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Cheney Was Key in Clearing CIA Interrogation Tactics

by: Greg Miller  |  The Los Angeles Times

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Vice President Dick Cheney said he was directly involved in approving severe interrogation methods used by the CIA. (Art: Julia Nissen)

    The vice president says that the use of waterboarding was appropriate and that the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, should stay open until "the end of the war on terror."

    Reporting from Washington - Vice President Dick Cheney said Monday that he was directly involved in approving severe interrogation methods used by the CIA, and that the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, should remain open indefinitely.

    Cheney's remarks on Guantanamo appear to put him at odds with President Bush, who has expressed a desire to close the prison, although the decision is expected to be left to the incoming administration of President-elect Barack Obama.

    Cheney's comments also mark the first time that he has acknowledged playing a central role in clearing the CIA's use of an array of controversial interrogation tactics, including a simulated drowning method known as waterboarding.

    "I was aware of the program, certainly, and involved in helping get the process cleared," Cheney said in an interview with ABC News.

    Asked whether he still believes it was appropriate to use the waterboarding method on terrorism suspects, Cheney said: "I do."

    His comments come on the heels of disclosures by a Senate committee showing that high-level officials in the Bush administration were intimately involved in reviewing and approving interrogation methods that have since been explicitly outlawed and that have been condemned internationally as torture.

    Soon after the Sept. 11 attacks, Cheney said, the CIA "in effect came in and wanted to know what they could and couldn't do. And they talked to me, as well as others, to explain what they wanted to do. And I supported it."

    Waterboarding involves strapping a prisoner to a tilted surface, covering his face with a towel and dousing it to simulate the sensation of drowning.

    CIA Director Michael V. Hayden has said that the agency used the technique on three Al Qaeda suspects in 2002 and 2003. But the practice was discontinued when lawyers from the Department of Justice and other agencies began backing away from their opinions endorsing its legality.

    Cheney has long defended the technique. But he has not previously disclosed his role in pushing to give the CIA such authority.

    Cheney's office is regarded as the most hawkish presence in the Bush administration, pushing the White House toward aggressive stances on the invasion of Iraq and the wiretapping of U.S. citizens.

    Asked when the Guantanamo Bay prison would be shut down, Cheney said, "I think that that would come with the end of the war on terror." He went on to say that "nobody can specify" when that might occur, and likened the use of the detention facility to the imprisonment of Germans during World War II.

    "We've always exercised the right to capture the enemy and hold them till the end of the conflict," Cheney said.

    The administration's legal case for holding detainees indefinitely has been eroded by a series of court rulings. Obama has pledged to close the facility, which still holds 250 prisoners.

    Cheney's remarks are the latest in a series of interviews granted by Bush and senior officials defending their decisions as they prepare to leave office. Bush recently said his main regret was that U.S. spy agencies had been so mistaken about Iraq's alleged weapons programs. Cheney and the Bush administration have been accused of "cherry-picking" intelligence to support going to war with Iraq.

    Cheney said that those mistakes didn't matter, and that the U.S. invasion was justified by Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's ability to reestablish destructive weapons programs. The vice president brushed off a series of findings questioning that view, including a 2006 Senate report concluding that Hussein lacked a "coherent effort" to develop nuclear weapons and had only a "limited capability" for chemical weapons.

    "This was a bad actor and the country's better off, the world's better off, with Saddam gone, and I think we made the right decision in spite of the fact that the original [intelligence] was off in some of its major judgments," he said.

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    Miller is a writer in our Washington bureau.

  

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This man is worse than

This man is worse than heartless! He obviously hasn't understood the Commandment "Love your neighbor as yourself": or he hates himself.

I wonder if his comments can

I wonder if his comments can be played back to him in a court of law. I wonder if he'll stand by them when he realizes he's being tried for treason.

In the "old" America,

In the "old" America, behavior such as this would be considered a war crime. Not so much now, but maybe again on 1/20/2009 when we begin the return to being a nation of laws, and not men.

Cheney is one of the supreme

Cheney is one of the supreme incarnations of evil and could only be surpassed in dark deeds by his boss...Bush!

Restoring The Rule of Law in

Restoring The Rule of Law in this country better be the first thing on Obama's list because if not, he may no longer have a country to govern! He should really listen closely to the people now, because the people are DEMANDING that these monsters, that have been in our White House, be held accountable for ALL (I repeat ALL) their crimes. Only then can our country move forward from this disgraceful period.

He talks as if he has no

He talks as if he has no fears of losing his power and the executive protection of the White House. Hm-m, Obama is not president YET, is he?

Well, he was wrong about

Well, he was wrong about 9/11, wrong about WMD, wrong about not being part of the executive branch OR the legislative brance of government, wrong about the "last throes" of the insugency, wrong about Valerie Plame, wrong about safe shotgun control (his own), secretive about his energy policy, and generally wrong about everything except making himself richer. But he's right about torture? Why are the meadia still listening to him, or even TALKING to him? Why is anyone?

Great to finally see this

Great to finally see this information come out, but it should have already been front-page news long ago!!!

Cheney is also a "bad

Cheney is also a "bad actor." Who really has been the acting President? Bush or Cheney?

Vice President Dick Cheney

Vice President Dick Cheney said Monday that "the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, should remain open indefinitely." Right, and he should be in it.

How many times have we

How many times have we heard that: "This was a bad actor and the country's better off, the world's better off, with Saddam gone" Repeat. Repeat. Believe. Believe. Believe. Got it! Between what Cheney admitted to and what Bush recently revealed when he said, "So what" that he may have known that there were no WMD and disregarded info any way and took us to war, reasons for both to be tried for treason, I'm a little suspicious, as they may have something up their sleeves. Like maybe pardoning each other somehow if we start any trials now. Those two seem to get a lot accomplished in the middle of the night when everyone is asleep. Anybody have a really stinkin' pair of shoes for the man who works in the "dark side". I wonder if they have their bags packed for Dubai.