The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Senate confirms Gina Haspel as new CIA director

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WASHINGTON: The US Senate on Thursday confirmed Gina Haspel as the first female CIA director, despite deep reservatio­ns among some lawmakers that her past involvemen­t in the torture of terror suspects was a red flag.

President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Central Intelligen­ce Agency passed on a vote of 5445, with half a dozen opposition Democrats bucking their party and supporting the controvers­ial Haspel’s nomination.

“Congratula­tions to our new CIA Director, Gina Haspel!” tweeted the president, who has described her as exceptiona­lly qualified.

Two Republican­s voted against her, while Republican Senator John McCain, who was tortured during years spent as a prisoner of war in Vietnam, also opposed her nomination but is in Arizona battling brain cancer and could not vote.

The 61-year-old Haspel, a Russia specialist who spent her career in the clandestin­e service, takes over from Mike Pompeo, whom Trump recently made his secretary of state.

Haspel is widely respected as a discipline­d, non-political field agent. She rose to manage the global clandestin­e network before becoming the CIA’s deputy director one year ago. But with her past suddenly in the spotlight, she endured a contentiou­s confirmati­on process during which lawmakers criticised her work following the Sept 11, 2001 attacks, when she oversaw a secret prison in Thailand.

It was there that Al-Qaeda suspects Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri were water-boarded, an interrogat­ion technique subsequent­ly condemned as torture.

Haspel pledged to lawmakers that she would ‘never ever’ take the CIA back to enhanced interrogat­ion techniques.

While she notably declined to describe the interrogat­ion methods as ‘immoral’ at her confirmati­on hearing, she wrote in a follow-up letter to lawmakers that the harsh program “is not one the CIA should have undertaken.”

Number two Senate Republican John Cornyn said Haspel is wellliked within the CIA and will provide “objective, unbiased, and unvarnishe­d intelligen­ce” to the president and policymake­rs. But several Democrats expressed worry that Haspel might not stand up to the president, who in 2016 told supporters that ‘torture works’ and that he would like to see interrogat­ion techniques “tougher than waterboard­ing.”

Senator Dianne Feinstein, a former chair of the Senate Intelligen­ce Community who in that role worked extensivel­y with CIA management, said confirming Haspel sends “the wrong message” that the United States has abdicated its moral authority.

“No one has ever been held accountabl­e for the torture programme and I do not believe those who were intimately involved in it deserve to lead the agency,” Feinstein said in a statement after voting against Haspel.

“What message does it send to the world if we reward people for presiding over what is considered to be one of the darkest chapters in our history?”

 ??  ?? Gina Haspel
Gina Haspel

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