(There is a discrepancy between the heading for this article in the 
online edition below and the print edition. The print heading is "Obama 
Faulted for Supporting Besieged CIA", one that more accurately reflects 
the body of the article. My guess is that some senior editor got some 
flak from the White House over the print heading and softened in the 
online version, giving dubious credit to Obama for ending torture.)

NY Times, Dec. 11 2014
Obama Catches Blame on Tactics of Torture That He Ended
By PETER BAKER

WASHINGTON — President Obama on Wednesday found himself caught in the 
middle of a collision between the Central Intelligence Agency and his 
own Democratic allies, who accused the White House of helping to cover 
up a legacy of torture and put the president on the defensive over an 
interrogation program he never supported.

A day after the Senate Intelligence Committee released a blistering 
report on the C.I.A.’s interrogations of terrorism suspects a decade 
ago, Mr. Obama, who banned such methods when he took office, came under 
fire from Democrats on the committee for declining to endorse the 
report’s conclusion that they were ineffective and standing by the 
C.I.A. director, John O. Brennan.

Mr. Obama’s attempt to find a balance on a polarizing issue inherited 
from his predecessor was seen by those critics as a failure to hold the 
agency accountable.

Senator Mark Udall of Colorado, a Democrat on the committee and a 
longtime critic of the C.I.A. interrogations, took to the Senate floor 
to excoriate the agency for failing to come to terms with its mistakes 
and the White House for enabling its deceptions.

“Director Brennan and the C.I.A. today are continuing to willfully 
provide inaccurate information to misrepresent the efficacy of torture,” 
Mr. Udall said. “In other words, the C.I.A. is lying.”

He added that the president should “purge” the agency leadership, 
including Mr. Brennan. “There can be no cover-up,” Mr. Udall said. 
“There can be no excuses. If there is no moral leadership from the White 
House helping the public understand that the C.I.A.’s torture program 
wasn’t necessary and didn’t save lives or disrupt terrorist plots, then 
what’s to stop the next White House and C.I.A. director from supporting 
torture?”

Senator Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, another Democrat on the 
committee, echoed the sentiment. “I would hope there would be a bit of a 
housecleaning from the White House given the results of this report,” he 
said in an interview. “The fundamental problem here is not just what 
happened but the continued resistance of the leadership of this agency 
to the basics of oversight.”

Mr. Brennan has adamantly denied that the C.I.A. deliberately misled the 
public and plans to defend the agency in a speech at its headquarters on 
Thursday. The White House defended him on Wednesday. “John Brennan is a 
decorated professional and a patriot,” said Josh Earnest, the White 
House press secretary. “And he is somebody that the president relies on 
on a daily basis to keep this country safe.”

After Tuesday’s release of the executive summary of the report, Mr. 
Obama repeated his belief that the techniques used after the attacks of 
Sept. 11, 2001, constituted torture and betrayed American values. But he 
declined to address the fundamental question raised by the report: Did 
they produce meaningful intelligence to stop terrorist attacks, or did 
the C.I.A. mislead the White House and the public about their 
effectiveness as the committee asserted?

That debate put Mr. Obama between two allies: the close adviser and 
former aide he installed as director of the C.I.A. versus Democrats on 
the Intelligence Committee and the liberal base that backs their 
findings. Instead, the president hoped to convince the public that the 
issue has now been confronted and resolved since he signed an order 
barring the controversial interrogation techniques shortly after taking 
office in January 2009.

“He’s between a rock and a hard place,” said Karen Greenberg, director 
of the Center on National Security at the Fordham University School of 
Law. “The intelligence agency has become the lead agency in national 
security, and therefore he’s beholden to it, and there’s no getting 
around that. It’s much bigger than before 9/11. It’s not just about 
Brennan.”

Indeed, in a written statement and a pair of television interviews after 
the report was released on Tuesday, Mr. Obama stressed his respect for 
the “patriots” of the C.I.A. who worked to guard the nation in an 
uncertain and dangerous period, even as he concluded that the methods 
they used “did significant damage to America’s standing in the world.”

While that frustrated critics of the C.I.A. who wanted a more 
unambiguous condemnation of torture and its architects, others said his 
comments struck a reasonable middle ground. “They seemed measured and 
responsible,” said Cesar Conda, an adviser to Republicans like former 
Vice President Dick Cheney and Senator Marco Rubio of Florida. “He’s 
walking a fine line between his base and his duties as commander in chief.”

Instead, Republicans and supporters of the C.I.A. saved their fire for 
the Senate Democrats who issued the report. Mr. Cheney, in his first 
public comments since its release, said he had read only summaries of it 
but denounced the report as “full of crap” and said it was a “flat-out 
lie” to suggest that President George W. Bush was kept in the dark about 
details of the program.

“He knew certainly the techniques,” Mr. Cheney said on Fox News. “We did 
discuss the techniques. There was no effort on our part to keep him from 
that.”

Mr. Cheney scoffed at the suggestion that methods like waterboarding, 
nudity, slapping and sleep deprivation violated human rights. “How nice 
do you want to be to the murderers of 3,000 Americans?” he asked.

For Mr. Obama, the report reopened a fight he had tried to avoid for 
nearly six years. Although he denounced torture during his 2008 
campaign, he has resisted pressure from activists to pursue those 
responsible. His Justice Department re-examined cases of prisoner abuse 
but did not prosecute anyone, and Mr. Obama rejected the creation of a 
“truth commission” and backed the C.I.A. in seeking redactions of the 
Senate report.

Mr. Obama supported the release of the declassified summary and said it 
should help ensure that the country never again violates its fundamental 
values. But as a president receiving regular briefings on terrorist 
threats, he sees the situation differently than he did as a candidate, 
aides have said. In his statement Tuesday, he expressed empathy for the 
“agonizing choices” Mr. Bush faced, and in an interview with Telemundo, 
he declined to say what he would have done in the same circumstances.

At his daily briefing, Mr. Obama’s spokesman, Mr. Earnest, spent an hour 
deflecting questions about whether the president believed the 
interrogations were ineffective and whether anyone should be punished. 
He repeatedly referred the second question to the Justice Department. 
“That is not a question for the president of the United States,” Mr. 
Earnest said.

Mr. Udall argued that it was. His outcry on the Senate floor put the 
question of Mr. Obama’s support for Mr. Brennan squarely on the table. 
The senator said Mr. Brennan’s response to the Senate inquiry 
contradicted information in a review ordered by his predecessor, Leon E. 
Panetta, that mirrored the committee findings.

It was that review that incited a battle this year between Mr. Brennan 
and the committee. When C.I.A. officers suspected that the committee had 
improperly gained access to secure sections of the agency’s computers, 
they read the emails of committee investigators. Mr. Brennan apologized, 
but the incident exacerbated tensions between committee Democrats and 
the C.I.A.

“The C.I.A. has lied to its overseers and the public, destroyed and 
tried to hold back evidence, spied on the Senate, made false charges 
against our staff, and lied about torture and the results of torture,” 
said Mr. Udall, who lost re-election last month. “And no one has been 
held to account.”

Other Democrats expressed more understanding of the president’s 
predicament. “You’re always going to have some tension even within an 
administration,” Senator Bob Casey of Pennsylvania said in an interview. 
“Sometimes the tension can’t be accommodated, but that’s a decision 
he’ll have to make.”
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