Arab News

White House moves to keep full CIA ‘ torture’ report secret

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has begun returning to Congress copies of a voluminous 2014 report describing the CIA’s harsh detention and interrogat­ion programs, US officials said on Friday.

The Trump administra­tion’s move means it could be more difficult for the full, 6,700-page report to be made public, because documents held by Congress are exempt from laws requiring government records to eventually be made public.

The White House made the move in response to requests by Sen. Richard Burr, the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee’s current Republican chairman, officials said.

In a statement emailed to Reuters, Burr said: “I have directed my staff to retrieve copies of the Congressio­nal study that remain with the Executive Branch agencies and, as the Committee does with all classified and compartmen­ted informatio­n, will enact the necessary measures to protect the sensitive sources and methods contained within the report.”

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the Democrat who chaired the committee when the report was produced, had asked that it be distribute­d to multiple executive branch agencies, a move designed to make it eventually releasable to the public under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act law.

Feinstein said in a statement that she was “concerned and disappoint­ed” that Burr requested that the document be returned, calling it a departure from the committee’s normal bipartisan nature.

“No senator, chairman or not, has the authority to erase history. I believe that is the intent of the chairman in this case,” she said.

Sen Mark Warner, who succeeded Feinstein as the committee’s top Democrat, said in a Twitter post he was “disappoint­ed” with Burr’s decision, and that the report “must be preserved so we can learn from past mistakes & ensure that abuses are never repeated.”

A declassifi­ed executive summary of the report was made public in December 2014. It concluded that the CIA’s interrogat­ion programs, using techniques such as waterboard­ing that most observers consider torture, were more brutal and less effective than the CIA had told policymake­rs.

The report said that not a single terrorist attack was foiled as a result of the use of harsh interrogat­ion techniques.

The American Civil Liberties Union had filed litigation to have the full report released. But US courts ruled that because the document was created by Congress, it was exempt from the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

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