Who is talking to Dana Priest...both he and his sources should be locked up
for publishing classified information.
 
Bruce
 

Covert CIA program withstands new furor 
Anti-terrorism effort continues to grow
 
By Dana Priest
The Washington Post
Updated: 11:43 p.m. ET Dec. 29, 2005
 

The effort President Bush authorized shortly after Sept. 11, 2001, to fight
al Qaeda has grown into the largest CIA covert action program since the
height of the Cold War, expanding in size and ambition despite a growing
outcry at home and abroad over its clandestine tactics, according to former
and current intelligence officials and congressional and administration
sources.
 
The broad-based effort, known within the agency by the initials GST, is
compartmentalized into dozens of highly classified individual programs,
details of which are known mainly to those directly involved.
 
GST includes programs allowing the CIA to capture al Qaeda suspects with
help from foreign intelligence services, to maintain secret prisons abroad,
to use interrogation techniques that some lawyers say violate international
treaties, and to maintain a fleet of aircraft to move detainees around the
globe. Other compartments within GST give the CIA enhanced ability to mine
international financial records and eavesdrop on suspects anywhere in the
world.
 
Over the past two years, as aspects of this umbrella effort have burst into
public view, the revelations have prompted protests and official
investigations in countries that work with the United States, as well as
condemnation by international human rights activists and criticism by
members of Congress.
 
Still, virtually all the programs continue to operate largely as they were
set up, according to current and former officials. These sources say Bush's
personal commitment to maintaining the GST program and his belief in its
legality have been key to resisting any pressure to change course.
 
'Dirty details'
"In the past, presidents set up buffers to distance themselves from covert
action," said A. John Radsan, assistant general counsel at the CIA from 2002
to 2004. "But this president, who is breaking down the boundaries between
covert action and conventional war, seems to relish the secret findings and
the dirty details of operations."
 
The administration's decisions to rely on a small circle of lawyers for
legal interpretations that justify the CIA's covert programs and not to
consult widely with Congress on them have also helped insulate the efforts
from the growing furor, said several sources who have been involved.
 
Bush has never publicly confirmed the existence of a covert program, but he
was recently forced to defend the approach in general terms, citing his
wartime responsibilities to protect the nation. In November, responding to
questions about the CIA's clandestine prisons, he said the nation must
defend against an enemy that "lurks and plots and plans and wants to hurt
America again."
 
This month he went into more detail, defending the National Security
Agency's warrantless eavesdropping within the United States. That program is
separate from the GST program, but three lawyers involved said the legal
rationale for the NSA program is essentially the same one used to support
GST, which is an abbreviation of a classified code name for the umbrella
covert action program.
 
'In the name of self-defense'
The administration contends it is still acting in self-defense after the
Sept. 11 attacks, that the battlefield is worldwide, and that everything it
has approved is consistent with the demands made by Congress on Sept. 14,
2001, when it passed a resolution authorizing "all necessary and appropriate
force against those nations, organizations, or persons [the president]
determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks."
 
"Everything is done in the name of self-defense, so they can do anything
because nothing is forbidden in the war powers act," said one official who
was briefed on the CIA's original cover program and who is skeptical of its
legal underpinnings. "It's an amazing legal justification that allows them
to do anything," said the official, who like others spoke on the condition
of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issues.
 

The interpretation undergirds the administration's determination not to
waver under public protest or the threat of legislative action. For example,
after The Washington Post disclosed the existence of secret prisons in
several Eastern European democracies, the CIA closed them down because of an
uproar in Europe. But the detainees were moved elsewhere to similar CIA
prisons, referred to as "black sites" in classified documents.
 
The CIA has stuck with its overall approaches, defending and in some cases
refining them. The agency is working to establish procedures in the event a
prisoner dies in custody. One proposal circulating among mid-level officers
calls for rushing in a CIA pathologist to perform an autopsy and then
quickly burning the body, according to two sources.
 
In June, the CIA temporarily suspended its interrogation program after a
controversy over disclosure of an Aug. 1, 2002, memorandum from the Justice
Department's Office of Legal Counsel that defined torture in an
unconventional way. The White House withdrew and replaced the memo. But the
hold on the CIA's interrogation activities was eventually removed, several
intelligence officials said.
 
The authorized techniques include "waterboarding" and "water dousing," both
meant to make prisoners think they are drowning; hard slapping; isolation;
sleep deprivation; liquid diets; and stress positions -- often used,
intelligence officials say, in combination to enhance the effect.
 
Behind the scenes, CIA Director Porter J. Goss -- until last year the
Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee -- has gathered
ammunition to defend the program.
 
McCain's measure
After a CIA inspector general's report in the spring of 2004 found that some
authorized interrogation techniques violated international law, Goss asked
two national security experts to study the program's effectiveness.
 
Gardner Peckham, an adviser to then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.),
concluded that the interrogation techniques had been effective, said an
intelligence official familiar with the result. John J. Hamre, deputy
defense secretary under President Bill Clinton, offered a more ambiguous
conclusion. Both declined to comment.
 
The only apparent roadblock that could yet prompt significant change in the
CIA's approach is a law passed this month prohibiting torture and cruel and
inhumane treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody, including in CIA hands.
 
It is still unclear how the law, sponsored by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.),
will be implemented. But two intelligence experts said the CIA will be
required to draw up clear guidelines and to get all special interrogation
techniques approved by a wider range of government lawyers who hold a more
conventional interpretation of international treaty obligations.
 
"The executive branch will not pull back unless it has to," said a former
Justice Department lawyer involved in the initial discussions on executive
power. "Because if it pulls back unilaterally and another attack occurs, it
will get blamed."
 
The origins
The top-secret presidential finding Bush signed six days after the Sept. 11
attacks empowered the intelligence agencies in a way not seen since World
War II, and it ordered them to create what would become the GST program.
 
Written findings are required by the National Security Act of 1947 before
the CIA can undertake a covert action. A covert action may not violate the
Constitution or any U.S. law. But such actions can, and often do, violate
laws of the foreign countries in which they take place, said intelligence
experts.
 

The CIA faced the day after the attacks with few al Qaeda informants, a tiny
paramilitary division and no interrogators, much less a system for
transporting suspected terrorists and keeping them hidden for interrogation.
 
Besides fighting the war in Afghanistan, the agency set about to put in
place an intelligence-gathering network that relies heavily on foreign
security services and their deeper knowledge of local terrorism groups. With
billions of dollars appropriated each year by Congress, the CIA has
established joint counterterrorism intelligence centers in more than two
dozen countries, and it has enlisted at least eight countries, including
several in Eastern Europe, to allow secret prisons on their soil.
 
Working behind the scenes, the CIA has gained approval from foreign
governments to whisk suspected terrorists off streets or out of police
custody into a clandestine prison system that includes the CIA's black sites
and facilities run by intelligence agencies in other countries.
 
The presidential finding also permitted the CIA to create paramilitary teams
to hunt and kill designated individuals anywhere in the world, according to
a dozen current and former intelligence officials and congressional and
executive branch sources.
 
In four years, the GST has become larger than the CIA's covert action
programs in Afghanistan and Central America in the 1980s, according to
current and former intelligence officials. Indeed, the CIA, working with
foreign counterparts, has been responsible for virtually all of the success
the United States has had in capturing or killing al Qaeda leaders since
Sept. 11.
 
Bush delegated much of the day-to-day decision-making and the creation of
individual components to then-CIA Director George J. Tenet, according to
congressional and intelligence officials who were briefed on the finding at
the time.
 
"George could decide, even on killings," one of these officials said,
referring to Tenet. "That was pushed down to him. George had the authority
on who was going to get it."
 
The lawyers
Tenet, according to half a dozen former intelligence officials, delegated
most of the decision making on lethal action to the CIA's Counterterrorist
Center. Killing an al Qaeda leader with a Hellfire missile fired from a
remote-controlled drone might have been considered assassination in a prior
era and therefore banned by law.
 
But after Sept. 11, four former government lawyers said, it was classified
as an act of self-defense and therefore was not an assassination. "If it was
an al Qaeda person, it wouldn't be an assassination," said one lawyer
involved.
 
This month, Pakistani intelligence sources said, Hamza Rabia, a top
operational planner for al Qaeda, was killed along with four others by a
missile fired by U.S. operatives using an unmanned Predator drone, although
there were conflicting reports on whether a missile was used. In May,
another al Qaeda member, Haitham Yemeni, was reported killed by a Predator
drone missile in northwest Pakistan.
 
Refining what constitutes an assassination was just one of many legal
interpretations made by Bush administration lawyers. Time and again, the
administration asked government lawyers to draw up new rules and reinterpret
old ones to approve activities once banned or discouraged under the
congressional reforms beginning in the 1970s, according to these officials
and seven lawyers who once worked on these matters.
 
Gen. Michael V. Hayden, deputy director of national intelligence, has
described the administration's philosophy in public and private meetings,
including a session with human rights groups.
 
"We're going to live on the edge," Hayden told the groups, according to
notes taken by Human Rights Watch and confirmed by Hayden's office. "My
spikes will have chalk on them. . . . We're pretty aggressive within the
law. As a professional, I'm troubled if I'm not using the full authority
allowed by law."
 

Not stopping another attack not only will be a professional failure, he
argued, but also "will move the line" again on acceptable legal limits to
counterterrorism.
 
When the CIA wanted new rules for interrogating important suspected
terrorists, the White House gave the task to a small group of lawyers within
the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel who believed in an
aggressive interpretation of presidential power.
 
The White House tightened the circle of participants involved in these most
sensitive new areas. It initially cut out the State Department's general
counsel, most of the judge advocate generals for the military services and
the Justice Department's criminal division, which traditionally dealt with
international terrorism.
 
"The Bush administration did not seek a broad debate on whether
commander-in-chief powers can trump international conventions and domestic
statutes in our struggle against terrorism," said Radsan, the former CIA
lawyer, who is a professor at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul,
Minn. "They could have separated the big question from classified details to
operations and had an open debate. Instead, an inner circle of lawyers and
advisers worked around the dissenters in the administration and one-upped
each other with extreme arguments."
 
At the CIA, the White House allowed the general counsel's job, traditionally
filled from outside the CIA by someone who functioned in a sort of oversight
role, to be held by John Rizzo, a career CIA lawyer with a fondness for
flashy suits and ties who worked for years in the Directorate of Operations,
or D.O.
 
"John Rizzo is a classic D.O. lawyer. He understands the culture, the
intelligence business," Radsan said. "He admires the case officers. And they
trust him to work out tough issues in the gray with them. He is like a
corporate lawyer who knows how to make the deal happen."
 
These lawyers have written legal justifications for holding suspects picked
up outside Afghanistan without court order, without granting traditional
legal rights and without giving them access to the International Committee
of the Red Cross.
 
CIA and Office of Legal Counsel lawyers also determined it was legal for
suspects to be secretly detained in one country and transferred to another
for the purposes of interrogation and detention -- a process known as
"rendition."
 
Lawyers involved in the decision making acknowledge the uncharted nature of
their work. "I did what I thought the best reading of the law was," one
lawyer said. "These lines are not obvious. It was a judgment."
 
Credit and blame
One way the White House limited debate over its program was to virtually
shut Congress out during the early years. Congress, for its part, raised
only weak and sporadic protest. The administration sometimes refused to give
the committees charged with overseeing intelligence agencies the details
they requested. It also cut the number of members of Congress routinely
briefed on these matters, usually to four members -- the chairmen and
ranking Democratic members of the House and Senate intelligence panels.
 
John D. Rockefeller IV (W.Va.), ranking Democrat on the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, complained in a 2003 letter to Vice President
Cheney that his briefing on the NSA eavesdropping was unsatisfactory. "Given
the security restrictions associated with this information, and my inability
to consult staff or counsel on my own, I feel unable to fully evaluate, much
less endorse, these activities," he wrote.
 
Rockefeller made similar complaints about the CIA's refusal to allow the
full committee to see the backup material supporting a skeptical report by
the CIA inspector general in 2004 on detentions and interrogations that
questioned the legal basis for renditions.
 
Some former CIA officers now worry that the agency alone will be held
responsible for actions authorized by Bush and approved by the White House's
lawyers.
 
Attacking the CIA is common when covert programs are exposed and
controversial, said Gerald Haines, a former CIA historian who is a scholar
in residence at the University of Virginia. "It seems to me the agency is
taking the brunt of all the recent criticism."
 
Duane R. "Dewey" Clarridge, who directed the CIA's covert efforts to support
the Nicaraguan contras in the 1980s, said the nature of CIA work overseas
is, and should be, risky and sometimes ugly. "You have a spy agency because
the spy agency is going to break laws overseas. If you don't want it to do
those dastardly things, don't have it. You can have the State Department."
 
But a former CIA officer said the agency "lost its way" after Sept. 11,
rarely refusing or questioning an administration request. The unorthodox
measures "have got to be flushed out of the system," the former officer
said. "That's how it works in this country."
 
Researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.
 
C 2005 The Washington Post Company
 
C 2005 MSNBC.com
 
URL:  <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10644533/>
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10644533/
 
  _____  

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