'US
a police state, Obama consciously allows torture' – CIA veteran
John Kiriakou
Kiriakou is now awaiting a summons to start a prison sentence. One of the first to confirm the existence of Washington's waterboarding program, he was sentenced last week to two-and-a-half years in jail for revealing the name of an undercover agent. But even if he had another chance, he would have done the same thing again, Kiriakou told RT.
Demonstrator Maboud Ebrahimzadeh is held down during a simulation of waterboarding outside the Justice Department in Washington (Reuters / Jim Young)
Protestors perform a simulation of the waterboarding torture technique on a man dressed as a prisoner during a protest, marking the fifth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, in front of the White House in Washington (Reuters / Jim Young)
RT: Obama's tough stance, and harsh punishments for whistleblowers, has sent a message. Is he winning his fight against those who speak out?
Ten
years ago, the idea of the US government spying on its citizens,
intercepting their emails or killing them with drones was
unthinkable. But now it’s business as usual, says John Kiriakou, a
former CIA agent and torture whistleblower.
RT,
31 January, 2013
Kiriakou is now awaiting a summons to start a prison sentence. One of the first to confirm the existence of Washington's waterboarding program, he was sentenced last week to two-and-a-half years in jail for revealing the name of an undercover agent. But even if he had another chance, he would have done the same thing again, Kiriakou told RT.
RT: The
judge, and your critics all seem to believe you got off lightly.
Would you say you got off lightly?
JK:
No, I would not say I got off lightly for a couple of very specific
reasons. First of all, my case was not about leaking, my case was
about torture. When I blew the whistle on torture in December 2007
the justice department here in the US began investigating me and
never stopped investigating me until they were able to patch together
a charge and force me into taking a plea agreement. And I’ll add
another thing too, when I took the plea in October of last year, the
judge said that she thought the plea was fair and appropriate. But
once the courtroom was packed full of reporters last Friday she
decided that it was not long enough and if she had had the ability to
she would have given me ten years.
RT: And
why did you, a decorated CIA officer, take such a strong stance
against an agency policy? Did you not consider that there might be
some come-back?
JK:
I did. I took a strong stance and a very public one and that’s what
got me into trouble. But honestly the only thing I would do
differently is I would have hired an attorney before blowing the
whistle. Otherwise I believe firmly even to this day I did the right
thing.
Demonstrator Maboud Ebrahimzadeh is held down during a simulation of waterboarding outside the Justice Department in Washington (Reuters / Jim Young)
RT: You
have called it ironic that the first person to be convicted with
regards to the torture program is the man who shed light on it. Do
you believe the others, who put the program together, will ever face
justice?
JK:
I don’t actually. I think that president Obama just like president
Bush has made a conscious decision to allow the torturers, to allow
the people who conceived of the tortures and implemented the policy,
to allow the people who destroyed the evidence of the torture and the
attorneys who used specious legal analysis to approve of the torture
to walk free. And I think that once this decision has been made –
that’s the end of it and nobody will be prosecuted, except me.
RT: When
you initially came out against torture, you said it was impractical
and inefficient. Did you consider it immoral initially?
JK:
I said in 2002 that it was immoral. When I returned from Pakistan to
CIA headquarters early in the summer 2002, I was asked by a senior
officer in the CIA’s counter-terrorist center if I wanted to be
trained in the use of torture techniques, and I told him that I had a
moral problem with these techniques. I believed that they were wrong
and I didn’t want to have anything to do with the torture program.
RT: It's
no secret that Obama's administration has been especially harsh on
whistleblowers. But can the US afford leniency, in these
security-sensitive times?
JK:
I think this is exactly what the problem is. In this post 9/11
atmosphere that we find ourselves in we have been losing our civil
liberties incrementally over the last decade to the point where we
don’t even realize how much of a police state the United States has
become.
Ten
years ago the thought of the National Security Agency spying on
American citizens and intercepting their emails would have been
anathema to Americans and now it’s just a part of normal business.
The
idea that our government would be using drone aircraft to assassinate
American citizens who have never seen the inside of a courtroom, who
have never been charged with a crime and have not had due process
which is their constitutional right would have been unthinkable. And
it is something now that happens every year, every so often, every
few weeks, every few months and there is no public outrage. I think
this is a very dangerous development.
Protestors perform a simulation of the waterboarding torture technique on a man dressed as a prisoner during a protest, marking the fifth anniversary of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, in front of the White House in Washington (Reuters / Jim Young)
RT: Obama's tough stance, and harsh punishments for whistleblowers, has sent a message. Is he winning his fight against those who speak out?
JK:
I don’t think he is winning this fight against whistleblowers, at
least not over
the long term, and I’ll tell you why.
President
Obama has now charged seven people with violations of the Espionage
Act. All previous presidents in American history combined only
charged three people with violating the Espionage Act. And the
Espionage Act is a WWI-era act that was meant to deter German
saboteurs during that First World War. And now it is being used to
silence critics of the government.
But
so far all seven of these cases that have made their way into a
courtroom have either collapsed of have been dismissed, including
mine. All of the three espionage charges against me were dropped.
So,
I think frankly the Obama administration is cheapening the Espionage
Act. The Espionage Act should be used to prosecute spies and
traitors, not to prosecute whistleblowers or people who are
exercising their first amendment right to free speech.
RT: Do
we still need whistleblowers? Are we going to see more of them coming
out?
JK:
I think we will see more whistleblowers and I think we need
whistleblowers now more than ever before. Whether it’s in national
security or whether it is in the banking industry, the American
people have a right to know when there is evidence of waste, fraud,
abuse, or illegality. If the Justice Department is not going to
prosecute these cases, at the very least the American people need to
know.
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