Cheney: Bush was aware of CIA torture

  • Breaking
  • 11/12/2014

By Dave Clark

President George W Bush was fully aware of and an "integral part" of the CIA's torture of terror suspects, his vice-president Dick Cheney says.

The long-awaited US Senate report on the harsh treatment and torture of detainees said Bush only learned details of it in 2006, four years after it started in the wake of the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington.

Detainees were beaten, waterboarded - some of them dozens of times - and humiliated through the painful use of medically unnecessary "rectal feeding" and "rectal rehydration", the report said.

Speaking to Fox News, Cheney denied Bush was kept out of the loop. He said the then-president "was in fact an integral part of the program and he had to approve it."

Asked if Bush knew specific details of how specific interrogations were being conducted, Cheney was more vague, saying: "We did discuss the techniques. There was no effort on our part to keep him from that."

Bush has yet to speak out publicly on the Senate report, which has drawn scathing criticism worldwide of what the CIA has called "enhanced interrogation techniques", amid and calls for those involved to face trial.

The CIA deliberately misled Congress and the White House about the value of the intelligence its interrogators were gathering, the report concluded.

But Cheney did not mince his words in rejecting that.

"The report's full of crap, excuse me. I said hooey yesterday - let me use the real word," he thundered.

The investigation was "deeply flawed" and "didn't bother to interview key people involved in the program," he said.

According to the 500-page declassified summary of the Senate Intelligence Committee's findings, the first CIA briefing with Bush on the interrogation techniques was on April 8, 2006.

Some of the prisoners - including Abu Zubaydah, allegedly Osama Bin Laden's right-hand man, and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, who allegedly led Al-Qaeda operations in the Gulf - were subjected to the torture starting in 2002, it said.

China and Iran, whose own human rights records have often been criticised by Washington, denounced the abuses - but so did Germany and the new pro-US leader of Afghanistan.

"Such a gross violation of our liberal, democratic values must not happen again," German foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said, reflecting the embarrassment of Washington's European allies.

America's great power rival China - often on the end of US censure for its rights record - was equally unimpressed.

"We believe the US side should reflect upon itself, correct its ways and earnestly respect and abide by the rules of international conventions," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said.

Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei took to Twitter to declare the United States a "symbol of tyranny against humanity" - not just in the CIA torture program but in domestic law enforcement.

The United Nations said the program violated international law and basic human rights, and British-based advocacy group CAGE demanded criminal proceedings.

Around the world, human rights bodies demanded that current US President Barack Obama - who halted the torture but has not gone after the perpetrators - take legal action.

In Washington, a senior official told reporters that nothing in the Senate Intelligence Committee report would change a decision not to prosecute.

The report, released by Democratic committee chair Dianne Feinstein over the objections of some of her Republican colleagues, said CIA torture had been more brutal than previously acknowledged.

It was also badly supervised and ineffective, it found.

"No nation is perfect," Obama said. "But one of the strengths that makes America exceptional is our willingness to openly confront our past, face our imperfections, make changes and do better."

Russia: Torture report 'shocking'

Russia has called the damning report "shocking" and urged global pressure to force Washington to release still-classified details on rights violations.

Russia, which has always bristled at what it sees as Washington's incessant attempts to lecture Moscow on human rights, seized on the latest opportunity to say the Kremlin's former Cold War foe and its allies were no models of democracy.

A searing US Senate Intelligence Committee report released Tuesday said the CIA's interrogation of al-Qaeda suspects was far more brutal than acknowledged and did not produce useful intelligence.

"Its contents are shocking," the Russian foreign ministry's human rights envoy Konstantin Dolgov said, referring to the report.

"The published data is the latest proof of crude systemic violations of human rights by US authorities," he said in a statement.

"Such a state of affairs does not mesh with the United States' claims to the title of a 'paragon of democracy," Dolgov said. "This is far from the reality."

Dolgov also called for a probe into the role of other governments that allowed the CIA to run secret prisons on their territory.

The call appeared to be a thinly veiled jab at countries such as Poland whose former president Aleksander Kwasniewski acknowledged for the first time on Wednesday that his country hosted a secret US jail.

Since the outbreak of the confrontation between Russia and the West over Ukraine, Poland has been one of the Kremlin's most vocal critics.

AFP

source: newshub archive