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Obama pressed to back torture investigation
By Demetri Sevastopulo and Andrew Ward in Washington
Published: April 22 2009 16:47
President Barack Obama on Wednesday came under increased pressure to back an investigation into use of torture by the US, after a Senate report accused the military of systematic abuse of detainees under George W. Bushs administration.
The findings, by the Senate armed services committee, were released hours after Mr Obama for the first time raised the possibility of prosecution for Bush officials responsible for authorising torture.
The 232-page report released on Tuesday night concluded that Bush administration officials should be held more accountable for the kind of abuses that occurred at Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad. It followed a two-year investigation into abusive detention and interrogation practices by the military.
Donald Rumsfeld, the former defence secretary, has repeatedly insisted that abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay were the work of a few bad apples but the Senate report concluded otherwise.
The report represents a condemnation of both the Bush administrations interrogation policies and of senior administration officials who attempted to shift the blame for abuse such as that seen at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay and Afghanistan to low-ranking soldiers said Carl Levin, the Democratic chairman of the committee.
The findings promised to fuel growing debate over how aggressively the Obama administration and Congress should investigate the Bush administrations use of torture and possibly punish the people responsible for authorising it.
The issue was catapulted back towards the top of the political agenda last week when the Obama administration declassified the so-called torture memos written by Bush administration officials to authorise use of enhanced interrogation techniques by the Central Intelligence Agency.
The release of the memos, which include detailed accounts of the techniques used against detainees, increased pressure from left-leaning Democrats for a criminal investigation into the issue.
Mr Obama had previously signalled opposition to prosecution of Bush administration officials, saying he preferred to look forward not back. He repeated that view on Tuesday but, in an apparent shift, said it was up to Eric Holder, the attorney-general, to decide whether anyone should be prosecuted.
The president insisted that operatives who carried out torture, under legal advice from the Bush administration, should not be held accountable. But he left open the possibility of punishment for those who crafted the legal advice.
Mr Obama faces a balancing act between appeasing Democrats who want an investigation and avoiding a partisan battle with Republicans that could imperil his legislative agenda.
Republicans have harshly criticised the White House decision to release the controversial memos, mainly on the grounds that it provides US enemies the ability to train to resist interrogation techniques.
Dick Cheney, the former vice-president who was instrumental in pushing the harsh methods, lambasted the White House for not releasing other top-secret documents that he said would prove that enhanced interrogation techniques had yielded important intelligence. Michael Hayden and three other former CIA heads also urged the Obama team not to release the memos.
The New York Times reported that, on the same day Mr Obama released the memos, Dennis Blair, his national intelligence director, told his staff in an internal memo that the harsh techniques had generated high value information that helped provide a better understanding of al-Qaeda.
Following the disclosure of his memo, Mr Blair put out a statement saying that while the techniques were valuable in some instances, it was impossible to know whether the same information could have been gleaned by other methods.
The bottom line is these techniques have hurt our image around the world. The damage they have done to our interests far outweighed whatever benefit they gave us and they are not essential to our national security, said Mr Blair.
Mr Obama banned the harsh techniques including waterboarding, which his attorney-general has called torture on his second day in office. But he appeared to concede this week that releasing the memos would complicate operations for the CIA, saying yes, youve got a harder job.
FT.com / US / Politics & Foreign policy - Obama pressed to back torture investigation
By Demetri Sevastopulo and Andrew Ward in Washington
Published: April 22 2009 16:47
President Barack Obama on Wednesday came under increased pressure to back an investigation into use of torture by the US, after a Senate report accused the military of systematic abuse of detainees under George W. Bushs administration.
The findings, by the Senate armed services committee, were released hours after Mr Obama for the first time raised the possibility of prosecution for Bush officials responsible for authorising torture.
The 232-page report released on Tuesday night concluded that Bush administration officials should be held more accountable for the kind of abuses that occurred at Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad. It followed a two-year investigation into abusive detention and interrogation practices by the military.
Donald Rumsfeld, the former defence secretary, has repeatedly insisted that abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay were the work of a few bad apples but the Senate report concluded otherwise.
The report represents a condemnation of both the Bush administrations interrogation policies and of senior administration officials who attempted to shift the blame for abuse such as that seen at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay and Afghanistan to low-ranking soldiers said Carl Levin, the Democratic chairman of the committee.
The findings promised to fuel growing debate over how aggressively the Obama administration and Congress should investigate the Bush administrations use of torture and possibly punish the people responsible for authorising it.
The issue was catapulted back towards the top of the political agenda last week when the Obama administration declassified the so-called torture memos written by Bush administration officials to authorise use of enhanced interrogation techniques by the Central Intelligence Agency.
The release of the memos, which include detailed accounts of the techniques used against detainees, increased pressure from left-leaning Democrats for a criminal investigation into the issue.
Mr Obama had previously signalled opposition to prosecution of Bush administration officials, saying he preferred to look forward not back. He repeated that view on Tuesday but, in an apparent shift, said it was up to Eric Holder, the attorney-general, to decide whether anyone should be prosecuted.
The president insisted that operatives who carried out torture, under legal advice from the Bush administration, should not be held accountable. But he left open the possibility of punishment for those who crafted the legal advice.
Mr Obama faces a balancing act between appeasing Democrats who want an investigation and avoiding a partisan battle with Republicans that could imperil his legislative agenda.
Republicans have harshly criticised the White House decision to release the controversial memos, mainly on the grounds that it provides US enemies the ability to train to resist interrogation techniques.
Dick Cheney, the former vice-president who was instrumental in pushing the harsh methods, lambasted the White House for not releasing other top-secret documents that he said would prove that enhanced interrogation techniques had yielded important intelligence. Michael Hayden and three other former CIA heads also urged the Obama team not to release the memos.
The New York Times reported that, on the same day Mr Obama released the memos, Dennis Blair, his national intelligence director, told his staff in an internal memo that the harsh techniques had generated high value information that helped provide a better understanding of al-Qaeda.
Following the disclosure of his memo, Mr Blair put out a statement saying that while the techniques were valuable in some instances, it was impossible to know whether the same information could have been gleaned by other methods.
The bottom line is these techniques have hurt our image around the world. The damage they have done to our interests far outweighed whatever benefit they gave us and they are not essential to our national security, said Mr Blair.
Mr Obama banned the harsh techniques including waterboarding, which his attorney-general has called torture on his second day in office. But he appeared to concede this week that releasing the memos would complicate operations for the CIA, saying yes, youve got a harder job.
FT.com / US / Politics & Foreign policy - Obama pressed to back torture investigation