Time to Thank "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques"

Posted By Alan W. Dowd On May 6, 2011 

The successes of the CIA and other intelligence agencies, the old saying
goes, are never known and the failures are never forgotten. The takedown of
Osama bin Laden by Navy SEALs, who were guided onto their target by the work
of hundreds of intelligence officers around the world, is a welcome
exception to this rule. In a similar way, the successful strike on bin Laden
forces us to take a fresh look at the notion that enhanced interrogation
techniques (EITs) are not useful or effective. If recent comments from
high-level officials are any indication, EITs played an important part in
the hunt for and elimination of the terror mastermind.

Ever since 9/11, the CIA has been pounded for not "connecting the dots." The
"dots" in the world of intelligence-gathering can be anything-individuals,
places, times, targets, dates, fragments of messages, inscrutable codes-but
they mean nothing to policymakers unless or until an intelligence analyst
can draw a line from one dot to another and thereby paint at least part of a
picture.

That connecting line is crucial. And in the case of taking down bin Laden,
that connecting line was apparently provided by sources that were subjected
to EITs, according to an NBC interview of CIA director Leon Panetta
<http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/42880435/ns/world_news-south_and_central_asia
> .

The most likely source to provide what NBC calls "the thread of information"
about bin Laden's trusted courier was Khalid Sheik Mohammed (KSM), who
masterminded the 9/11 attacks.

According to the Associated Press, KSM, while being held in a CIA prison
somewhere in Eastern Europe, divulged nicknames of key bin Laden aides and
couriers. Although he had been subjected to water-boarding, or simulated
drowning, several times
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/03/us-binladen-interrogations-idUSTR
E7417SQ20110503>  prior to divulging the names, KSM turned over these
fragments of info long after agents had stopped using the technique. Obama
administration officials concede, however, that "U.S. intelligence did not
learn the identity of the courier until after the CIA interrogation program
was terminated," Reuters reports. In other words, it is possible fear of
another round of water-boarding had an impact on KSM.

"We got beat up for it, but those efforts led to this great day," Marty
Martin, a retired CIA officer, told AP.

In fact, Panetta says, "intelligence garnered from water-boarded detainees
was used to track down al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and kill him,"
according to NBC's reporting. "We had a multiple source-a multiple series of
sources-that provided information with regards to the situation," according
to Panetta. "Clearly some of it came from detainees and the interrogation of
detainees, but we also had information from other sources as well." 

Rep. Peter King (R-NY), was less opaque. "The road to bin Laden began with
water-boarding," he told NBC News. As chairman of the Homeland Security
Committee and a member of the Permanent Select Intelligence Committee, King
would know.

  _____  

  _____  

In the cold calculus of this war, King has concluded that the ends justify
the means, that innocent life is more important than a terrorist's comfort:
"I use the example of September 10th, 2001, if we had captured Mohammed Atta
and we knew he was going to kill thousands of Americans but we didn't know
when or where, are we saying now you wouldn't hold his head under water to
save 3,000 lives?"

When put that way, most Americans would agree with King's sentiment, and
understandably so. When characterized as torture, Americans become a bit
more squeamish about EITs, and understandably so.

The reason the "thread" that led the CIA and the SEALs to bin Laden is such
a big deal is President Barack Obama's very vocal views on EITs.
Water-boarding "violates our ideals and our values," Obama said in 2009. "I
do believe that it is torture.And that is why I put an end to these
practices."

The Bush administration, on the other hand, rejected the characterization of
EITs as torture and limited the use of EITs to a small handful of
individuals. "We used this technique on three people," President George W.
Bush said in an interview after leaving office. "We gained.information to
protect the country. And it was the right thing to do as far as I'm
concerned."

It's a policy difference, a difference of worldviews and philosophy, and
that's what elections are about. Obama's 2009 executive order that reversed
Bush administration policy on EITs authorizes only those interrogation
techniques approved by the U.S. Army Field Manual. The problem is, those
techniques may not have-probably would not have-persuaded KSM to say much of
anything.

The intelligence community in general and the Bush administration in
particular have been forced to defend their post-9/11 tactics ad nauseam and
criticized for not connecting all the pre-9/11 dots. Now that those tactics
are helping to connect the dots-and in fact clearing a path all the way to
bin Laden-perhaps it's time to stop criticizing them.

Alan W. Dowd <http://twitter.com/alanwdowd>  writes on defense and security
issues.

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  _____  

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/05/06/time-to-thank-enhanced-interrogation-tech
niques/

 



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