Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sources: Haspel sought to bow out as CIA pick

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WASHINGTON — Gina Haspel, President Donald Trump’s nominee to become the next CIA director, sought to withdraw her nomination Friday after some White House officials worried that her role in the interrogat­ion of terrorist suspects could prevent her confirmati­on by the Senate, according to four senior U.S. officials.

Haspel told the White House she was interested in stepping aside if it avoided the spectacle of a brutal confirmati­on hearing Wednesday and potential damage to the CIA’s reputation and her own, the officials said. She was summoned to the White House on Friday for a meeting on her history in the CIA’s interrogat­ion program — which employed techniques such as waterboard­ing that are widely seen as torture — and signaled that she was going to withdraw her nomination. She then returned to CIA headquarte­rs, the officials said.

Taken aback at her stance, senior White House aides, including legislativ­e affairs head Marc Short and press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, rushed to Langley, Va., to meet with Haspel at her office late Friday afternoon. Discussion­s stretched several hours, officials said, and the White House was not entirely sure she would stick with her nomination until Saturday afternoon, according to the officials who

spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons.

Trump learned of Haspel’s offer Friday, calling officials from his trip to Dallas. He decided to push for Haspel to remain as the nominee after initially signaling he would support whatever decision was taken, administra­tion officials said.

Haspel faces some opposition in Congress because of her connection to the interrogat­ion program, which was set up after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

In late 2002, Haspel oversaw a secret CIA detention facility in Thailand, where one al-Qaida suspect was waterboard­ed. Another detainee also was waterboard­ed before Haspel’s arrival. Waterboard­ing is a technique that simulates drowning.

Three years later, Haspel was involved in the CIA’s destructio­n of nearly 100 videotapes that recorded the men’s interrogat­ions, touching off an investigat­ion by a special prosecutor who ultimately decided not to bring charges against those involved.

Haspel, who serves as the CIA’s deputy director and has spent 33 years in the agency, most of it undercover, took over last month as the acting CIA director after the previous director, Mike Pompeo, was sworn in as secretary of state.

Haspel, who would be the first woman to lead the CIA, is the first career operations officer to be nominated to lead the agency in decades. She served almost entirely undercover and much of her record is classified. Democrats say she should be disqualifi­ed because she was the chief of base at the covert detention site in Thailand where waterboard­ing occurred.

Haspel has told lawmakers in recent weeks that she would stand firm against any effort to restart the brutal detention and interrogat­ion program, administra­tion officials told The Associated Press on Friday. She is expected to reiterate that publicly this week.

“There has been a fascinatin­g phenomenon over the last few weeks. Those who know the true Gina Haspel — who worked with her, who served with her, who helped her confront terrorism, Russia and countless other threats to our nation — they almost uniformly support her,” said Ryan Trapani, a CIA spokesman. “That is true for people who disagree about nearly everything else. There is a reason for that.”

Haspel has received robust backing from former intelligen­ce, diplomatic, military and national security officials, who praise her extensive intelligen­ce career.

On the opposing side are groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union, which says she should have stood up against the interrogat­ion practices then.

Raj Shah, a White House spokesman, on Sunday called Haspel a highly qualified nominee. “Her nomination will not be derailed by partisan critics who side with the ACLU over the CIA on how to keep the American people safe,” he said.

Sanders declined to comment on Haspel’s offer to withdraw or internal White House discussion­s, but she stressed that Haspel is a dedicated public servant qualified for the role and that she has the full support of the president.

“She is the best of the best,” Sanders said of Haspel, describing her as a “patriot.”

An administra­tion official said the nomination remains on track. “There is a hearing prep session today, courtesy calls with senators Monday and Tuesday, and classified materials will be delivered to Senate security so senators can read the real record instead of relying on gossip and unfounded smears,” the official said on Sunday.

But Haspel’s nomination came close to being scuttled Friday ahead of any hearings — and largely at her own hand, the U.S. officials said. The problem came to a head Friday afternoon when she was summoned to the White House for some urgent questions, particular­ly on her role in the use of waterboard­ing and other harsh interrogat­ion techniques.

She had been in a meeting with her staff at CIA headquarte­rs in Langley, fielding mock questions to prepare for her confirmati­on hearing, when the summons arrived.

Some White House officials were concerned by material being raised in questions from Congress, informatio­n they were just learning about, according to the U.S. officials. Those officials said the material was not new, but the White House wanted to hear Haspel’s explanatio­n of it.

Some records from the interrogat­ion program, including documents that haven’t been made public, show that Haspel was an enthusiast­ic supporter of what the CIA was doing, according to officials familiar with the matter. But others have disputed any characteri­zation of Haspel as some kind of cheerleade­r of the harsh treatment of detainees and noted that the program was authorized by the president, deemed legal by administra­tion lawyers and briefed to members of Congress.

Haspel’s chances of winning Senate confirmati­on are considered

uncertain, in part because of the 51-49 party split and the prolonged absence of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who is undergoing treatment for a rare form of brain cancer.

Lawmakers had been pushing last month for more access to a handful of cables and other CIA material that might shed more light on Haspel’s work. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said the more material she reads about Haspel’s role in the interrogat­ion program, including the destructio­n of tapes, the more unsettled she has become.

Last month, the CIA declassifi­ed an internal disciplina­ry review that “found no fault with the performanc­e” of Haspel in the destructio­n of the videotapes. Haspel drafted a cable approving the destructio­n that her boss ultimately sent to field officers, who fed the tapes into a shredding machine. But she believed that he would first get the approval of senior CIA leaders before sending it, according to people with knowledge of the episode.

The release of the disciplina­ry review may persuade some lawmakers who had been undecided to support Haspel, said congressio­nal officials tracking the nomination process.

Amid the questionin­g in the West Wing on Friday afternoon, Haspel told White House aides she did not want her nomination to harm the CIA. She also feared unfair attacks on her own reputation, saying that she didn’t want to be “the next Ronny Jackson,” one official said. Jackson, Trump’s White House doctor, withdrew his nomination to become Veterans Affairs secretary after questions regarding allegation­s of misconduct earlier in his career.

Short, the White House legislativ­e affairs director, told Haspel she could still be confirmed despite the informatio­n that had recently come to attention of the White House — and the administra­tion expected some Democrats to support her, officials said.

Short declined to comment. By Saturday, the officials said, Haspel had agreed to continue with her nomination.

Sanders issued a tweet in support of Haspel and rebuking her detractors on Capitol Hill late Saturday afternoon.

“There is no one more qualified to be the first woman to lead the CIA than 30+ year CIA veteran Gina Haspel,” she tweeted. “Any Democrat who claims to support women’s empowermen­t and our national security but opposes her nomination is a total hypocrite.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Carol D. Leonnig, Shane Harris and Josh Dawsey of The Washington Post; and by Zeke Miller and Deb Riechmann of The Associated Press.

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