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Ichingcarpenter

(36,988 posts)
Sat Jul 26, 2014, 05:51 AM Jul 2014

Ex-Chief of C.I.A .Tenet Shapes Response to Detention Report

Over the past several months, Mr. Tenet has quietly engineered a counterattack against the Senate committee’s voluminous report, which could become public next month. The effort to discredit the report has set up a three-way showdown among former C.I.A. officials who believe history has been distorted, a White House carefully managing the process and politics of declassifying the document, and Senate Democrats convinced that the Obama administration is trying to protect the C.I.A. at all costs.

The report is expected to accuse a number of former C.I.A. officials of misleading Congress and the White House about the program and its effectiveness, but it is Mr. Tenet who might have the most at stake.

The detention and interrogation program was conceived on his watch and run by men and women he had put in senior positions. After virtually disappearing from public view since leaving the C.I.A. in 2004 except for a brief period promoting his memoir, Mr. Tenet is working behind the scenes with many of the same people to develop a strategy to challenge the report’s findings. And he is relying on his close relationship with Mr. Brennan to keep him apprised as the report moves through a glacial declassification process. Mr. Brennan rose to the C.I.A.’s senior ranks during Mr. Tenet’s tenure, and served as one of the former C.I.A. chief’s most trusted advisers during the post-9/11 period.

Mr. Tenet, who declined to be interviewed for this article, has arranged a number of conference calls with former C.I.A. officials to discuss the impending report. After private conversations with Mr. Brennan, he and two other former C.I.A. directors — Porter J. Goss and Michael V. Hayden — drafted a letter to Mr. Brennan asking that, as a matter of fairness, they be allowed to see the report before it was made public. Describing the letter, one former C.I.A. officer who spoke on condition of anonymity said that the former directors “think that those people who were heavily involved in the operations have a right to see what’s being said about them.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/26/world/george-tenet-ex-chief-of-cia-is-set-to-defend-actions-on-interrogation-program.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&smid=tw-thecaucus&_r=0


Disclaimer: George Tenet's biography has been removed from the CIA's website. The following information on Tenet was present on the site's bio before removal.


http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/George_John_Tenet

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Ex-Chief of C.I.A .Tenet Shapes Response to Detention Report (Original Post) Ichingcarpenter Jul 2014 OP
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Jul 2014 #1
K&R ReRe Jul 2014 #2
Kicked Ichingcarpenter Jul 2014 #3

ReRe

(10,597 posts)
2. K&R
Sat Jul 26, 2014, 08:36 AM
Jul 2014

Thanks, I.c. for these links. The war criminals are getting fiigity to get a cover story ready. What they got away with is going to keep coming up and rehashed forever more. Just because we didn't do what needed to be done at the end of the Bush-Cheney junta's time in office.

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