Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Career spymaster, Haspel becomes new CIA director

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s choice to be the first female director of the CIA is a career spymaster who once ran an agency prison in Thailand where terror suspects were subjected to a harsh interrogat­ion technique that the president has supported. Gina Haspel, the current deputy CIA director, also helped carry out an order that the agency destroy its waterboard­ing videos. That order prompted a lengthy Justice Department investigat­ion that ended without charges. Haspel, who has extensive overseas experience, briefly ran a secret CIA prison where accused terrorists Abu Zubayadah and Abd al Rahim al-Nashiri were waterboard­ed in 2002, according to current and former U.S. intelligen­ce officials, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. More than a decade after waterboard­ing was last used, the CIA is still haunted by the legacy of a tactic that the U.S. government regarded as torture before the Bush administra­tion authorized its use against terrorist suspects. There is no indication that Trump’s pick signals a desire to restart the harsh interrogat­ion and detention program. Haspel, who joined the CIA in 1985, has been chief of station at CIA outposts abroad. In Washington, she has held several top senior leadership positions, including deputy director of the National Clandestin­e Service and deputy director of the National Clandestin­e Service for Foreign Intelligen­ce and Covert Action..

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