Dec 12, 2007 2:04 pm US/Pacific
Congress To Call For CIA Tapes Probe
Congress Says It Was Not Informed Interrogations Were Videotaped
WASHINGTON (CBS News) ―
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CIA Director Michael Hayden said he learned of the terrorist interrogation videotapes more than a year ago in his tenure as principal deputy director of national intelligence, a post he held from April 2005 to May 2006.
AP
The CIA failed to inform Congress fully that
it was videotaping the harsh interrogations of terror suspects and that
it destroyed the tapes in 2005, the bipartisan leaders of the House of
Representatives intelligence committee said Wednesday.
"Our committee was not informed, has not been kept informed, and we
are very frustrated about that issue," said the committee's Democratic
chairman, Rep. Sylvestre Reyes, after a three-hour private meeting with
the CIA's director, Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden. That meeting, he
said, "is just the first step in what we feel is going to be a
long-term investigation."
The probe will include calling other witnesses, including Hayden
predecessors George Tenet and Porter Goss, and John Negroponte, the
former Director of National Intelligence who is now the deputy
secretary of state, said Rep. Peter Hoekstra, the committee's senior
Republican.
Reyes told CBS News that Hayden told the committee that he never received a sit-down briefing from Goss when he became CIA director.
Hoekstra told CBS News that he and Reyes both agree the man
they most want to hear from is Jose Rodriguez, the former CIA director
of operations, who ordered the destruction of the tapes. He said a
meeting could happen relatively soon, possibly before Christmas.
Both also said they want to hear from former White House counsel Harriet Miers.
Hayden acknowledged that "particularly at the time of the
destruction, we could have done an awful lot better at keeping the
committee alerted and informed."
Hayden said he learned of the terrorist interrogation videotapes
more than a year ago in his tenure as principal deputy director of
national intelligence, where he served from April 2005 to May 2006. He
said he did not know that the tapes were being destroyed.
"I did not personally know before they were destroyed, not at all,"
he said after the briefing. "I was aware of the existence of the tapes
but really didn't become focused on it until the summer of '06."
Reyes said some members were "stunned" by what they heard at
Wednesday's meeting, but they will need many more hearings before being
able to figure out exactly what happened, reports CBS News correspondent Bob Fuss.
Hoekstra said the panel also will look into the White House's
interrogation policy and whether the intelligence agency's
interrogators followed it.
Hayden made a similar appearance before the Senate Intelligence
Committee on Tuesday, but said he could not answer all the panel's
questions because the tapes were created and destroyed before he
arrived at the CIA, under the tenure of his predecessors Tenet and
Goss.
"Other people in the agency know about this far better than I,"
Hayden said, and promised the committee he would make those witnesses
available.
Hayden told CIA employees last week that the videotapes, made in
2002, showed the CIA's interrogations of two terror suspects. The CIA
destroyed the tapes in 2005. The tapes were made to document how CIA
officers were using new, harsh questioning techniques recently approved
by the White House to force recalcitrant prisoners to talk.
They show the interrogations of Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri.
Abu Zubaydah, the first high-value detainee taken by the CIA
in 2002, is now being held with other detainees at the U.S. base at
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He told his interrogators about alleged 9/11
accomplice Ramzi Binalshibh, and the two men's confessions also led to
the capture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who the U.S. government said was
the mastermind behind the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Al-Nashiri is the alleged coordinator of the 2000 suicide attack on
the USS Cole in Yemen, which killed 17 sailors. He is also now at
Guantanamo.
The CIA has not described exactly what was shown on all the tapes.
However, among the harsh interrogation techniques the White House
approved in 2002 was waterboarding.
Waterboarding involves strapping down a prisoner, covering his
mouth with plastic or cloth and pouring water over his face. The
prisoner quickly begins to inhale water, causing the sensation of
drowning.
The CIA is known to have waterboarded three prisoners - Abu Zubaydah, Al-Nashiri and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
The CIA has not used the technique since 2003, according to a
government official familiar with the program. Hayden prohibited
waterboarding in 2006. The U.S. military outlawed it the same year.
The CIA destroyed the videotapes in November of 2005. Exactly when
Congress was notified of that and in what detail is in dispute.
President Bush said he didn't know about the tapes or their destruction until last week.
(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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