She is Lucy. They were wifi signals the French are very aware of. It is a race to the hydrogen bomb. China is capable of mind warfare. It is new technological age of warfare.
First I want to applaud your return to the fray, Froomkin – I really missed your reporting – clear, accurate, annoyed to the max. Re the report, we can’t even get a redacted summary of a half-assed report that doesn’t place blame where it clearly lies or even discuss what is probably 50% or more of the most treaty-breaking torture. Really sad. Oh, we’ll get it all when Hillary’s President….ooops.
Perhaps the headline should read “EVERYONE,” instead of just “OBAMA…”
“Many of who” needs a revisit in the para beginning, “Critics of the Bush administration’s torture regime …”.
Once again: the whole “negotiation” is a fake. Senators, like all member of Congress, have full Constitutional immunity for ANY acts “on the floor of Congress.” So they can release the report, redacted or not, any time they care to. There is precedent: Sen. Grave released the Pentagon Papers on the floor of Congress, placing them in the Congressional Record, thus instantly declassifying them. Feinstein, or any member of the committee, including Udall or Wyden, could do the same with this report, if they cared to.
IOW: it isn’t just the administration that’s stalling. It’s Feinstein, hoping a Republican Senate will get her off the hot seat.
It just goes to show how deep the collusion runs.
To all of you silly fools who thought that re-electing Obama in 2012 prevented a Republican from being president – you got one anyway!
I’m not sure what your point is considering the only other option WAS a Republican (god bless our star-spangled-awesome one party system!). I highly doubt many here thought Obama was going to turn into a progressive/liberal in his second term. So I’m not really sure where: ‘silly fools who thought…’ comes in play.
Let us acknowledge the few and the proud, and dismal failure of the Chosen Few :) Way to upset the entire Congress, guys!
These days it seems that dishonest means are the only way to accomplish anything. Not progress…pure decadence.
Executing torture – what kind of people can do that? Covering it or let it happen – again what kind of people can do that? EMPATHY & CONSCIENCE must have been SUFFOCATED effectively in early childhood. But both are parts of the brain, & the logic part can’t function properly without the connection to the other parts. Insanity is in full swing, & the victims are suffering horrible pain. We’re lock, stock & barrel in the Middle Ages, where people just were swept away by their rage & passions, which they satisfied whatever the cost. No questioning, no considering, no nothing.
There is little difference between the two parties and they are both corrupt to the bone. This is political theater for the masses because nobody will be punished for it. If the Democrats really wanted nail Republicans to the wall then why not expose the crime of 9-11 itself? There is more than enough evidence to warrant the charge that the 9-11 commission was a whitewash and there is probably enough evidence on youtube for a conviction. This doesn’t happen because they are all bought and paid for by our legal bribery known as fundraising. They work very well together at staying in gridlock, avoiding issues, spending our money foolishly and recklessly while they bicker about each other on the TV circuit.
Is Obama Stalling Until Republicans Can Bury the CIA Torture Report ?
um, the answer is easy : Yes, as are all the power elite scumbags plumping for Empire…
as he and his korporate toadies are doing with any/all issues actions which threaten Empire…
and EVERYTHING threatens Empire…
ebola threat ?
well, we don’t really need a surgeon general, let’s just fumble that political football around longer…
et cetera ad nauseum ad infinitum
are we circling the toilet bowl in a clockwise, or counter-clockwise rotation ? ? ?
i’m so dizzy, i can’t tell anymore…
Thank you, Dan, for bringing this issue back to light! Unfortunately, I am almost certain we (US citizens) will never see any meaningful reports which haven’t been absurdly concocted and rehashed by the agencies involved. I am readily waiting for the standard: “we need to look forward, not backwards”, jargon.
We need a Whistleblower here. Perfect opportunity for an enterprising person. Can you imagine what would happen if one suddenly appears. Delicious.
Re-post comment of mine from another thread (sue me):
The Report itself recommends NO PROSECUTIONS WHATEVER.
This makes it practically useless in terms of accountability.
Whether it sees the light of day today or in a year or never, the Report is a distraction from the fact that nothing will be done to punish the US for torture.
If another nation accused of torture decided that they’d talked it over (with themselves) and decided to not prosecute anyone, and produced a belabored, redacted, toothless Report that was passed from desk to desk within that nation’s establishment (and its release delayed absurdly), until finally the internal examination of the event was revealed as too problematic to produce real accountability… anyone independently observing would correctly conclude that the nation’s powerful had AS A UNIT decided to bury the subject beneath theater, merely pretending to have addressed it.
Which is precisely the case here. Feinstein, the CIA, the White House, the Republicans, ALL WORK FOR THE SAME ELITE whether they know it or not.
Think of it from the outside: America is ‘America’ to observers, it isn’t ‘good America” being thwarted by ‘bad America.’ It’s just the US.
Saying pursuing prosecution is too problematic is as lame now as it was when Ford pardoned Nixon. (See ‘With Liberty and Justice For Some’ by Greenwald)
Please at least try to see that the establishment is a self-protective club (“and you and I are not in it” – George Carlin) that puts on a show of self-examination that is no more meaningful than someone accused of fraud deciding to audit themselves and promising to be honest.
With respect, I realize you’re just reporting on the ongoing ‘proceedings,’ but you don’t seem to doubt the earnestness of some participants – which I find naïve.
All the ‘powerful’ within all establishment parties want this to NOT stain America’s history (more) – all of them want the perception that torture was ultimately a forgivable aberration on America’s part. All of this theater is to that end, obviously including the whining and blaming by the CIA and by Feinstein. In my opinion.
The issue of when the Summary or the Report itself is released, or how much is redacted, is a bizarre focus since no accountability will be sought AT ALL, EVER.
Yes.
Is anyone surprised? Obama specializes in covering up for war criminals. In fact, he is one himself.
Th…that…thta’s impossible!!! the man is a Nobel Peace Prize laureate!
So someone should just stand up in the Senate and read the report into the record.
A constitutionally protected action.
The Report claims to find NOTHING that would warrant prosecution.
So reading it aloud or translating it into Klingon is not going to make any difference.
Constitutional? How about prosecuting those ordering and performing cruel and unusual punishment? That would be very ‘Constitutional,’ and a damn sight more productive than “Well it’s redacted here, I’ll just move on…” for hundreds of useless pages of bullshit.
It achieves the end that the Obama Regime wants thwarted- according to this article.
Don’t read too well, do you?
I read simply that you expressed (however sarcastically, I have no way of knowing) that reading the Report aloud would be appropriate, which it wouldn’t, as the whole thing is a charade.
I merely pointed out how wrong you are, and why.
If you wish to convey nuance, I suggest you add it next time.
Yes. that would at least release it, with no risk of being exiled to Russia or imprisoned – short of a constitutional crisis.
Is there some reason i am being censored?
All I did is provide a link to Ralph Nader and Jesse Ventura.
If you people want me to go piss-off, just say so.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y941DO99J2U
Comments, especially those with sinks often take awhile to post. Be patient and it will probably show up.
Uh, links. I mean links. Oh, for an edit function.
Ok.
The “Democrats” won’t leak it. It implicates them, the Obama regime, and his revolting choice of Brennan, in ordering, carrying out, and covering up massive criminal human rights abuses by the Bush/Obama CIA.
Like Eichmann explained by Arendt, most evil doesn’t come through being a monster, but rather by the banality of bureaucrats afraid of losing their livelihoods, just following orders. Eichmann himself in his testimony considered effective resistance to be futile, a sacrifice that would accomplish nothing except create an additional victim. He believed he had given an oath of service to the bureaucracy which would be profoundly disloyal to break. Arendt saw that evil easily came through mediocrity. There are remarkable similarities in our own government bureaucracies, too many of Ward Christensen’s “Little Eichmanns” who have nothing personal against the victims created by the monstrous economic and military hierarchy they do their best to obey, and just like that iconic banal man they don’t think of the consequences or feel any responsibility, even though the killing machine would stop if they did. But like that consummate bureaucrat of the same mindset, they wouldn’t show moral initiative to rebel against wrongful orders on their own, but would be agreeable to it if they were so ordered. So much for our vapid exceptionalism and indispensability, which amounts to a demagogic flattering of lemmings.
There are called Enablers. I as a child set at my Uncles knees and heard them speak of their service in and horrors of World War II. They talked of how Hitler and Nazis came to be. Not all at once like I am the Führer follow me and we will cause World devastation and along the way, kill some Jews, gays, gypsies, Catholics and many others, won’t that be fun. No, not all at once but by a gradual loss of freedom and free will, with many enablers expediting the process, see Burt Lancaster’s performance as Ernst Janning in “Judgment at Nuremburg.” Janning makes a statement condemning himself and his fellow defendants for “going along.” Sadly, I see this going along enablers and process in America now. Currently yielding failed governance with the potential for some future real serious disagreement and disaster.
Nice picture of one of the most gruesome politicians of our time. Please take it down.
Re-post: Please stop picking on my girl. I have written her a love ballad of the same quality as the governance I am given. If I could only find a great artist such as Ted Nugent to sing it, I could put my mission accomplished on it.
To my American girl.
For you service to the police state.
From your secret admirer, Fred Cowan, Soldier and Scientist, LOL XXX.
Spymaster Queen
She my Spy Master Queen
Finest Lady you ever seen
A lady with a ticket to Halls of Power Ball
A lady who has already humped us all
I want to see her dressed in leathers, jack boots and whip.
Love to bend her head back and spread her lips
Just to give the dark- side a big French-kiss.
Drones in the air and murder plots
All her violence makes me HOT.
Bin’s action plan put it all in motion.
Made police state America an executable notion
Mr. Snowden, don’t dare speak truth to power
Don’t you be so brash,
My girl will polish her jack-boots in your “traitor” ass.
Some say she is paid to not see, a “democracy dissenter.”
It Ok the blowback has made her a “One Percenter (1%)”
Politicians blackmail or bribed, Constitutions in the shedder.
So bust a cap in Bin’s ass so we all can feel better.
You know what they say, a deal with the devil leads to a consequence. Let’s act like Feinstein Is still relevant.
The distinction between public and private is important. Let’s demonstrate that they collaborated, held the public hostage, and created a straight line of bullshit. That happened. Let’s let them act like it didn’t happen. Let’s let them act like they have any friends. It appears, obvious.
The Repukians and the Democraps, the two branches of the Fascist Party of America. It will take a lot of blood-letting to bring honesty back to the US and I’m not sure it is worth it. Just let the bloated pig die in its own swill.
The two parties are “Indispensable Enemies”, as Walter Karp made plain years ago.
Each must do the despicable deeds that will get the votes and bribes they need.
Suppression of the torture report by the Republicans will burnish their brand, and criticism of the Republicans on this issue by the Democrats will do likewise for them.
See, its a win-win proposition.
But not for the spectating dupes that take these matters at face value.
Let’s act like that roar went nowhere and was meant with a yawn, as regards Feinstein. Let’s point out that it’s nonthreatening at this point and that corruption is obvious. Let’s act like they set it up at that way and let’s act like rectification is possible. Let’s act like we had to act any way at this point anyway.
What an hilarious article!
Can the democrats hold the perpe-traitors accountable?!
The republicans are coming! The republicans are coming!
As if Dianne Feinstein is really wanting transparency!
This is all a load of pretentiousness to keep the voters (and apparently some writers) within the corporate corral – running in circles and not seeing beyond the knee-deep crap.
The establishment as a whole doesn’t want accountability for torture, for the establishment as a whole ordered it to happen.
The theater of Democrats versus Republicans or Congress versus Intelligence Agencies is literally a charade.
There will be no accountability. The Report itself recommends NO PROSECUTIONS WHATEVER. The delay of the Report, and the delay of the summary of the Report before that, is part of the ‘theater,’ and the theatrical Republicans will doubtless gladly take responsibility for suppression even of the useless Summary and Report as such action bolsters their pantomime presence (as Snidely Whiplash), the faux opposite to the Democrats’ pantomime presence (as Mr. Smith Goes to Washington). It’s all fake, and both parties and all agencies ARE REALLY ON THE SAME SIDE – even if some in those groups don’t actually know it.
Presenting this as Obama selling out to the Republicans implies perhaps this is ‘just him,’ or is a kind of anomaly.
Truth is, the Congressional and Executive and SCOTUS Democrats love to pretend it’s Republican opposition that stalls their ‘good intentions,’ just as the institutional Republicans love the pretense of blaming Democrats for keeping the government ‘too big.’ Meanwhile the establishment as a whole – inclusive of lawmakers in both parties – gobbles greedily at precisely the same lucrative trough of corporatism and militarism…
– with no intentions of EVER holding representatives of the actual “establishment’ accountable for wrongdoing at all.
Yesterday, I saw a Senate campaign ad on TV in which the candidate was in front of the image of a confinement hog farm. The candidate stated that they thought the smell in Washington was worse than a sewage filled hog house and that they would go and clean it up.
From my perspective, the candidate was lacking any sense of irony or sincerity.
Clearly, the pseudo-outsider candidate wanted to be one of the hogs at the trough and would say anything to get into the confinement shed!
I feel embarrassed and can’t help but laugh every time I remember the ad.
Great piece, Mr. Dan, though I personally might’ve still offered some homemade baked goods for leaking an unredacted copy…
Ho hum…just another day in 21st century fascist America.
No need to drag up the past. Let’s look forward.
Remember when Obama promised transparency and to protect whistleblowers? Yeah. That was fun.
Up is the new down. In is the new out. Lies are the new truth.
“It depends upon what the definition of ‘Is’ is.”
It isn’t as “new” as it is getting very old.
I’m sure that the vast majority of those who vote this November will leave the polling places feeling assured of their righteousness after they reinforce the corruption by voting for the same old bullshitters – democrats, republicans, and libertarians.
It just TOO MUCH to ask the voters to see the truth and walk away from these perverts.
Unfortunately, I don’t disagree with a word you wrote. I share your cynicism. I’d love to find a reason not to. But the business of politics these days is just that: A business. And a corrupt one at that.
Nothing will change until we get the money out of politics. For starters.
I must correct you on a misapprehension.
I am not a cynic. My words were an honest assessment of the corruption. If I were a cynic I would not even bother to point these things out.
Granted, I am Not an optimist and I am very pessimistic, but I do not believe that all of the misguided voters are deliberately reinforcing the corruption. I’m sorry if I gave that impression.
I do get snarky.
The real cynics I have met are usually people who chuckle and roll their eyes when I point out the fact of the avaricious corporate control which now passes for government. They think it is foolishness to imagine that things could be done differently. The lesser-evilists are cynics. The believers in “american exceptionalism” are cynics.
This is not a game to me, but it is to the cynics.
My heart goes out to those who are brutalized by this capitalist machine. If I were cynical, I would just shrug my shoulders and think C’est la vie.
Also, “we” can best get the money out of politics if we do not give ANY credence to the words of those politicos who depend upon corporate money and those who support corporate-owned political parties.
I am a realist.
I don’t share your narrow definition of cynicism. But that money is a corrupting influence in government and politics is self-evident. And I don’t believe it is a simple matter of not voting for a specific politician. It’s not about Democrats or even Republicans who are proud of their pro-corporate favoritism.
The system itself needs major reforms because even politicians with the best of intentions are not immune. “We” actually do need to push for and enact legislation that as a a matter of fact and practicality, removes conflicts of interest.
There is NO democrat, republican, or libertarian candidate who is not participating in and enabling fascism.
The system is not going to change. It has to be abandoned and I would estimate (based upon the 2012 election results) that 98 to 99% of the voters are reinforcing corruption. They believe in the system changing itself. I do not believe that will ever happen and the history of the past 100 years clearly shows that – other than a few blips (1929 to 1945 and the 1960’s) the corporate owned system has increased its levels of toxic disintegration while the voters cling to it as if it is a form of salvation.
Fear and arrogance have replaced a sense of duty toward equal justice for the vast majority of voter participants in this fascist system which masquerades as government.
I do not believe that violence is necessary, but it is more and more likely the longer voters keep supporting the corporate predators.
Look at the extent of global violence today. It is the inescapable result of the corporate capitalist machine having control. That machine cannot change itself into promoting equal justice. So, it is in the process of consolidating its militaristic, devious schemes to protect itself from equal justice.
The saddest thing is that so many people with good intentions still cling to the democrat/republican/libertarian fuel for the machine as if it will stop the horrors.
I repeat – it is too much to expect the voters to just walk away from the corruption and, I will add, they cling out of fear and/or arrogance.
This is the great shame of our time.
And for another pontificating poseur, check out Jay Rockefeller “demanding” an explanation from Whisper.
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2014/oct/23/whisper-social-media-app-revelations-location-tracking
We are ruled by the mendacious and the moronic.
The same strategy was used in 2010 with the Bush Tax Cuts. It was astounding when it was announced in late September that the Democratic controlled congress wouldn’t force a vote on the issue before the election (in which the Republicans were certain to win the House). A large majority of the public wanted the tax cuts to expire for high earners (over $250,000); therefore, the run up to an election would seem to have been an opportune time to press the issue. It was a perfect campaign issue, and they just threw it away. The only possible explanation is that Obama and the Democrats didn’t really want what they were pretending to want.
So the Obama White House is apparently quite willing to sabotage the potential opportunity to enact more of his policy ideas so that this report can be buried. I guess that shouldn’t be surprising.
Here in the UK we are still waiting for the results of the Chilcot Inquiry…..
In the meantime, may I introduce Craig Murray to the good people on The Intercept comment section. Sorry a bit off topic.
Craig Murray is an author, broadcaster and human rights activist. He was British Ambassador to Uzbekistan from August 2002 to October 2004 and Rector of the University of Dundee from 2007 to 2010. He now lives in Scotland and today wrote a short article titled “Decade of dissent.”
“It is ten years since I ended my FCO career by going on the Today programme and blowing the whistle on CIA/MI6 complicity in torture. It was on my 46th birthday, and I was in my second year as an Ambassador and my seventh as a top Whitehall civil servant, a member of the Senior Civil Service.
Looking back now, what is most striking are the blatant lies by the FCO that they were not obtaining intelligence from torture. As the BBC reported:
In one he claimed MI6 had used information passed on to it by the CIA but originally obtained in Uzbek torture cells – something strongly denied by the Foreign Office.
I do not think there is a single person in public life or social media nowadays who would not accept that the FCO were simply lying. Jack Straw was blatantly to lie about it to parliament. But ten years ago the public and media knew much less than they know now. Nobody outside secret circles had ever heard the words extraordinary rendition. It was a year later – May 2005 – before the New York Times revealed the CIA was sending people to Uzbekistan to be tortured, precisely as I had stated.
It sounds incredible, but in October 2004 many people believed it was Craig Murray who was a liar, not Jack Straw. Again I do not think there is a single individual today who does not understand that Jack Straw was lying through his teeth. But back in 2004 life was hard for me.
After going on the Today programme I went on the run, in fear for my life. I am not paranoid, remember David Kelly. I first stayed with my old friend Andy Myles in Edinburgh, then I think Chief Executive of the Scottish Liberal Democrats. He was phoned the next morning by the FCO. When he denied knowledge of my whereabouts, they not only said they knew I was staying with him, they said which bedroom I was sleeping in. Ten years ago today I was hiding in Aviemore in the house of my old friend Dominic.
That was the start of a decade as a dissident where I have devoted my life to exposing, and trying to counter, the evil of the neo-conservative policy pursued by our political class at the behest of the corporations who fund them. I have suffered a huge loss in money, status and most of the other normal aspirations. But what I have gained is invaluable. I have respect and love, while Blair and Straw will forever be despised.”
Thank you, comrades in torture.
Nice to see mention of the ‘other’ torture:
“The findings also don’t address the considerably more widespread and common use of torture by the military at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere”
General Petraeus command in Iraq had been up to its neck in torture that makes the CIA’s ‘black sites’ look like a nun whacking a miscreant students fingers with a ruler. Not only that, the man overseeing the business was reporting directly to Petraeus. Not to mention the hypocrisy of Feinstein and her being a case of the pot painting the kettle black in regards to human rights, considering she’s been on-board with the ‘extra-judicial assassinations are legal’ bullshit throughout the course of events:
http://ronaldthomaswest.com/2014/08/03/we-tortured-some-folks/
Dan, you write “Senate Democrats could of course take matters into their own hands, either by unilaterally releasing the (already carefully edited) report, which would be constitutionally protected “speech and debate” — or by leaking it”
Don’t hold your breath leaking the report will do much more than ‘soften the narrative’ on torture (above referenced link) .. the reality would make a full 6,000 page report release look pale and no one is looking at actually coming clean, there’s simply too many complicit criminals. If the rule of law were to be reasserted in the USA, the tens of thousands of criminals bailing out to locations unknown would resemble the Nazi ratlines (escape routes) of World War II
You seem a little miffed, Ronald. Most of your posts are satirical in nature, IMO, but you are calling a spade a spade in this one. In your opinion, has this “government”(regime) always been this criminal or has it just bloomed in the last couple of decades? It sure seems rampant to me and has gotten progressively worse since 9/11. It could just be more apparent to those who choose to see.
@ jgreen: My opinion would be it had been cyclical. U.S. Grant’s post civil war administration was corrupt to the core. Then we had the robber barons and Standard Oil. After that, Calving Coolidge era of looking the other way while the bankers ran wild resulting in the crash of 1929. In each of these examples, the rule of law more or less was reasserted.
Where our republic was sold down the river for good was the National Security Act of 1947. This is where we finally went off the rails by handing off accountability with creating a covert ‘national security’ apparatus vested in the so-called ‘National Security Council.’
This umbrella has led to a little controlled, ever-expanding, oftentimes off-record marriage of the corporate sector with government in what has become the modern ‘national security state.’
Essentially, the National Security Act of 1947 created a terrarium for growing an ethically inverted, sociopath infested, self regenerating, necrotic, cellularized and unaccountable life form altogether independent of oversight.
It’s like the petri dish principle, you create conditions to grow something in an artificial environment and that’s exactly what will happen. In this case what was created is an environment where not only are criminal personalities attracted, but where they flourish and multiply-
ps, here’s as good an explanation as any as to how it came about:
http://www.ratical.org/ratville/JFK/ST/STchp4.html
” When the law was passed, it contained no provision whatsoever either for collection of intelligence or for clandestine activities. However it did contain one clause that left the door ajar for later interpretation and exploitation. The CIA was created by the NSA/47 and placed under the direction of the NSC, a committee. This same act had established the NSC at the same time. Therefore, the CIA’s position relative to the NSC was without practice and precedent; but the law was specific in placing the agency under the direction of that committee, and in not placing the Agency in the Office of the President and directly under his control. In conclusion, this act provided that among the duties the CIA would perform, it would:
. . . (5) perform such other functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the National Security as the NSC may from time to time direct.
This was the inevitable loophole, and as time passed and as the CIA and the ST grew in power and know-how they tested this clause in the Act and began to practice their own interpretation of its meaning. They believed that it meant they could practice clandestine operations. Their perseverance paid off. During the summer of 1948 the NSC issued a directive, number 10/2, which authorized special operations, with two stipulations: (a) Such operations must be secret, and (b) such operations must be plausibly deniable. These were important prerequisites” endquote
Ronald..as usual, your insights and opinion are backed with 99.9% pure gold. Indeed, the National Security Act is the mother lode of our undoing while the Central Intelligence Act is the mainlining vein for IC heroin of evil. What astounds me is how anyone in their right mind would have sold this country down the tube, as when Congress enacted these insidious laws, they handed over the keys to the kingdom. One only need read these pieces of shit to understand the power that was given to the CIA and the IC overall. Notwithstanding the NSA and FISC, the CIA have basically raised their middle finger to the Church Committee while laughing their ass off at the stupidity of Congress and the citizens of the Dumbest Country on the Planet(DCOTPtm). Col. Prouty and Jim Garrison were right. We’re no longer looking over the edge of the abyss…we’re at freefall speed and are about to hit bottom. The torture report is living proof of our inevitable decent to the bottom of the Totalitarianism cesspool. One only need to smell the vomit inducing stench emanating from WDC across Murka to slap ones senses into reality. Unfortunately..there is only one solution left, and those who serve the Corporatacracy knows it which is why an all out assault on the 2nd Amendment will be forthcoming. Mark my words. The monopoly on violence collectivists are already hard at work to this end and will not stop until they achieve it.
@ chronicle: Indeed the 2nd Amendment has been under assault with people like Robert Parry promoting a revisionist history of the anti-federalist founders intent, but it’s more than this. Some of the mass shootings in the USA smell to high heaven of social engineering through terror along the lines of ‘Operation GLADIO’ (google it folks.) This is particularly Aurora & the navy yard:
http://ronaldthomaswest.com/2013/09/19/the-navy-yard-reporting-smells-wrong/
^ It’s not a pretty world behind the curtain folks
Though you haven’t requested it of me, in my opinion, this vicious regime has always been this criminal, ever since it joyfully took the bloody reins from the previous vicious criminal regime, and attempted to out-fascist the fascists at their atrocious games. Obama wanted to prove his military/”national security” bona fides to the master class which he serves, and that involved engaging in rampant torture, murder, and repression at home and abroad, to which he happily acceded.
Good article, Dan. I think you’re spot on with your analysis. I so wish you weren’t, but in this paradigm of no accountability for anyone in power the outlook is grim. As for calling anyone to do the “right” thing and leak the report, you would have to assume that someone with security clearance sufficient to do so reads these articles on The Intercept and the comments. The same names keep showing up in the comments and as I’ve written before, unless we can get more people speaking up, we lack sufficient numbers to be credible enough to be reckoned with. I have to admit the list of names is growing, and the site is less than a year old, so perhaps I just need to be patient. It’s not easy when I see opportunities for change come and go simply because we’re not loud enough. Speak up people.
I think there are a lot more people reading than speaking. I read virtually everything, but rarely comment because the comment system isn’t user-friendly. I hope that once that is improved, more people will speak up.
There are normally quite a few lurkers – far more than bother to comment. Some sites show how many are reading the comments at the moment,
one reason for having to click through to them.
This comment system is no more unfriendly than most. High rate of moderation, a sign the site is takinbg commens seriously,
Can’t let the sheeple get a whiff of the saugage being made in their names and at their expense. Nosiree, bad for business.
All it takes is one honest Senator to read us the document from the floor of the Senate.
Do we have even one honest Senator? Nope.
Honest? What does that have to do with it? The CIA/NSA would make their lives very uncomfortable [with extreme prejudice] if anyone released the report on the floor. They [Congress, other potential leakers] aren’t exactly cowards – they’re afraid for their and their family’s lives. This is the State of despotism we have come to.
They, congress, are indeed cowards and criminals.
Well there’s Dick Durbin. Nope. Chuck Schumer. Nope. Wyden. Nope. Levin. Nope. Well there must be somebody.
Nope ! !
re: last para
I’ve given up hope of a leak. It’d be the right thing to do, and given the way journos have stepped up their security game, it ought to be eminently doable. But, I don’t believe it will happen for two reasons. 1. The staffer who would be the most likely individual to have the sense of integrity likely doesn’t have the security skills and/or the cojones/ovaries to pull it off. 2. The politicians with direct access to the report also lack the technical skills to leak securely but value their sinecure so deeply (and can rationalize their ability to do continued “good work” from the inside so easily) they wouldn’t even think about leaking it.
As for “speech and debate.” Jesus. Don’t make me laugh. Sen Wyden and Sen Udall ought to have done this together months ago. And, if they were at all likely to use that cloak, they would have done so months ago. Nope. Put them both in the second category of the above. As for all their current pontificating (Yes; I’m speaking to you Ron Wyden), cue that famous soliloquy from Macbeth Act 5, Scene 5.
Good perspective on Wyden and Udall. Hadn’t considered them as posers, but your astute analysis has opened my eyes some more. Thanks, Tally.
Should the CIA succeed in defeating Mark Udall in Colorado, he would be remiss in not standing in the well of the Senate and reading all 6,000 pages. The lack of help from Obama’s GOTV effort in Colorado for Udall is telling, and there’s plenty of dirty tricks we’re not seeing.
Yes, exactly, and Wyden is one of my Senators.
Well, it’s interesting speculation, nothing more. If born out in the fullness of time it will be yet another undemocratic manipulation of the governing system.
Really though, people who continue to claim the US Neoliberal Empire is democratic need to be associated with the other “deniers” and “truthers”.
This is an easy leak. Come on, leakers, obviate this political game in service to truth.