Top Ten Surprises of the Brennan Hearing on CIA Torture and Drones /
by Juan Cole

Posted: 08 Feb 2013 01:09 AM PST

The confirmation hearing for John Brennan allowed the country to
grapple with many issues that had been swept under the rug and seldom
discussed in public. While few to none of them were thus resolved, it
does seem to me positive that they were brought up in public.

Surprises?

1. The LAT reports that “Republicans largely focused on whether the
CIA should be capturing more terrorists, rather than just killing
them.” Let’s get this straight. The GOP is pressuring a Democratic
administration to be less bloodthirsty?

2. It turns out the John Brennan wants to turn the drone program over
to the Department of Defense. I have long advocated this step (not
that it matters much what I think about these matters). As Brennan and
his aides point out, having it under the Central Intelligence Agency
makes it automatically covert and removed from public inquiry or
discussion. While the special operations forces in the US military do
not have has much bureaucratic oversight as the CIA, the Department of
Defense in general is in the nature of the case more under civilian
oversight than the CIA. And, its programs are open to public
discussion.

[why is letting one group of bloodthirsty bastards run the
drone/targeted assassination program better than letting another group
of bloodthirsty bastards do so?]

3. The National Journal reports that Brennan also says he recognizes
that the drone program as now carried out has the potential to
undermine international law, and that the US risks setting precedents
that e.g. China and Russia might themselves use for their own purposes
in the near future. While the paternalistic assumption that the US is
responsible but lesser races are not is problematic, to say the least,
the point– that US policy is often cited in justification for
controversial actions by other countries– is correct. The problem is
that Brennan and Obama seem to be in the position of the young St.
Augustine, who is alleged to have prayed that God make him virtuous,
but “not yet.”

4. Brennan alleges that he objected to the use of waterboarding when
he was deputy executive director of the CIA, but did not pursue the
matter because it was being done in a different section of the agency.
Hunh? Is it that he was in the Directorate of Intelligence and it was
the Directorate of Operations guys who were waterboarding? Isn’t he
implying that there are black ops being run by rogue parts of the
agency that aren’t open to influence from even deputy executive
directors?

[if it did, how could THAT happen? can you spell "plausible deniability"?]

5. The LAT says that Brennan has now concluded, after a 6,000 page
review distilled into a 300-page summary, that stress positions,
humiliations such as nudity, and waterboarding (which I will call
torture even though he would not) produced no useful intelligence. I
would go further and argue that actually the torture produced key
disinformation for which Washington often fell, sending it off on wild
goose chases like invading Iraq.

6. Likewise, LAT notes that “Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.)
said the interrogation program was ‘corrupted by personnel with
pecuniary conflicts of interest.’” Hunh? Somebody was making money off
the torture? Who, how and why? You can’t just leave us hanging with
that tidbit, Sen. Rockefeller!

7. The CIA is telling Sen. Diane Feinstein that the number of innocent
civilians killed by US drone strikes annually has typically been in
single digits, but also forbade her to say that publicly because
everything about drones is classified. If this allegation is true, the
CIA is not as good at counting as the young British journalists at the
Bureau of Investigative Journalism (scroll down).

8. It turns out that Americans, when asked, think that droning
American citizens is illegal, and that they don’t support the drone
program if it means killing innocent civilians along with militants.
As usual, Americans turn out to be mostly center-left on policy when
anyone bothers actually to ask their opinion. Sen. Ron Wyden, among
our foremost exponents of the rule of law in these matters, turns out
to have an enormous constituency!

9. When senators pressed Brennan to have judicial oversight of drone
strike decisions where they concerned Americans, he said it could be
considered but doubted whether a court could evaluate intelligence on
whether a militant posed a threat. Why can intelligence bureaucrats
make that evaluation but judges cannot? Occasionally the arrogance of
the intelligence aristocracy peaked out at the hearing.

10. Administration officials are admitting that the drone program,
which is allegedly authorized by the 2001 congressional authorization
for the use of military force, would be brought into legal question if
al-Qaeda were declared defeated, thus putting an ending parenthesis
around the AUMF. But I argue that the AUMF is itself unconstitutional,
since it went beyond calling for hunting down and punishing the
plotters of 9/11 to creating a class of persons (“al-Qaeda members”)
who are objects of a Bill of Attainder. You can’t actually declare war
on a small civilian organization that is spread over the world. There
is no formal definition of an al-Qaeda member, there is no real way to
decide who is ‘operational’ and who isn’t, and there is a tendency in
the US government to use ‘al-Qaeda’ to describe all militant and/or
inconvenient Muslim movements. In fact, the NYT revealed that the US
routinely ex post facto puts all young men killed in a drone strike in
the category of ‘militants,’ even if it has no idea who they are. Most
living actual al-Qaeda members had nothing to do with 9/11 and many
are critics of it. The hypocrisy of all this is obvious in Libya,
where the US cooperated with Abdel Hakim Belhadj, who became the
security director for post-revolutionary Tripoli, even though he could
be droned at will by President Obama any day of the week according to
current US policy. The entire thing is a definitional, constitutional
and legal mess, and Obama should end it all before going out of
office.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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