Obama gets euphoric CIA welcome

Agence France-Presse


April 20, 2009


LANGLEY, Virginia – President Barack Obama Monday heaped praise on the CIA, 
telling employees not to be discouraged by his release of stunning details on 
the agency's harsh terror interrogations.

The president got an enthusiastic reception as he gave a speech at the agency's 
headquarters, just days after releasing secret memos on Bush-era questioning of 
terror suspects derided by critics as torture.

"Don't be discouraged by what's happened the last few weeks. Don't be 
discouraged that we have to acknowledge potentially we have made some mistakes 
-- that's how we learn," Obama said.

"But the fact that we are willing to acknowledge them and then move forward, 
that is precisely why I am proud to be president of the United States and 
that's why you should be proud to be members of the CIA."

Obama's visit coincided with fresh revelations about the repeated use of 
waterboarding, or near drowning, on up to 266 occasions by CIA interrogators 
against two top Al-Qaeda terror suspects.

Last week, the president released a series of Justice Department memos 
detailing harsh techniques, including waterboarding, sleep deprivation and even 
the use of insects, endorsed by the previous administration of George W. Bush.

The move, in line with a court order, exposed Obama to fierce attacks from 
across the political spectrum.

Former Bush administration officials warned he had tied the hands of the agency 
for the future, damaged individual agents who carried out the questioning or 
offered a propaganda tool to US enemies.

Human rights groups were furious though that Obama simultaneously ruled out 
prosecutions of CIA operatives who carried out interrogations that they view as 
torture, by reasoning agents were acting on orders to defend their country.

The former head of the Central Intelligence Agency, Michael Hayden, warned on 
Sunday that the release of the documents could still leave agents vulnerable to 
civil lawsuits or congressional probes targeting CIA operatives who relied on 
the Bush-era memos to carry out harsh interrogations.

"There will be more revelations. There will be more commissions. There will be 
more investigations," he told the TV program "Fox News Sunday."

This is an agency, he added, "that is at war and is on the frontlines of 
defending America."

The harsh interrogation techniques, Hayden insisted, had succeeded in combating 
Al-Qaeda and saving American lives, something he characterized as "an 
inconvenient truth."

Obama showered praise on the agency operatives who operate in the shadows and 
have played a new and more vital role since the September 11 attacks in 2001.

"I want you to know how much the American people appreciate your service," 
Obama said.

"Sometimes it's hard to acknowledge sacrifices made by the people whose work or 
even identity must remain secret, and that's part of the enormous burden that 
you carry when you sign up."

Obama's visit coincided with revelations that CIA interrogators waterboarded 
Al-Qaeda's September 11 attack mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and another 
top suspect, Abu Zubaydah, on multiple occasions.

The use of the near-drowning technique on the two suspects was contained in the 
small print of a Bush-era Justice Department memo released by Obama last week 
and highlighted by the New York Times Monday.

The document, dated May 30, 2005, revealed that "waterboarding" was used 183 
times on Mohammed during March 2003 and at least 83 times on Zubaydah in August 
2002.

Those totals amount to far greater use of waterboarding than has originally 
been reported and may give further ammunition to those who see the technique as 
torture and an ineffective way of eliciting information. 


http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Obama_gets_euphoric_CIA_welcome_0420.html

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