Leaked
documents from CIA director’s email reveal thoughts on torture,
Iran, Afghanistan
RT,
21
October, 2015
WikiLeaks
has come into possession of the contents of CIA chief John Brennan's
email account. Among the documents, from the period when Brennan
worked in the private sector, are reports on Afghanistan and torture,
and ideas for US policy towards Iran.
RELEASE: CIA Director John Brennan emails https://wikileaks.org/cia-emails/
The
emails, obtained by a hacker earlier this week, were from Brennan’s
private email account, which the CIA chief appears to have used to
work on several intelligence-related projects in 2007 and 2008.
Focus
on torture
The
leaked papers include alleged drafts containing discussions about
“challenges
for the US Intelligence Community in a post cold-war and post-9/11
world,”
as well as proposals regarding“torture
methods.”
Among
the documents harvested from Brennan’s personal emails is a May
2008 letter from Christopher Bond, vice-chairman of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, proposing a way to ban torture while
continuing to interrogate “high-value
detainees.”
Both
the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) and CIA director at the
time had objected to proposals limiting interrogation methods to the
19 techniques explicitly authorized in the Army Field Manual (AFM).
RELEASE: CIA chief torture expansion proposal https://wikileaks.org/cia-emails/#torture …
“Rather
than authorizing intelligence agencies to use only those techniques
that are allowed under the AFM, I believe the more prudent approach
is to preclude the use of specific techniques that are prohibited
under the AFM,”
Bond wrote.
This would allow the use of interrogation methods not
explicitly authorized in the manual, but still considered acceptable
under the Geneva Conventions and other laws.
Bond
lists the methods that should be prohibited: “forcing
the detainee to be naked, perform sexual acts, or pose in a sexual
manner; placing hoods or sacks over the head of a detainee and using
duct tape over the eyes; applying beatings, electric shock, burns, or
similar forms of physical pain; ‘waterboarding;’ using military
working dogs; inducing hypothermia or heat injury; conducting mock
executions; and depriving the detainee of adequate food, water or
medical are.”
The draft bill on torture in the WikiLeaks dump was from former Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) and introduced in the Senate http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.uscongress/legislation.110s3386 …
Ties
with Iran
A
note called the Conundrum of Iran, which gave recommendations to
“whoever
takes up residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in January
2009,” emphasized
the need for negotiations with Tehran. Brennan gave a history
of Iran’s political development over the centuries, criticized the
Islamic republic for its support of terrorists, but also praised the
efforts of Iranian diplomats in negotiations in post-Taliban
Afghanistan. The note was written in 2007, when Brennan worked at The
Analysis Corp (TAC), an intelligence and analysis firm he founded.
RELEASE: CIA chief's Iran playbook for incoming Obama https://wikileaks.org/cia-emails/#iran …
Earlier
this week, an American teenage hacker with pro-Palestinian views
claimed that he had broken into the personal email accounts of US top
security officials, CIA director Brennan’s among them.
CIA chief's e-mail hacked, hackers with pro-Palestinian agenda claim responsibility http://on.rt.com/6u89
Calling
for clear instructions to intelligence community
Another
document is a July 2007 draft position paper proposing reforms within
the US intelligence community. One of Brennan’s suggestions is to
extend the terms of the CIA Director and the Director of National
Intelligence to 10 years. This would remove these positions from
the “cycle
of partisan political appointments” and “ensure
needed continuity at the helm of US Intelligence,” he
wrote.
“Backroom
discussions that result in Presidential directives of dubious
legality are not in keeping with our Constitutional
foundations,” Brennan
wrote, demanding “clear
mandates, defined responsibilities, and firm criteria for domestic
intelligence operations,” so
the intel agencies would know their limits and what is required of
them.
Instead,
he said, the “ineffective
implementation” of
the 2004 reforms that created DNI has “resulted
in confusion and competition among intelligence agencies.”
The
draft peters off while discussing the importance of intelligence
operations abroad, leaving unfinished the section on 'Damaging Leaks
of Classified Information.'
Stranded
without a strategy in Afghanistan
The
hacktivist group Anonymous also released fragments
of several documents, including an undated report by Louis Tucker,
Minority Staff Director at the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence, to Vice-Chairman Bond.
Tucker
reports that he traveled to India, Afghanistan and Pakistan with four
colleagues, visiting a number of cities and officials. He complained
that the US Central Command (CENTCOM) in Bagram, Afghanistan
“remained strongly unsupportive” of the trip at every stage.
“Everyone
we spoke with on the ground in Afghanistan and Pakistan confessed
that they know of no overall USG strategy for the region,” Tucker
wrote. “Rather,
we observed quality individuals serving judiciously in their own
lanes ungoverned by a coordinated, comprehensive strategy.”
The
group concluded this lack of coordination was the greatest
contributor to the US failure to achieve regional stability, urging
the development of a comprehensive strategy based on clearly defined
US goals in the region.
They
also recommended the US to avoid cross-border attacks into the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan, as they
risked alienating the Pakistani government and international opinion.
Last,
but not least, the group urged the lawmakers to resist the refrain
of “send
more troops,” as
that would be a recipe for disaster without a strategy.
Hacked
by 'cracka'
Some
of the documents have been posted on Twitter, with edited parts of
them reportedly made public by the hacker under the username
"cracka." Apart from the CIA chief's email, the teenager
claimed to have gained access to Brennan's personal AOL account,
which contained the official's own application for top security
clearance.
The
FBI and Secret Service said they were investigating the situation.
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