Control Congress is a multi-partisan, issue-oriented political forum that brings together the Left, Right, and everyone in between.

C.I.A. Was Urged to Keep Interrogation Videotapes

Who do you think ordered the tapes to be destroyed? And do you think it was a good or bad idea?

NYT-White House and Justice Department officials, along with senior members of Congress, advised the Central Intelligence Agency in 2003 against a plan to destroy hundreds of hours of videotapes showing the interrogations of two operatives of Al Qaeda, government officials said Friday.

The chief of the agency’s clandestine service nevertheless ordered their destruction in November 2005, taking the step without notifying even the C.I.A.’s own top lawyer, John A. Rizzo, who was angry at the decision, the officials said.

The disclosures provide new details about what Gen. Michael V. Hayden, the C.I.A. director, has said was a decision “made within C.I.A. itself” to destroy the videotapes. In interviews, members of Congress and former intelligence officials also questioned some aspects of the account General Hayden provided Thursday about when Congress was notified that the tapes had been destroyed.

As the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee in 2003, Porter J. Goss, then a Republican congressman from Florida, was among Congressional leaders who warned the C.I.A. against destroying the tapes, the former intelligence officials said. Mr. Goss became C.I.A. director in 2004 and was serving in the post when the tapes were destroyed, but was not informed in advance about Mr. Rodriguez’s decision, the former officials said.

READ MORE

One Response to “C.I.A. Was Urged to Keep Interrogation Videotapes”

  1. [...] I found another example regarding the same story online: Who do you think ordered the tapes to be destroyed? (link) [...]

|