Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Government Republicans Democrats Security News Politics Technology Your Rights Online

Director Brennan: CIA Won't Waterboard Again, Even If Ordered By Future President (msnbc.com) 319

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."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Director Brennan: CIA Won't Waterboard Again, Even If Ordered By Future President

Comments Filter:
  • Time for a new job (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ITRambo ( 1467509 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @09:47AM (#51883731)
    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.
    • I'm sure they'll just come from the FBI.

      • I'm sure they'll just come from the FBI.

        Or the NYPD. I hear they're replacing Stop and Frisk with Stop and Waterboard.

    • by AntronArgaiv ( 4043705 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:04AM (#51883849)

      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.

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:08AM (#51883889)

        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.

      • Having a "Top Secret" stamp means never having to say you're sorry.
      • by Theaetetus ( 590071 ) <theaetetus,slashdot&gmail,com> on Monday April 11, 2016 @12:17PM (#51884989) Homepage Journal

        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.

      • ... Congress and the Attorney General are going to want an answer.

        Well... Congress only seems to want answers to things they think will politically help those doing the asking, otherwise they don't really care - at all.

    • by Stephan Schulz ( 948 ) <schulz@eprover.org> on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:05AM (#51883855) Homepage
      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.

    • by PPGMD ( 679725 )
      It is customary for all Presidential appointees from the previous administration to submit their resignations to the next President. And are typically are accepted, as the incoming administration often wants to appoint their own men to those positions. Now some are kept until their successor is confirmed by the Senate, but often the civil servant steps in becoming the interim director until the new one is appointed. This may seem inefficient, but typically there is minimal disruption because the civil serva
      • by mbkennel ( 97636 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @12:11PM (#51884911)

        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.
        • by PPGMD ( 679725 )
          The Federal Reserve is the only position on the list that routinely succeed presidents.

          Since the Nixon administration with exception of George Tenet (who served both the Clinton and Bush Administrations) the CIA directorship has changed hands with every presidency. There is some overlap in the early era, but modern day with each new administration there is a new director at the CIA within the year. NASA is the same way, some overlap, but typically each President appoints their own administrator for NASA.

          The
    • If he's true to his word, think of him as a Torture Canary.

      In reality, though, the CIA is big enough to have factions within factions, and the CIA can torture people without him even knowing about it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        If he's true to his word, think of him as a Torture Canary.

        Torture Canary? Is he starting a rock band?

    • If Brennen refuses an order from a Republican president, however repugnant, he's out the door.

      Trump has some experience in saying, "You're fired!"

      CIA: "We will never do it again, until we do it again."

    • by plopez ( 54068 )

      Not necessarily. It depends on the CIA's enabling legislation. There may be some wiggle room such as a clause stating "using the means to gather information at the Directors discretion to gather intelligence". Time and time again it has been shown torture is ineffective. This allows the director to say "no" under US law.

    • If Brennen refuses an order from the President (whether the President is Republican or Democrat), he is out the door. Which is as it out to be.
    • Honest question, how would you categorize the practice of being jailed for contempt of court? Is that a form of torture?

    • Right. There's no way Brennan could control what happens in the future. What he COULD do that would help is to install some sort of monitoring/reporting apparatus and make sure its tentacles reach throughout. If given a little time to take root, it would likewise take a bit of time to eradicate.
  • Too late (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 11, 2016 @09:56AM (#51883799)

    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.

    • Re:Too late (Score:5, Insightful)

      by oneiros27 ( 46144 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:09AM (#51883899) Homepage

      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.

    • by ( 4475953 )

      the whole point of the laws of war was that prisoners on both sides would be treated decently

      There are many laws of war that might be interpreted in that way (e.g. providing adequate food and shelter for prisoners of war, releasing them when the war finished), and others that have nothing to do with that (e.g. wearing uniforms in order not to confuse civilians with combatants). The prohibition of torture does not fall in either category. Not to be tortured is really just a basic human right that no decent person would even consider to violate, no matter what the other side does.

      • Not to be tortured is really just a basic human right that no decent person would even consider to violate, no matter what the other side does.

        Donald Trump promised America a lot more of it - waterboarding and a lot worse (whatever that is). As you said, no decent person would even consider it.

    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:13AM (#51883939) Journal

      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.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:44AM (#51884165)

        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.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          >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.

          The above is no joke: there was a Frontline show from Afghanistan in ?2006-7, where the translator with the journalists and US soldiers forgot he was wearing a wire when local man came to the interpreter in a fearful frenzy:

    • Re:Too late (Score:5, Insightful)

      by allcoolnameswheretak ( 1102727 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:20AM (#51883985)

      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.

      • > When you have the country that describes itself as the beacon of freedom and democracy in the world ...

        That reminds me, I wonder if any of Obama's aides ever took him aside and explained to him that what you just said is called "American Exceptionalism". If they told him that when he denies American Exceptionalism, that terms means he's denying that the US has a responsibility to act consistent with justice and liberty, because the country was founded explicitly to advance those ideals.

        I'm sure he wou

      • "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."

        Heck, I live under Western Democracy and see it as a farce. At least in the USA the rich and powerful get their say, and the masses get paid lip service. Bills are written by the companies they are supposed to regulate. Congressional districts are gerrymandered to a comical level. Party loyalty and scoring purely political

      • Not quite, and not technically.

        1) He was impeached, for perjury and obstruction of justice. He was acquitted of both charges.

        2) The "justice" he obstructed was only about whether he fucked his intern. Being tried for perjuring yourself about something that was not, itself, illegal is about as perfect an example of a "technicality" as you're going to find.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

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

      Not just in battle, it's just "if you're caught" or "captured".

      Doesn't matter if you're an innocent bystander - if you're at the wrong place at the wrong time, you're fair game.

      It's one reason why ISIS is as violent as they are - they're emboldened by the fact that it's been done, so they need to escalate to beheadings and worse.

  • "No CIA officer" (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sqlrob ( 173498 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @09:57AM (#51883813)

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

  • by ThatBeDank ( 4493649 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:01AM (#51883833)

    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.

  • Yeah ok (Score:4, Interesting)

    by liqu1d ( 4349325 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:05AM (#51883861)
    Because you told the world when you did it before right?
  • Of course, the head of the CIA is a political position, and serves at the pleasure of the president. But if he raises a fuss and threatens to resign...

  • by FeatherBoa ( 469218 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:18AM (#51883965)

    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.

    • Journalists seem to love acting like the jury is out on just about everything, because you should present BOTH sides of an argument even when one side is utterly batshit insane.

      Sometimes, arguments only have one side.

    • Waterboarding is a form of psychological torture. The problem is torture is a huge, arbitrary gray area: any form of coercion is uncomfortable, yet at some point we call it "torture". In other words: we know inflicting extreme pain is torture; and we know inflicting mild discomfort (e.g. a fucking prison cell?) is *not* torture; and somewhere in the middle we argue over where something goes from not-torture to torture.

      To some people, torture must be physical; and to some, it must include physical pai

      • All your points are decent ones. However most of what we did is so far over the line as to not being debatable. Sleep deprivation, ear splitting loud music while being held in stress positions, making someone sleep on a cold concrete slab until they died of hypothermia, and so much more are all so far beyond the line that we should not be still discussing whether there is any validity to the "might not be torture" point of view.

        We tortured a bunch of folks. We have brought our selves down to the level of

        • Some people might not call sleep deprivation "torture" because, while it sucks, we've all been tired and we've all had shitty jobs that made us work after we didn't get enough sleep. Many people have been in college while working a full-time job and spent weeks or months under chronic sleep deprivation. It seems like too common a thing and too common a tolerated thing for people to imagine it as the bloody evil they want to envision under such a damning term as "torture".

          Loud music and cold temperature

  • The current CIA director will someday be replaced by someone else who may reinstate torture. The other possibility is that the CIA will hire folks in foreign countries to torture whomever the CIA wants tortured.
    • He only said he does not want a CIA officer do waterboarding. Nobody said anything about the CIA cooperating with external persons to conduct the torture. Yeah the CIA officers will ask the questions and probably hold the victim down. But they won't pour the water over them, so they did not waterboard them.

  • ... the IRS.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday April 11, 2016 @10:48AM (#51884199)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Waterboarding is by an overwhelming concensus a formal example of torture.

      Then so is eating MREs. Military personnel undergo both, regularly, as part of their training.

    • Agree with your other points. But:

      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.

      The healthcare reform plan you cite was passed when Obama's party had a majority in the House and Senate for 2 years, and a fillibuster

  • I'm selling my beachfront property in Arizona.

  • He won't be in charge much longer and things will change. All it takes is one more attack like 9/11 or something worse and support for waterboarding will return.
  • just hit em with a board, preferably a 2x4
  • 1. The US Constitution says that treaties count as law of the land.
    2. In 1953, the Department of Defense adopted the principles of the Nuremberg Code as official
    policy" of the United States. (Hasting Center Report, March-April 1991) - so he not only has
    the duty to follow "lawful orders", but equally to "refuse to follow lawful orders" (the Nazis in
    the camps were "just following o

  • Donald Trump is a staunch supporter of torture

    Evidently CNN is too, based on how often they subject their viewers to him...

"God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh." - Voltaire

Working...