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Director Brennan: CIA Won't Waterboard Again, Even If Ordered By Future President (msnbc.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from MSNBC: CIA Director John Brennan told NBC News in an exclusive interview that his agency will not engage in harsh "enhanced interrogation" practices, including waterboarding, which critics call torture -- even if ordered to by a future president. "I will not agree to carry out some of these tactics and techniques I've heard bandied about because this institution needs to endure," Brennan said. The CIA used waterboarding and other techniques on terrorist suspects after the 9/11 attacks. But in January 2009, President Obama banned the practices in his first few days in office with an executive order. When asked specifically about waterboarding Brennan could not have been clearer. "Absolutely, I would not agree to having any CIA officer carrying out waterboarding again," he said. Donald Trump is a staunch supporter of torture, saying he would bring back waterboarding and "a hell of a lot worse" to retrieve information from potential terrorists. Ted Cruz says he would "not bring [waterboarding] back in any sort of widespread use" by rank and file soldiers and agents, but as President he would "use whatever enhanced interrogation methods to keep this country safe."

34 of 319 comments (clear)

  1. Time for a new job by ITRambo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If Brennen refuses an order from a Republican president, however repugnant, he's out the door. There will be any number of qualified sadists that would be happy to torture people, in the name of freedom, for the US government.

    1. Re:Time for a new job by AntronArgaiv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If Brennen refuses an order from a Republican president, however repugnant, he's out the door. There will be any number of qualified sadists that would be happy to torture people, in the name of freedom, for the US government.

      Probably true, but the order itself is illegal, so the President would need to have a defense against that, because Congress and the Attorney General are going to want an answer.

    2. Re:Time for a new job by Stephan+Schulz · · Score: 4, Insightful
      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. [....] Whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it [...] When a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.

      I would certainly accept the argument that a president or any other leader who orders torture violates natural rights and voids his authority.

      --

      Stephan

    3. Re:Time for a new job by OzPeter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Probably true, but the order itself is illegal, so the President would need to have a defense against that, because Congress and the Attorney General are going to want an answer.

      I didn't hear much complaining when the US executed a US citizen without due process.

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    4. Re:Time for a new job by Theaetetus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If Brennen refuses an order from a Republican president, however repugnant, he's out the door. There will be any number of qualified sadists that would be happy to torture people, in the name of freedom, for the US government.

      Probably true, but the order itself is illegal, so the President would need to have a defense against that, because Congress and the Attorney General are going to want an answer.

      The order was illegal back in the 2000s, too, but Congress and the AG had no problem then.

    5. Re:Time for a new job by hey! · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Plame's official CIA job title was "operations officer":

      OOs clandestinely [emphasis mine] spot, assess, develop, recruit and handle human sources with access to vital intelligence.

      [source].

      What's more, she posed as a energy consultant when she traveled abroad. In other words Plame was what in the spy trade is called a "knock" -- No Official Cover. This means that unlike agents who pose as diplomats she was not covered by diplomatic immunity and was potentially liable to legal and other actions taken by target countries. The identities of NOC agents is one of the most sensitive pieces of information there is.

      Robert Novak, the columnist who outed Plame, later started the meme that she was a mere analyst. This is a self-serving claim; had he believed that then he wouldn't be guilty of a felony under the Intelligence Identities Protection Act. Movak was in effect pleading stupidity because the biographic references he admitted using listed a front company as her employer rather than the CIA. In fact in the column in question he correctly identifies her as an "operative", not an "analyst" -- a distinction which he was well aware meant that her job was clandestine.

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    6. Re:Time for a new job by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It has also caused a lot of false confessions, making it about as useful as water boarding. It seems that toddlers and people functioning at that level will often just go along with what a 'friend' says. Worse, they will then no longer have a clear factual memory of the matter in question. That sort of "enhanced interrogation" also tends to leave lasting damage.

      If you don't consider abusing an adult until their mental function drops to that of a toddler torture, I would hate to imagine what you would call torture.

      Good rule of thumb, when the bureaucratic euphemisms like "enhanced interrogation" start flying, it means that deep down, even they know what they're doing is wrong. Otherwise they'd proudly call it what it is.

  2. Re:That's a bold statement! by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Insightful

    at least they're talking about it.

    Yeah, that's the problem. With torture there is nothing to discuss. A humane person and a civil society would never consider it.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  3. Too late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In Iraq 1 war the Iraqi army surrendered because they knew they would be treated decently, Bush and his cronies with the last Iraq war changed everything, the message was now clear to the enemies, if we capture you we will torture you.

    so now your enemies will torture the living fuck out of your soldiers and they can say quite honestly "well the Americans did it and they didn't get reprimanded, so now we do it, except we are worse"

    the whole point of the laws of war was that prisoners on both sides would be treated decently, if the enemy did it you could say with dignity "we dont do that" and haul them in front of the warcrimes with the knowledge that you were better than that.

    Bush and his chums threw it all away and today he still sits as free man sipping whiskey and rye, smiling with his millions of dollars and Americans are perfectly fine with that.

    If you are caught in battle now, be afraid, very afraid.

    1. Re:Too late by oneiros27 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And let's also not forget that the other side can now use such incidents as 'proof' that they are fighting a 'just' war, as it's against people who would torture. ... which helps them recruit and inspire their troops to do more viscous things, as obviously the ends justify the means. (which then inspires both sides to ratchet up the hostilities)

      It'd be one thing if we could at least justify an atrocity as maybe we're trading problems down the road for some benefit now ... but there have been so many reports that harsh interrogation doesn't produce good or useful information, that there's no justifiable reason for doing it.

      Maybe Cruz should spend more time reading the Butter Battle Book, rather than Green Eggs & Ham.

      --
      Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
    2. Re:Too late by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is the worst thing about the whole war in Iraq. All the bad precedents that were set. When you have the country that describes itself as the beacon of freedom and democracy in the world invading another country under false pretext and then torturing prisoners and indiscriminately murdering civilians, how can anyone still be surprised nobody in the middle east cares much for western "freedom" and "democracy"? Many people there see western Democracy as a farce and instead flock to their faith and religious extremism, which they perceive as the last remaining vestige of hope and stability.

      The amount of damage the Bush administration has done with their heavy handed and misguided policies is insurmountable. ISIS and the catastrophe that is now Iraq and Syria would probably not have happened where it not for them. Under objective circumstances, Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld would deserve to be put in front of a war tribunal, but of course that is never going to happen, which is yet another sting of injustice that many people across the middle east won't easily forget.

      And someone like Bill Clinton almost got impeached because he fucked his assistant. The US is messed up.

    3. Re:Too late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Atrocity is recognized as such by victim and predator alike, by all who learn about it at whatever remove. Atrocity has no excuses, no mitigating argument. Atrocity never balances or rectifies the past. Atrocity merely arms the future for more atrocity. It is self-perpetuating upon itself — a barbarous form of incest. Whoever commits atrocity also commits those future atrocities thus bred.
      -- The Apocrypha of Muad'Dib

    4. Re:Too late by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Quoting Dune? There may be hope for /. after all!

      --
      Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
  4. "No CIA officer" by sqlrob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Later heard mumbling under his breath, contractors and extraordinary rendition are just fine.

  5. What about other government agencies? by ThatBeDank · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who cares what the CIA does when each bloody branch of government can run its own intelligence services essentially duplicating the other. You don't think that mercenaries, branches of the military, or even off the books intelligences agencies won't continue to water board?

    One agency not water boarding, what hilarity.

  6. Re:WHY IS THIS HERE????! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If this isn't a "thing that matters", I don't know what is.

    You're talking about a potential rift of current governmental process in the most powerful nation on the planet. There are also those in the military who are saying they would refuse blatantly immoral orders, such as "killing the families of terrorists".

    If large chunks of both the military and civilian governmental agencies start refusing orders, the implications of that will reverberate in ways I don't think anyone can predict. Best case, somehow it ends up smoothed over. Worst case, it becomes a civil war. Most likely, somewhere in the middle, with unforeseeable consequences that could spread well outside the bounds of the US itself.

  7. Yeah ok by liqu1d · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Because you told the world when you did it before right?

  8. Re:He speaks truth by mwvdlee · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd torture them until they'll tell me whatever lies they think will make me stop, regardless of whether they actually know anything at all.
    My family would be dead and I'd have wasted precious time chasing down dead-ends, but I'd feel good having acted out my vengeance.

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  9. Lesson learned by Comboman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apparently the CIA has learned a lesson, though probably not the one you think. I doubt they now believe that torture is inhumane and lowers us to the level of those we fight against. What they learned is that torture is completely ineffective at yielding usable intelligence. Prisoners will say anything to make it stop, including making stuff up. Since the made up stuff is exactly what the torturer expects to hear, they often give it more credibility than any actual intelligence that is obtained.

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    1. Re:Lesson learned by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, it's worse that that: what they learn is that it's bad publicity.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    2. Re:Lesson learned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Anyone who supports torture as a means of extracting information, should themselves be tortured until they give up the location of the body.

      "What body" you ask? That's the point. Having no information to give up should hopefully cause them to realize just how stupid torture is as a means of extracting information.

    3. Re:Lesson learned by codeButcher · · Score: 3, Insightful

      torture is completely ineffective at yielding usable intelligence. Prisoners will say anything to make it stop, including making stuff up.

      I once spoke to someone involved in military intelligence (not USA), so this is all hearsay. Apparently, interrogators are quite aware of the fact that people make things up (may be different in the USA...). Anyhow, the made-up narratives do provide a lot of useful insights into the "other side's" thought processes, planning, and intelligence about their opponents. It may narrow down locations deemed important or as bases, etc. Not directly "actionable" pieces of information, but quite useful background information nevertheless (if you don't get it via other sources, or want to fill in/corroborate what you've got already).

      --
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  10. Hijacking airliners, flying into skyscrapers by raymorris · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There is a kernel of truth in what you say - the US should live up to a HIGHER standard. Our founding documents say this country exists for the purpose of justice, freedom, and liberty.

    That said, are you thinking that Al Quaeda was following the laws of war until after 9/11, that hijacking civilian airliners and crashing them into skyscrapers is okay? To claim that Al Quaeda won't follow the laws of war because the US may not have is of course a bit silly.

    1. Re:Hijacking airliners, flying into skyscrapers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That said, are you thinking that Al Quaeda was following the laws of war

      The thing most people fail to realize is that it's not (just) about the "elite" Al Quaeda fighters.

      It's about those subsistence-level farmers in the Pakistani village, who see the US troops march through the village and have to make the calculation of whether to tell them that Bin Laden is hiding in that farm house over there, or keep their head down and their mouth shut. - It's about whether the US troops actually march through the village, or whether it's marked as a no-go zone due to the IEDs that locals are putting up to deter "extraordinary rendition" of their relatives to torture centers in midnight raids. - It's about the smuggler in Syria, who's just hoping to get his country back to some semblance of stability, and trying decide which group of fighters to run guns to. Which way does "they're working with the Americans" push him? Does that mean they fight for peace and stability? Or does that mean that they fight for a pro-torture puppet regime? - It's about the 18-year old boy who happened to be born in the wrong village, and is drafted to fight for ISIS. How does he treat American soldiers if he happens to capture some?

      The extremists are extremists. But there's a wide swath of people who aren't extremists, but are involved anyway. Which way do these people in the middle swing? How do they act? If America isn't "doing the right thing", why should they? If America tortures because Al Quaeda tortures, what incentive do they have to favor the America-supported side over the Al Quaeda-supported one? Also, revenge is a powerful motivator. If your Uncle Ibrahim was tortured, you're going to be much more likely to go out of your way to abuse the side who did it, even if you didn't have any malice toward them beforehand.

  11. Re:WHY IS THIS HERE????! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It "matters", but Slashdot should not be the venue to discuss it!

    If you want to get all riled up about political matters that are unrelated to science/tech/computing, then go to Huffington Post, or Drudge Report, or Gawker, one of the many other sites out there that cater to such matters.

    Leave Slashdot for stories and discussion that are specific to science/tech/computing.

  12. Can we stop the "critics call torture" horseshit by FeatherBoa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is one of the total failures of journalism that they keep acting like the jury is out on whether waterboarding is torture. It is torture by the definition of multiple US courts -- ones that successfully prosecuted Japanese soldiers for torture in the 40s precisely for waterboarding. It is a long-standing precedent that waterboarding is very much torture in the eyes of the US court system. The promulgation of this phony sense of ambiguity is a lie perpetrated by the media for the benefit of the neocon establishment.

  13. so, there are some issues to point out about it. by nimbius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    which critics call torture

    stop. stop this. Waterboarding is by an overwhelming concensus a formal example of torture. the united states has in the past engaged in torture, full stop. it still engages in torture to this day at Guantanamo Bay without independent oversight and enjoys freedom from media coverage. In this regard the US is no different than north korea and iran.

    even if ordered to by a future president.

    but there was no formal order from the bush administration. the bush team crafted a doctrine by which terrorism became "enhanced interrogation" and through this clever violation of the geneva convention the techniques described in the CIA's handbooks stopped being torture entirely. You technically never tortured anyone before, and refuse to do so now.

    President Obama banned the practices in his first few days in office with an executive order.

    Its hard to put on the Nobel prize when youre the leader of a nation that runs a secret torture prison. Obama made a concerted effort to close this prison, but largely failed when congress and senate majorities handed him a non-stop shit storm shutting down the government twice and attempting to repeal healthcare reform more than 45 times.

    Donald Trump is a staunch supporter of torture

    And Martha Stewarts dog died in a propane explosion. Neither of these considerations is relevant to the topic. the point is Brennan is making a clever distraction from the actual problem. The united states under the Bush doctrine legally authorized torture by changing the definition of the word and then unanimously arguing theirs was a legally consistent and correct one. The judge that wrote the defense of this argument was later promoted in the administration in what was largely seen as a quid pro quo move by leadership.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
  14. Re:WHY IS THIS HERE????! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Refusing, rather than carrying out with some enthusiasm and taking pictures, such orders would be a bit of a change in practice; but in the noble land of theory; hasn't it always been the case that military agents are supposed to refuse to carry out unlawful orders(with the obvious practical limits imposed by the fact that most soldiers have access to legal opinion only to the extent that somebody told a JAG to write up a terse summary of the rules of engagement)?

    My (admittedly layman's) understanding was that while actually having the issue come up is considered a bad sign(since something has obviously gone badly wrong on the executive or legislative side if the military is being issued unlawful orders); but that while disobeying lawful orders is somewhere between 'disciplinary problem' and 'coup d'etat', depending on how many people are involved and whether they are brought into line internally or not; it is no more a desired outcome for the military to execute an unlawful order than it is for the judiciary to rule according to an unconstitutional law; or the executive to act without legislatively granted authority.

    The only real change here is that we have an actually-high-ranked-spook not weaseling around and claiming that waterboarding is just the sort of practical-joking fun that we all did when we joined a frat.

  15. Re:NOT TORTURE! by dave420 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Tell that to the US courts who have deemed waterboarding to be torture for decades. We know it doesn't work, yet some people (yourself included) are willing to overlook that for some good ol' fashioned vengeance, regardless of the demonstrable harm it causes the US.

    You suck at being a human being.

  16. Re: WHY IS THIS HERE????! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How about you just skip the articles that don't intrest you? Information is like bandwidth; it is always there but not always utilized. I appreciate the job the editors do, even if I don't click on every submission.

  17. Re:He speaks truth by Plus1Entropy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If someone had my family in a direct harm situation, then I shouldn't be the one put in charge of the interrogation.

    --
    Only crack the nuts that crack. You don't put the ones that don't crack in the sack.
  18. Until the next time it happens. by mitcheli · · Score: 3, Informative

    Torture was already deemed illegal by the Geneva Convention. And yet, here we are again. It's probably not the President that will encourage water boarding again, it's probably their lawyer who convinces the leadership at the time that water boarding does not constitute torture and is as such perfectly legal. ... Not that this EVER happens.

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  19. Turnover across presidential administrations. by mbkennel · · Score: 3, Interesting


    There are some traditions. Certain instruments of government are considered more independent of the Presidential administration than others, and thus the terms of their directors are intentionally not supposed to coincide with the Presidential terms.

    I think that CIA, NASA, Federal Reserve, and FBI are in that category. Cabinet secretaries are, naturally, appointed by the President directly.

    With respect to the current issue: CIA will not torture. But a contractor, or an agency of another government, will.

  20. Re:Can we stop the "critics call torture" horseshi by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ask the many journalists who deliberately had it done to them while writing (or broadcasting) about this very subject.

    Sure, let's ask them! Guess what? They say that it is torture.

    People who have, by your definition, been "actually tortured" - like McCain - say that waterboarding is torture.

    In short, it is obviously torture.

    And you're scum for repeatedly defending it here.