Stephen F. Hayes: Obama’s intelligence chief admits the value of tough interrogations

Published Saturday, April 25, 2009 at 9:34 am

Posted in: Politics

Admiral Dennis Blair, the top intelligence official in the United States, thanks to his nomination by Barack Obama, believes that the coercive interrogation methods outlawed by his boss produced “high-value information” and gave the U.S. government a “deeper understanding of the al Qaeda organization that was attacking this country.” He included those assessments in a letter distributed inside the intelligence community last Thursday, the same day Obama declassified and released portions of Justice Department memos setting out guidelines for those interrogations.

That letter from Blair served as the basis for a public statement that his office put out that same day. But the DNI’s conclusions about the results of coercive interrogations–in effect, that they worked–were taken out of Blair’s public statement. A spokesman for the DNI told the New York Times that the missing material was cut for reasons of space, though the statement would be posted on DNI’s website, where space doesn’t seem to be an issue.

Curious.

There’s more. Blair’s public statement differed from his letter to colleagues in another way. The letter included this language: “From 2002 through 2006 when the use of these techniques ended, the leadership of the CIA repeatedly reported their activities both to Executive Branch policymakers and to members of Congress, and received permission to continue to use the techniques.” Blair’s public statement made no mention of the permission granted by “members of Congress”–permission that came from members of Obama’s own party.

Odd.

I had a mild revelation, while reading this article: It’s interesting that many liberals, and the Left in general, find it difficult to refer to those who deliberately target and kill innocents as terrorists, while having no problem referring to non-lethal techniques of coercion – methods that we oblige many of our own military personnel to experience, as part of their training – as “torture”. It would seem that they are capable of nuanced thinking only when it serves their ideological agenda.

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