Some Senators Finally Willing To Call CIA’s Torture Program ‘Torture’

Tech Dirt – by Mike Masnick

We’ve been writing quite a bit about the supposedly devastating $40 million, 6,300 page Senate report that exposes the CIA torture program for being useless — and (perhaps more importantly) describing in detail how the CIA lied about it to everyone, including Congress. There’s been something of an ongoing fight about declassifying the document, with the general thinking being that the Democrats on the Senate Intelligence Committee would likely support declassification, but the Republicans would not. But, as we’d pointed out, despite Intelligence Committee boss Senator Dianne Feinstein’s condemnations of the CIA concerning the report, she still couldn’t must up the courage to admit that what the CIA was doing was “torture.” Instead, it was always the “detention and interrogation program.” But, anyone who’s looked at it knows exactly what it was: a torture program, almost certainly in violation of the Geneva conventions.   

So it’s great to see that a Republican Senator (remember, they were supposedly against declassification), Susan Collins, (along with Independent Senator Angus King) not only come out in favor of declassification but to directly call it torture:

We remain strongly opposed to the use of torture, believing that it is fundamentally contrary to American values. While we have some concerns about the process for developing the report, its findings lead us to conclude that some detainees were subjected to techniques that constituted torture. This inhumane and brutal treatment never should have occurred. Further, the report raises serious concerns about the CIA’s management of this program.

[….]

Torture is wrong, and we must make sure that the misconduct and the grave errors made in the CIA’s detention and interrogation program never happen again.

The CIA’s torture program is a shameful moment in American history, and as a country, we cannot deal with it by pretending that it was anything other than what it was. We need to make it clear that it was torture and that it was wrong. Those responsible for the program should be held accountable. But they won’t. Instead, the only person in jail… is the guy who blew the whistle on it. If we can’t even admit that the torture program was a torture program, then we’re bound to go down this road again.

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140402/07200926776/some-senators-finally-willing-to-call-cias-torture-program-torture.shtml

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