[Peace-discuss] FW: Trumps latest appointment

bjornsona at ameritech.net bjornsona at ameritech.net
Thu Mar 15 01:49:26 UTC 2018


Thank you for all you have and are doing.!!
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------ Original message------From: Boyle, Francis A via Peace-discuss Date: Wed, Mar 14, 2018 10:08 AMTo: Peace-discuss List (peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net);Cc: Subject:[Peace-discuss] FW: Trumps latest appointment


Yeah, I just gave an interview to RT on this. Will let you know if and when it comes out. Of course Trump is a Fascist!
 
Fab
 
 

Francis A. Boyle
Law Building
504 E. Pennsylvania Ave.
Champaign, IL 61820 USA
217-333-7954 (phone)
217-244-1478 (fax)
(personal comments only)

 


From: Peace-discuss >
On Behalf Of Karen Aram via Peace-discuss

Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2018 9:47 AM

To: Peace-discuss List (peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net) >

Subject: [Peace-discuss] Trumps latest appointment


 


Frankly, just about anyone leading the CIA is likely to have been involved in torture of one form
 or another. Whether through rendition or our usual interventions and training of proxies. However, we are becoming so overt in our illegal and atrocious behavior, that it takes on the veneer of acceptability and normality. This we must resist.


 


Opinion | 
EDITORIAL

Having a Torturer Lead the C.I.A.


By THE
 EDITORIAL BOARDMARCH 13, 2018


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CreditDamon
 Winter/The New York Times 


President Trump has displayed enthusiasm for brutality over the past year. He has told the police to treat
 suspects roughly, praised President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines for murdering people
 suspected of drug ties and called for the execution of drug dealers.

But one of his most unsettling beliefs is still his acceptance of the value of torture. “In
 my opinion, it works,” he told Sean Hannity of Fox News early last year.

Previously, anyone alarmed by Mr. Trump’s cavalier embrace of government-sanctioned cruelty was reassured by his vow to accept
 the advice of his defense secretary, Jim Mattis, who opposes torture and promised at his Senate confirmation hearing that he would uphold American and international laws against it.

Now we have reason to be uneasy yet again.

When it comes to torture, no American officials have been more practiced in those heinous dark arts than the agents and employees of the Central Intelligence Agency who applied it to terrorism suspects
 after 9/11. Few American officials were so directly involved in that frenzy of abuse, which began under President George W. Bush and was ended by President Barack Obama, as Gina Haspel.

On Tuesday, in announcing that he had dismissed Rex Tillerson as secretary of state and was replacing him with Mike Pompeo, the C.I.A. director, Mr. Trump said that Mr. Pompeo’s successor would be his
 deputy, Ms. Haspel.
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As an undercover C.I.A. officer, Ms. Haspel played a direct role
 in the agency’s “extraordinary rendition program,” under which suspected militants were remanded to foreign governments and held at secret facilities, where they were tortured by agency personnel.

Ms. Haspel ran the first detention site in Thailand and oversaw the brutal interrogations of two detainees, Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri. Mr. Zubaydah was waterboarded at least 83 times in
 a single month; his C.I.A. torturers bashed his head into walls and subjected him to other unspeakable brutalities. This cruelty stopped when investigators decided he had nothing useful to tell them.


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The sessions were videotaped and the recordings stored in a safe at the C.I.A. station in Thailand until they were ordered destroyed in 2005. And who did that? By then, Ms. Haspel was at C.I.A. headquarters,
 and while the agency said the decision to destroy evidence was made by her boss at the time, Jose Rodriguez, Ms. Haspel’s name was on the cable with the destruction orders.

In 2013, these activities were of such concern that Senator Dianne Feinstein
 of California, the senior Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, blocked Ms. Haspel’s promotion to be head of the agency’s clandestine service. Since then the two have spent time together, leading Ms. Feinstein on Tuesday to describe Ms. Haspel as
 a “good deputy” and to say she would wait until the confirmation hearing to make a judgment on the appointment.

Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona and a former prisoner of war,
 insisted that during the confirmation process, Ms. Haspel must “explain the nature and extent of her involvement” in the interrogation program. Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, said her roles overseeing the waterboarding of detainees and the destruction
 of tapes were troubling. He and the American Civil Liberties Union called for Ms. Haspel’s C.I.A. records
 to be declassified as part of her nomination.

The use of torture and secret foreign prisons — think of the deeply disgraceful events at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq — was a boon to terrorist groups, helping their propaganda and recruitment efforts. Such
 activities were also an irritant to key allies and even put American forces and personnel at risk of legal liability and being subjected to harsh treatment when they are detained.

Ms. Haspel is reportedly respected by many C.I.A. agents. But she effectively ran an illegal program, and her promotion to such a top administration position, unless she forcefully renounces the use of
 torture during her confirmation hearing, would send an undeniable signal to the agency, and the country, that Mr. Trump is indifferent to this brutality, regardless of what Secretary Mattis believes. Members of Congress and public interest groups need to stand
 up and make clear that, otherwise, the appointment is wrong.



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