Nothing yet from the Bush torture apologists?

I guess Rush hasn't told them what to think yet.....

On May 13, 9:03 pm, VT VirtualTruth <[email protected]> wrote:
> The excuses, the rationalizations, the lies all of this to avoid
> war crime trials for torture, torture that a SUCCESSFUL interogator
> swore under oath, did not work!
>
> OH and the CIA interogator who said that water boarding DID
> break Abu Zubaydah in seconds, recanted his statement, it appears
> not only wasn't he present but he was mistaken about what he was
> told!
>
> On May 13, 8:09 pm, VT Sean Lewis <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Harsh interrogation techniques ineffective,' former FBI agent
> > testifies
>
> > By WARREN P. STROBEL
> > McClatchy Newspapers
> > A former FBI special agent who interrogated senior al-Qaida captives
> > told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday that harsh
> > interrogation techniques are "ineffective, slow and unreliable," and
> > disputed claims by former Vice President Dick Cheney and others that
> > they helped uncover major terrorist plots.
>
> > Ali Soufan, a veteran FBI investigator, said that CIA officials and
> > others responsible for the extreme measures inflated the program's
> > successes and downplayed the consequences of physical abuse.
>
> > "The situation was, and remains, too risky to allow someone to
> > experiment with amateurish, Hollywood-style interrogation methods that
> > in reality taints sources, risks outcomes, ignores the end game and
> > diminishes our moral high ground," Soufan said.
>
> > "It was one of the worst and most harmful decisions made in our
> > efforts against al-Qaida," he said.
>
> > Former State Department official Philip Zelikow, who in 2005 was
> > Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's point man in a battle to
> > overhaul the Bush administration's detention and interrogation
> > policies, joined Soufan in criticizing the use of techniques such as
> > waterboarding, a form of simulated drowning that's widely considered
> > torture.
>
> > Zelikow said the U.S. could combat terrorism without resorting to
> > extreme methods.
>
> > "Others may disagree," he said. "The government, and the country,
> > needs to decide whether they are right. If they are right, our laws
> > must change, and our country must change. I think they are wrong."
>
> > Cheney has argued that the now-defunct CIA program, which included a
> > global network of secret prisons, produced valuable intelligence that
> > thwarted terror attacks and saved American lives.
>
> > Cheney, who's scheduled to give a major speech on the subject next
> > week at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative Washington
> > policy organization, has called for the release of two classified CIA
> > memos that he says detail the program's successes.
>
> > However, Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., a member of the Senate Judiciary
> > and Intelligence committees, said he's seen the two documents and they
> > don't prove Cheney's case.
>
> > Soufan's testimony apparently was the first public appraisal by a
> > senior U.S. government interrogator who dealt directly with suspected
> > terrorists in CIA custody.
>
> > It came a month after President Barack Obama released four Bush-era
> > Justice Department legal memos justifying methods that included
> > confinement boxes, sleep deprivation and slamming detainees into
> > walls. That reopened the debate over whether top Bush officials should
> > be investigated and prosecuted for their actions.
>
> > Adding to the drama, Soufan testified from behind a screen where the
> > senators, but not the audience, could see him. Since at least one
> > photo of Soufan is available on the Internet, the reason for the
> > security measures wasn't readily apparent.
>
> > Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who's also an Air Force Reserve lawyer,
> > said the Bush administration erred in its reading of the law but
> > argued that harsh interrogation techniques sometimes produce valuable
> > information.
>
> > He challenged Soufan to dispute that.
>
> > "I can only speak to my experience," the former FBI agent replied.
>
> > "That's the point, isn't it?" Graham retorted.
>
> > Soufan was a lead FBI interrogator of Abu Zubaydah, one of the first
> > major al-Qaida figures to be captured after the Sept. 11, 2001,
> > terrorist attacks. The initial interrogation of Zubaydah, using the
> > bureau's traditional, rapport-building techniques, yielded valuable
> > intelligence, including the role of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed as the
> > mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, he said.
>
> > Then-CIA director George Tenet congratulated the interrogators - until
> > he learned that they were from the FBI, not the CIA, Soufan said. A
> > team from the CIA's Counterterrorism Center that included a government
> > contractor quickly replaced him and his colleagues. They introduced
> > harsh interrogation techniques, and Zubaydah's cooperation stopped,
> > Soufan said.
>
> > After complaints from officials in Washington about the dried-up
> > intelligence flow, Soufan and colleagues reverted to the traditional
> > approach, and Zubaydah began talking again.
>
> > To bolster the Democrats' case against torture, Sen. Sheldon
> > Whitehouse, D-R.I., released summaries of Soufan's interrogations of
> > another al-Qaida figure, Abu Jandal, who was a bodyguard to Osama bin
> > Laden. Without being tortured, Jandal divulged intimate details and
> > personal histories of bin Laden's inner circle, the 100 pages of
> > documents appear to show.
>
> > The hearing took place amid an escalating political fracas over what
> > congressional Democrats knew at the time about the CIA program.
> > Republicans say that documents call into question House Speaker Nancy
> > Pelosi's contention that she wasn't briefed about waterboarding.
>
> > Zelikow called the CIA program "a collective failure, in which a
> > number of officials and members of Congress (and staffers), of both
> > parties, played a part."
>
> > Zelikow wrote a classified February 2006 memo challenging the legal
> > reasoning of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel. The
> > White House responded by ordering copies of the memo destroyed, but
> > Zelikow said his six-page document has been retrieved from State
> > Department files and is undergoing declassification review.
>
> >http://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics/AP/v-print/story/1047093.html
>
> > The Senate Judiciary Committee 
> > hearing:http://judiciary.senate.gov/hearings/hearing.cfm?id=3842
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