The Day

Senators want CIA to lift veil on nominee’s black site past

- By DEB RIECHMANN

Washington — Gina Haspel’s long spy career is so shrouded in mystery that senators want documents declassifi­ed so they can decide if her role at a CIA black site should prevent her from directing the agency.

It’s a deep dive into Haspel’s past that reflects key questions about her future: Would she support President Donald Trump if he tried to reinstate waterboard­ing and, in his words, “a lot worse”? Is Haspel the right person to lead the CIA at a time of escalating Russian aggression and ongoing extremist threats?

Haspel’s upcoming confirmati­on hearing will be laser-focused on the time she spent supervisin­g a secret prison in Thailand. The CIA won’t say when in 2002 Haspel was there, but at various times that year interrogat­ors at the site sought to make terror suspects talk by slamming them against walls, keeping them from sleeping, holding them in coffin-sized boxes and forcing water down their throats — a technique called waterboard­ing.

Haspel also is accused of drafting a memo calling for the destructio­n of 92 videotapes of interrogat­ion sessions. Their destructio­n in 2005 prompted a lengthy Justice Department investigat­ion that ended without charges.

“We should not be asked to confirm a nominee whose background cannot be publicly discussed and who cannot then be held accountabl­e for her actions,” said Sen. Martin Heinrich, who joined other Democrats on the Senate intelligen­ce committee in asking the CIA to declassify more details about Haspel. “The American public deserves to know who its leaders are.”

Court filings, declassifi­ed documents and books written by those involved in the CIA’s now-defunct interrogat­ion program suggest Haspel didn’t arrive at the secret prison in Thailand until after one detainee, Abu Zubaydah, was waterboard­ed 83 times in August 2002. But they indicate she arrived before another detainee, Abd al Rahim al-Nashiri, was waterboard­ed at least three times in November 2002.

Details about the two detainees’ treatment were disclosed in a 2014 Senate report. It said the prison was shut down in December 2002.

Even if Haspel was at the prison site for just a few months, Steven Watt, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney, said she was deeply involved in the interrogat­ion program. For much of its existence, Haspel was deputy director of the CIA’s counterter­rorism center that ran the program using “enhanced interrogat­ion techniques.”

At least 119 men were detained and interrogat­ed as part of the program, said Watt, who represente­d two detainees and the family of another in a 2015 lawsuit against a pair of CIA-hired psychologi­sts.

It’s unknown if Haspel ever was or currently is a gung-ho proponent of brutal methods, or if she was only implementi­ng orders from CIA headquarte­rs.

Several colleagues and former intelligen­ce officials have come to her defense.

Mike Morell, who was an acting director of the CIA, worked closely with Haspel from 2006 until he retired in 2013. Morell has described her as a “warm and engaging” colleague with a “self-deprecatin­g” sense of humor. She’s a “simply exceptiona­l” person who gets things done in a “quiet, yet effective way” and is “calm under fire,” he wrote in The Cipher Brief, an online newsletter on intelligen­ce issues.

“The media is also likely to refer to a moment in her career when she drafted a cable instructin­g a field station to destroy videotapes of CIA interrogat­ions of senior al-Qaida operatives,” Morell wrote when Haspel became deputy CIA director last year. “She did so at the request of her direct supervisor and believing that it was lawful to do so. I personally led an accountabi­lity exercise that cleared Haspel of any wrongdoing in the case.”

While some of assignment­s have come under political fire, “in each case she was following the lawful orders of the president,” Morell said. “And, in each case, she carried out her responsibi­lities within the bounds of the law and with excellent judgment. Any criticism of her in this regard is unfair.”

Psychologi­st James Mitchell, an architect of the CIA program who worked at the same black site, said Haspel won’t filter the intelligen­ce she distribute­s to Trump through a political lens to please him or jockey for political reward.

“We’d be shooting ourselves in the foot if she’s not confirmed,” he told Fox News. “She’s got deep institutio­nal knowledge. She has worked more than 30 years in the agency. She’s earned the right to be there. She can go to work on Day One.”

Former CIA spokesman Bill Harlow, who helped Mitchell write a book, said the focus on interrogat­ion obscures the CIA director’s wide-ranging portfolio. Instead of re-litigating the past, he said Haspel should be asked about Russia, China and cyber threats and how to improve intelligen­ce collection on America’s adversarie­s.

Retired Air Force Col. Steven Kleinman, a longtime interrogat­or with lengthy experience during the first Gulf War, isn’t sure. He said he doesn’t know Haspel’s personal views about the harsh interrogat­ions, but said there’s no indication she ever tried to halt them.

“That question has to be asked by the Senate: ‘Did you at any time suggest that it be stopped because it’s ineffectiv­e, immoral or illegal?’” Kleinman said. “I think we all deserve an answer to that.”

 ?? CIA VIA AP ?? This March 21, 2017, photo provided by the CIA shows Deputy Director Gina Haspel. Haspel, who joined the CIA in 1985, has been chief of station at CIA outposts abroad. President Donald Trump tweeted March 13 that he would nominate CIA Director Mike...
CIA VIA AP This March 21, 2017, photo provided by the CIA shows Deputy Director Gina Haspel. Haspel, who joined the CIA in 1985, has been chief of station at CIA outposts abroad. President Donald Trump tweeted March 13 that he would nominate CIA Director Mike...

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