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elleng

(130,895 posts)
Sat Mar 8, 2014, 01:11 AM Mar 2014

Behind Clash Between C.I.A. and Congress, a Secret Report on Interrogations.

It was early December when the Central Intelligence Agency began to suspect it had suffered what it regarded as an embarrassing computer breach.

Investigators for the Senate Intelligence Committee, working in the basement of a C.I.A. facility in Northern Virginia, had obtained an internal agency review summarizing thousands of documents related to the agency’s detention and interrogation program. Parts of the C.I.A. report cast a particularly harsh light on the program, the same program the agency was in the midst of defending in a prolonged dispute with the intelligence committee.

What the C.I.A. did next opened a new and even more rancorous chapter in the struggle over how the history of the interrogation program will be written. Agency officials began scouring the digital logs of the computer network used by the Senate staff members to try to learn how and where they got the report. Their search not only raised constitutional questions about the propriety of an intelligence agency investigating its congressional overseers, but has also resulted in two parallel inquiries by the Justice Department — one into the C.I.A. and one into the committee.

Each side accuses the other of spying on it, with the Justice Department now playing the uneasy role of arbitrator in the bitter dispute. “It’s always been a dicey proposition to be investigating Congress,” said W. George Jameson, a C.I.A. lawyer for decades. “You don’t do it lightly.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/08/us/politics/behind-clash-between-cia-and-congress-a-secret-report-on-interrogations.html?hp&_r=0

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Behind Clash Between C.I.A. and Congress, a Secret Report on Interrogations. (Original Post) elleng Mar 2014 OP
K & R !!! WillyT Mar 2014 #1
an easy way to end conflict: give CIA blanket immunity in exchange for testimony against yurbud Mar 2014 #2
Eye opener: Jefferson23 Mar 2014 #3

yurbud

(39,405 posts)
2. an easy way to end conflict: give CIA blanket immunity in exchange for testimony against
Sun Mar 9, 2014, 01:30 PM
Mar 2014

elected officials who crafted the policy.

Jefferson23

(30,099 posts)
3. Eye opener:
Sun Mar 9, 2014, 06:42 PM
Mar 2014
It is unclear how or when committee investigators obtained parts of the Panetta review. One official said that they had penetrated a firewall inside the C.I.A. computer system that had been set up to separate the committee’s work area from other agency digital files, but exactly what happened will not be known until the Justice Department completes its inquiry.

Several officials said that the C.I.A. never intended to give the internal memos to the Senate, partly under the justification that they were draft documents intended for the C.I.A. director and therefore protected under executive privilege authorities.

K&R
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