Document: Cheney, Rice signed off on interrogation techniques 

 Obama: CIA Is 'More Important Than Ever' 






 AFP/Getty Images/File – A man walks across the seal of the Central 
Intelligence Agency at the lobby of the CIA headquarters in … 
By Margaret Talev, McClatchy Newspapers Margaret Talev, Mcclatchy Newspapers – 
Wed Apr 22, 7:42 pm ET

 
WASHINGTON — A newly declassified narrative of the Bush administration's advice 
to the CIA on harsh interrogations shows that the small group of Justice 
Department lawyers who wrote memos authorizing controversial interrogation 
techniques were operating not on their own but with direction from top 
administration officials, including then-Vice President Dick Cheney and 
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice.
 
At the same time, the narrative suggests that then-Defense Secretary Donald H. 
Rumsfeld and then-Secretary of State Colin Powell were largely left out of the 
decision-making process.
 
The narrative, posted Wednesday on the Senate Intelligence Committee's Web site 
and released by its former chairman, Sen. Jay Rockefeller , D- W.Va. , came as 
Attorney General Eric Holder told reporters that he'd "follow the evidence 
wherever it takes us" in deciding whether to prosecute any Bush administration 
officials who authorized harsh techniques that are widely considered torture.
 
In a statement accompanying the narrative's release, Rockefeller said the task 
of declassifying interrogation and detention opinions "is not complete" and 
urged prompt declassification of other opinions from 2006 and 2007 that he said 
would show how Bush Justice Department officials interpreted laws governing 
torture and war crimes.
 
These developments come days after the Obama administration declassified four 
Justice Department memos from 2002 and 2005 that revealed in detail authorized 
interrogation methods, such as waterboarding, which simulates drowning, sleep 
deprivation and putting detainees in containers with insects.
 
The drafting of the narrative began last summer, at the prompting of 
Rockefeller. The Senate Intelligence Committee staff drafted the document, with 
heavy input from the Bush administration, in a multi-department effort largely 
coordinated through the Director of National Intelligence's office.
 
Bush's National Security Council , however, refused to declassify it.
Obama's National Security Adviser, James L. Jones , signed off on its release 
last week and the Senate panel cleared it Tuesday.
 
Among other details, the narrative shows that:
— The CIA thought al Qaida operative Abu Zubaydah was withholding information 
about an imminent threat as of April 2002 , but didn't get authorization to use 
various interrogation techniques on him until more than three months later.
— Key Senate Intelligence Committee members were briefed on the techniques used 
on Zubaydah and Khalid Sheik Mohammed in 2002 and 2003.
— The Director of Central Intelligence in the spring of 2003 sought a 
reaffirmation of the legality of the interrogation methods. Cheney, Rice, 
then-Attorney General John Ashcroft and White House counsel Alberto Gonzales 
were among those at a meeting where it was decided that the policies would 
continue. Rumsfeld and Powell weren't.
— The CIA briefed the Rumsfeld and Powell on interrogation techniques in 
September 2003 .
— Administration officials had ongoing concerns about the legality of 
waterboarding as they continued to justify its legitimacy.
 
Cheney couldn't be reached for comment. Rice, through an aide, declined to 
comment.
 
As the narrative was released, various civil liberties and liberal activist 
organizations said they planned to present Holder on Thursday with 250,000 
petition signatures calling for the appointment of an independent prosecutor to 
lead a criminal investigation into alleged torture.
 
Meanwhile, Republican Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South 
Carolina , and independent Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut wrote to Obama 
urging him not to prosecute Bush officials who offered legal advice about CIA 
interrogations.
While the senators deemed some of the legal analyses "deeply flawed," they said 
that criminalizing bad legal opinions "would have a deeply chilling effect on 
the ability of lawyers in any administration to provide their client — the U.S. 
government — with their best legal advice." 
 
Sen. Patrick Leahy , D- Vt ., the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee , 
on Wednesday reiterated his call for an independent "truth commission" to 
examine the interrogations, and said that if Republicans wouldn't go along with 
the bipartisan commission, he'd seek an investigation through the Senate . 
( William Douglas contributed to this article.) 
 
ON THE WEB 
Rockefeller's statement regarding Justice's opinion on torture 
Justice Dept. letter to Sen. Rockefeller regarding torture 
 
MORE FROM MCCLATCHY 
Report: Abusive tactics used to seek Iraq -al Qaida link 
In reversal, Obama opens door to prosecuting top Bush aides 
Senior Justice Dept . nominee faces GOP roadblock in Senate 
Check out McClatchy's expanded politics coverage
 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20090422/wl_mcclatchy/3218102
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