Senate Votes to Partially Declassify CIA Torture Report
The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee voted Thursday to partially lift the media and public blackout of its 6,300 page investigation into widespread CIA torture, extrajudicial detentions, unlawful renditions, and lying to the U.S. government in the so-called ‘War on Terror.’
In an 11 to 3 decision, the committee voted to submit the executive summary and conclusions of the report on the CIA Detention and Interrogation Program to the White House for declassification. According to Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-California), the full report “will be held for declassification at a later time.”
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“The CIA is hoping and expecting to get another crack at hiding as much of the report as they can.” —Christopher Anders, ACLU
The CIA is expected to play a major role in the declassification process, including redaction of information, despite allegations that the CIA spied on the Senate staffers while they were creating the report.
In an open letter to President Obama released last week, a coalition of human rights organizations slammed the potential inclusion of the CIA as an “inherent conflict of interest.”
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