A damning US Senate report concluded that the CIA misled the US Congress and the public by downplaying the severity of its interrogations and overstating intelligence gleaned from the sessions, the Washington Post said on Monday.
Several officials familiar with the classified 6,300-page document that was years in the making said it detailed the brutality of an enhanced interrogation program that yielded little actionable intelligence beyond what was already obtained from detainees before they were subjected to the objectionable techniques.
“The CIA described [its program] repeatedly both to the [US] Department of Justice and eventually to Congress as getting unique, otherwise unobtainable intelligence that helped disrupt terrorist plots and save thousands of lives,” a US official briefed on the document told the daily. “Was that actually true? The answer is: ‘no.’”
Officials also spoke of the abuses undertaken within the vast system of secret detention sites to which terror suspects were taken and interrogated.
The abuse often took place under brutal conditions — including the previously undisclosed method of repeatedly dunking suspects in ice water — until US President Barack Obama ordered the system dismantled in 2009.
Classified files reviewed by the US Senate Select Committee on Intelligence investigators who put together the report showed that CIA employees left the agency’s secret black site in Thailand disturbed by the abuses that were being administered there.
Officials at the spy agency’s headquarters ordered the harsh interrogation techniques to continue “even after analysts were convinced that prisoners had no more information to give,” the Post said.
The records were said to make it clear that the CIA obtaining key intelligence against al-Qaeda — including information that led to the killing of former leader Osama bin Laden in 2011 — had little to do with the so-called “enhanced interrogation techniques.”
One official said that nearly the entirety of valuable threat-related information from al-Qaeda operative Abu Zubaida — captured in Pakistan in 2002 — was obtained during questioning by an FBI agent while Zubaida was in hospital in Pakistan that took place before he was interrogated by the CIA, whose agents waterboarded him 83 times.
The explosive account comes as committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein is pushing to get parts of the report declassified and made public.
The committee is expected to vote tomorrow on whether to send the report’s executive summary, key conclusions and recommendations to the White House for declassification.
Their report has caused a deep rift between the CIA and the senate panel tasked with conducting oversight of the spy activities, with each side accusing the other of potentially criminal violations related to accessing computer systems used during the investigation.
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