Banner Advertise

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

[chottala.com] The CIA's History of Bamboozling The US Congress



First Published 2009-05-26, Last Updated 2009-05-26 09:47:41

The CIA's History of Bamboozling The Congress PDF Print E-mail
Melvin A. Goodman
The Public Record
Friday, 22 May 2009 13:02

There is a long and substantiated record of CIA deceit and dissembling to the congressional intelligence committees, explains Melvin A. Goodman.

 
"Let me be clear about this," CIA director Leon Panetta told his troops last week, "it was not CIA policy or practice to mislead Congress. That is against our laws and our values."

Of course, Panetta is entitled to his opinions, but he cannot create his own facts. And, as a long-time member of the House of Representatives, he surely must know that there is a long and substantiated record of CIA deceit and dissembling to the congressional intelligence committees. Here are some highlights of that record:

In 1973, CIA director Richard Helms deceived the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, refusing to acknowledge the role of the CIA in overthrowing the elected government in Chile. Helms falsely testified that the CIA had not passed money to the opposition movement in Chile, and a grand jury was called to see if Helms should be indicted for perjury.

In 1977, the Justice Department brought a lesser charge against Helms, who pleaded nolo contendere; he was fined $2,000 and given a suspended two-year prison sentence. Helms went from the courthouse to the CIA where he was given a hero's welcome and a gift of $2,000 to cover the fine. It was one of the saddest experiences in my 24 years at CIA.

In the new Ford administration, Secretary of State Kissinger, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, and White House chief of staff Dick Cheney orchestrated phony intelligence for the Congress in order to get an endorsement for covert arms shipments to anti-government forces in Angola.

The CIA lied to Sen. Dick Clark, D-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on Africa and a critic of the Agency's illegal collaborations with the government of South Africa against Angola and Mozambique. Agency briefers exaggerated the classification of their materials so that Senate and House members could not publicize this information.

Agency shields of secrecy and falsehood were extremely effective.

In the 1980s, CIA director William Casey and his deputy, Bob Gates, consistently lied to the congressional oversight committees about their knowledge of the Iran-Contra Affair. Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D-New York, believed that Casey and Gates were running a disinformation campaign against the Senate Intelligence Committee.

Casey even managed to alienate Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Arizona, a pro-intelligence, conservative who typically walked through barbed wire for the CIA.

Gates' lies on Iran-Contra led to the Senate Intelligence Committee's unwillingness to vote him out of the committee in 1987 when he was nominated to be CIA director by President Ronald Reagan. Gates was nominated again in 1991 and this time he was confirmed, but not before the hearings produced rhyme and verse on Gates' tailoring of intelligence to fit the biases of Bill Casey.

Throughout the 1980s and the early 1990s, Aldrich Ames performed as the most destructive traitor in the history of the CIA, but CIA directors Gates, William Webster and Jim Woolsey failed to inform the congressional oversight committees of the serious counter-intelligence problems that had been created.

In the late 1980s, the CIA concealed from the Congress that Saddam Hussein was diverting US farm credits through an Atlanta bank to pay for nuclear technology and sophisticated weapons. The chairman of the Senate and House intelligence committees, Sen. Dennis DeConcini, D-Arizona, and Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kansas, were furious with the deception tactics of CIA briefers.

The greatest CIA disinformation campaign in the Congress took place in 2002-2003, when CIA director George Tenet and his deputy, John McLaughlin, consistently lied about Iraqi training for al Qaeda members on chemical and biological weapons as well as the existence of mobile labs to manufacture such weapons.

Several days before the congressional vote on the authorization to use force, CIA senior analyst Paul Pillar delivered an unclassified memorandum to the Hill with a series of false charges about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Pillar's memorandum and a national intelligence estimate on the same subject were also used to develop Secretary of State Colin Powell's address to the United Nations in February 2003.

More recently, Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Michigan, the ranking minority member of the House Intelligence Committee, documented the dissembling of the CIA to cover-up the Agency's involvement in a drug interdiction program in Peru that led to the loss of innocent lives. Hoekstra accused CIA director Tenet with misleading the Congress.

The CIA still has not addressed the serious procedural and institutional problems that were exposed in a report from the Office of the Inspector General on the Peru program, which concluded that Agency officials deliberately misled Congress, the White House and the Justice Department.

In closing, Panetta emphasized that it was the CIA's task to "tell it like it is, even if that's not what people always want to hear. Keep it up. Our national security depends on it."

If only that were the case in the 1980s, when the CIA hid from the Congress the intelligence on the decline of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact or more recently when the CIA tailored intelligence on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and Iraqi ties to al Qaeda in order to give the Bush administration an intelligence case to go to war.

Panetta should understand that there was far less dissembling to the Congress 35 years ago when the Agency's Office of General Counsel only had two attorneys, but with the addition of 63 attorneys over the next two decades there was greater politicization of Agency testimony and briefings.

Today there are nearly 200 lawyers with the Office of the General Counsel. Panetta should also understand that it is long past time for him to make sure that the Agency replaces the current acting directors of the Office of the Inspector General and the Office of the General Counsel in order to make sure that the CIA is indeed telling truth to power.

Melvin A. Goodman, a regular contributor to The Public Record where this essay first appeared, is senior fellow at the Center for International Policy and adjunct professor of government at Johns Hopkins University. He spent more than 42 years in the US Army, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Department of Defense. His most recent book is Failure of Intelligence: The Decline and Fall of the CIA.

 
 
(gwu.edu) There is a long and substantiated record of CIA deceit and dissembling to the congressional intelligence committees.
 



__._,_.___


[* Moderator's Note - CHOTTALA is a non-profit, non-religious, non-political and non-discriminatory organization.

* Disclaimer: Any posting to the CHOTTALA are the opinion of the author. Authors of the messages to the CHOTTALA are responsible for the accuracy of their information and the conformance of their material with applicable copyright and other laws. Many people will read your post, and it will be archived for a very long time. The act of posting to the CHOTTALA indicates the subscriber's agreement to accept the adjudications of the moderator]




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

[chottala.com] UK's MI5 accused of Outsourcing torture to foreign climes [Bangladesh]



UK's MI5 accused in Bangladesh torture case
 

Outsourcing torture to foreign climes

By Andy Worthington, Guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 27 May 2009 14.49 BST

Jamil Rahman's case suggests, leaving the door to torture ajar allows British and American agents to engineer 'intelligence' from abroad

andy

      In today's Guardian, Ian Cobain tells the disturbing story of Jamil Rahman, a British citizen, raised in south Wales. His claims of abuse in Bangladeshi custody while British intelligence officers were in the same building add another location to an expanding list of countries in which the British intelligence services are accused of being involved in the use of torture. It also provide the clearest indication yet of direct British involvement in interrogations in other countries.

      According to Rahman, whose lawyers believe they have enough evidence to start civil proceedings against home secretary Jacqui Smith, two masked men of European origin were present – and appeared to be directing events – when he was seized from the home of his Bangladeshi wife on 1 December 2005 and taken to a cell in an office of the Bangladeshi intelligence services, where he was held for three weeks. Rahman said he was "stripped, beaten and told that his wife would be raped and murdered and her body burned" and made to record a number of false confessions, including a statement that he had masterminded the terrorist attacks in London on 7 July 2005.

      What makes Rahman's claims particularly disturbing are his reports about the behaviour of two MI5 agents, who, he said, responded to his complaints that he had been tortured and had made false confessions, by saying, "They haven't done a very good job on you," and adding, "That's good, you've learned your lesson," when interrogations resumed after further abuse.

      In this period, when, he says, his passport was taken away and he was told to stay in his wife's village and to talk to no one abut his experiences, he was regularly summoned for further interrogations, at which MI5 officials were present, and was shown hundreds of photographs, including those of friends in the UK, and asked to identify them. Rahman claims that if he did not co-operate, the two British officers would leave the room and he would then be beaten.

      British involvement in dubious overseas interrogations is not news, of course. Binyam Mohamed, released from Guantánamo in February, is involved in a court case to establish that the British government knew of his CIA-sponsored torture in Morocco and provided intelligence to his torturers, and just 10 days ago the Mail on Sunday reported that a British spy had actually visited him in Morocco, shattering the government's claims that it did not know where he was being held.

      Similarly, over the last year, Ian Cobain has uncovered several examples of close co-operation between the British intelligence services and their counterparts in Pakistan regarding the treatment of British prisoners in Pakistani custody, which has involved the UK feeding questions to interrogators while turning a blind eye to the use of torture. This appears to be so prevalent that the Guardian has described it as "an official interrogation policy", but although it has involved horrendous treatment – Rangzieb Ahmed, later convicted of terrorism-related charges in the UK, claimed he had his fingernails pulled out by Pakistani torturers, and a medical student, who was subsequently released, stated that "after being tortured by Pakistani agents he was questioned by British intelligence officers" – it appears to be the first example of British agents, on the ground, leaving the room while abuse took place.

      Above all, however, the circumstances in which Jamil Rahman was pressured to produce false confessions and to identify other "terror suspects" from photographs demonstrate the dangers inherent in a system in which the British intelligence services appear to be equating "actionable intelligence" with the fruits of coercion and, if not the use of torture, then the threat of torture.

      The British government's mantra is that it does not support or condone the use of torture, but a troubling passage in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's recent report (pdf, p16), on human rights makes it clear that a loophole has been deliberately left open. After stating, "The use of intelligence possibly derived through torture presents a very real dilemma, given our unreserved condemnation of torture and our efforts to eradicate it," the report's authors added, "Where there is intelligence that bears on threats to life, we cannot reject it out of hand."

      As the case of Jamil Rahman demonstrates, the fundamental problem with leaving the door to torture ajar is that it encourages that slim proviso to become a policy in and of itself. The circumstances in which appraisals of "intelligence possibly derived through torture" are required should be very small, but with the sidelining of the absolute prohibition on torture in the US-led "war on terror", both the US and the UK appear to have introduced policies in which the supposed "intelligence" has not, as in the past, arrived indirectly from the torture dungeons of brutal dictatorships, but has, at least partly, been engineered by British and American agents themselves.

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2009/may/27/jamil-rahman-torture

      They knew I was beaten and threatened': Briton to sue Jacqui Smith over MI5 torture claim

      By Daniel Bates
      Last updated at 2:01 AM on 27th May 2009

      Read at:

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1188608/They-knew-I-beaten-threatened-Briton-sue-Jacqui-Smith-MI5-torture-claim.html

       

      Jamil Rahman plans to Jacqui Smith over MI5 torture claims

      Jamil Rahman plans to sue British Home Secretary

      Jacqui Smith over MI5 torture claims

      Images

      AFP
      BBC News
      Daily Mail
      Al-Arabiya
      Laos News
      This is London
      TVNZ
      23 May 2009:

      Andy Worthington: Binyam Mohamed may have returned home but his struggle to secure evidence from the British government about his torture continues

      163 comments
      Picture of Andy Worthington

      Andy Worthington

      Webfeed

      Profile

      Andy Worthington is a historian, writer and author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America's Illegal Prison (2007) and two books on modern British social history

      Outsourcing torture to foreign climes

      guardian.co.uk - ‎3 hours ago‎
      Binyam Mohamed, released from Guantánamo in February, is involved in a court case to establish that the British government knew of his CIA-sponsored torture ...

      UK faces legal action over torture claims

      Irish Times - ‎8 hours ago‎
      A former civil servant is threatening to sue a British minister, saying British security agents colluded in his torture by Bangladeshi officers who held him ...

      Briton alleges MI5 collusion in torture

      United Press International - ‎2 hours ago‎
      LONDON, May 27 (UPI) -- British intelligence services colluded in the torture of a terrorism suspect at the hands of Bangladeshi interrogators, ...

      Briton claims MI5 asked for his torture in Bangladesh

      Telegraph.co.uk - ‎2 hours ago‎
      The Home Secretary is being sued by a British terrorism suspect who claims he was tortured by Bangladeshi intelligence services while being questioned by ...

      Outsourcing torture to foreign climes

      guardian.co.uk - ‎3 hours ago‎
      In today's Guardian, Ian Cobain tells the disturbing story of Jamil Rahman, a British citizen, raised in south Wales. His claims of abuse in Bangladeshi ...

      After stating, "The use of intelligence possibly derived through torture presents a very real dilemma, given our unreserved condemnation of torture and our efforts to eradicate it," the report's authors added, "Where there is intelligence that bears on threats to life, we cannot reject it out of hand."
      more by David Miliband - 3 hours ago - guardian.co.uk (5 occurrences)

      MI5 faces Bangladesh torture claims: report

      AFP - ‎4 hours ago‎
      LONDON (AFP) — A Briton who claims he was tortured in Bangladesh with the complicity of MI5 intelligence agents is to take legal action against the Home ...

      Man sues British Home Secretary over torture

      Belfast Telegraph - ‎4 hours ago‎
      A British man who was held on suspicion of terrorism in Bangladesh is suing the British Home Secretary for allegedly colluding in his torture. ...

      Blogs

      UK Home Secretary faces flak over fresh MI5 torture allegations

      Thaindian.com - ‎8 hours ago‎
      London, May 27 (ANI): British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith is likely to face legal action over allegations that MI5 agents colluded in the torture of a ...


      __._,_.___


      [* Moderator�s Note - CHOTTALA is a non-profit, non-religious, non-political and non-discriminatory organization.

      * Disclaimer: Any posting to the CHOTTALA are the opinion of the author. Authors of the messages to the CHOTTALA are responsible for the accuracy of their information and the conformance of their material with applicable copyright and other laws. Many people will read your post, and it will be archived for a very long time. The act of posting to the CHOTTALA indicates the subscriber's agreement to accept the adjudications of the moderator]




      Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
      Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
      Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
      Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

      __,_._,___