Orlando Sentinel

Sen. John McCain,

Haspel’s ties to torture could bring quick thumbs-down from senator who was a POW

- By Chris Megerian chris.megerian@latimes.com

whose travails as a POW give him unique authority on the issue of torture, could be the key to Gina Haspel being named the next director of the CIA.

WASHINGTON — Activists seeking to derail President Donald Trump’s nomination of Gina Haspel to lead the CIA are looking to Sen. John McCain to cast the deciding vote against her — assuming he is well enough to return to Washington.

The 81-year-old Republican was diagnosed with brain cancer in July and last cast a vote in early December before he returned home to Arizona for treatment. He underwent surgery in Phoenix for an intestinal infection last Sunday.

Haspel’s critics are counting on McCain to speak out against her nomination, even if he can’t cast a vote on the Senate floor, cementing his legacy as the country’s most prominent critic of torture as he faces the twilight of his career.

“Sen. McCain is essential,” said Matt Hawthorne, policy director for the National Religious Campaign Against Torture. “He has more moral leadership on the issue of torture than anyone.”

McCain was tortured as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War, and he helped lead denunciati­ons of the CIA’s harsh interrogat­ions of terrorism suspects in a secret network of overseas prisons after the 9/11 attacks on New York and the Pentagon in Virginia.

Haspel ran one of the so-called black sites, in Thailand in 2002, and in 2005 she helped authorize the shredding of videotapes made of waterboard­ing and other abusive treatment of detainees at the facility.

Haspel has won wide respect in the intelligen­ce community for her other work at the CIA, serving overseas and undercover for most of her 33 years in the agency. She is now deputy director.

The Obama administra­tion decided not to prosecute anyone for the CIA’s harsh interrogat­ion program, and Haspel’s supporters note that at least some members of Congress gave their blessings to it.

More than 50 former intelligen­ce officials and lawmakers sent a letter supporting Haspel to the leaders of the Senate intelligen­ce committee, which has scheduled her confirmati­on hearing May 9. “She is a true intelligen­ce profession­al who brings care, integrity and a commitment to the rule of law to her work every day,” the letter said.

Among the signatorie­s were former CIA directors John Brennan, Leon Panetta, Michael Hayden and George Tenet, as well as Michael Morell, who served twice as acting director.

McCain, who is serving his sixth term in the Senate, has expressed skepticism of Haspel but hasn’t said whether he will oppose her nomination. His office says he remains engaged in his work in the Senate, where he heads the Armed Services Committee, during his illness.

A Navy pilot in the Vietnam War, McCain was shot down over Hanoi in 1967 and imprisoned for 5½ years. As the son of the Navy admiral who commanded U.S. forces in the Pacific, McCain was offered early release, but he refused to jump the line ahead of POWs who were captured years earlier. He was beaten and held in solitary confinemen­t, exacerbati­ng injuries he suffered when he ejected from his fighter jet.

McCain’s relations with Trump have been strained since 2015 when Trump — who received multiple draft deferments during the war — appeared to mock McCain’s sacrifice.

“He’s not a war hero,” Trump said at a Republican Party candidates’ forum in Iowa. “He’s a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren’t captured.”

Last July, McCain cast the decisive and dramatic no vote that blocked Republican attempts to repeal parts of Obamacare, which Trump had called a priority. McCain might relish a chance to torpedo Trump’s CIA nominee as well.

Haspel was working at the CIA’s Counterter­rorism Center in 2001 when the agency approved what it called “enhanced interrogat­ion techniques” for terrorism suspects it had captured overseas.

During the next five years, some were subjected to mock drowning, forced to go without sleep, slammed against walls, given rectal feeding and confined in coffin-size boxes.

Haspel reportedly ran the CIA prison in Thailand when Abd al Rahim al Nashiri was waterboard­ed. The Saudi was accused of helping to mastermind the suicide bombing of the USS Cole, a guided-missile destroyer at anchor in Yemen, that killed 17 American sailors in 2000.

Nashiri was eventually taken to the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. His long-delayed trial before a military commission there finally was set to start this year but was suspended last month after his civilian lawyers quit over fears the government had been spying on them.

According to his military lawyer, Lt. Alaric Piette, a Boston University medical professor who examined Nashiri, said “he’s the most traumatize­d torture victim she’s ever seen, and she’s treated and observed hundreds, including those who’ve been tortured by brutal regimes and warlords.” Piette, a former Navy SEAL, described Nashiri’s treatment as “disgusting.” He added, “That was a time when we needed profession­alism and leadership, and we got torture instead.”

Haspel’s role in the episode remains classified, frustratin­g advocacy groups concerned about the nomination. It’s not publicly known whether she ordered waterboard­ing and other harsh tactics, or opposed them.

“It’s not an easy process. She’s been undercover for so long,” said Raha Wala, a lawyer at Human Rights First.

Memoirs by former CIA officials have described Haspel’s role in the CIA shredding of the interrogat­ion videos. Haspel advocated destroying the tapes and drafted the cable directing CIA officers in Thailand to do so. Her boss, Jose Rodriguez, then the director of clandestin­e operations, gave the order.

The CIA has promised to disclose more about Haspel’s background for her confirmati­on hearing.

The Republican Senate majority has slipped to 5149, and Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., another vocal critic of torture, already has pledged to vote no. If he is the only Republican defection, Haspel can squeak through.

But if McCain opposes her as well, her nomination could be doomed because his stance would increase chances that all Democrats will oppose her.

McCain’s office declined to answer questions involving his thoughts on Haspel’s nomination.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP 2017 ?? Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is seen as a key vote in Gina Haspel’s nomination for CIA chief.
SUSAN WALSH/AP 2017 Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., is seen as a key vote in Gina Haspel’s nomination for CIA chief.
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