A group of distinguished intelligence and military officers, diplomats, and law enforcement professionals delivered an urgent message this morning to the chairman and the ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, calling on them to hold the nomination of Judge Michael Mukasey until he takes a clear position on the legality of waterboarding.
Their message strongly endorses the view of former judge advocates general that waterboarding "is inhumane, is torture, is illegal.” The intelligence veterans added it is also a notoriously unreliable way to acquire accurate information.
They noted that the factors cited by the president and Mukasey as obstacles to his giving an opinion on waterboarding can be easily solved by briefing Mukasey on waterboarding and on C.I.A. interrogation methods.
The intelligence veterans noted that during their careers they frequently had to walk a thin line between morality and expediency, all the while doing their best to abide by the values the majority of Americans have held in common over the years. They appealed to Senators Pat Leahy and Arlen Specter to rise to the occasion and discharge their responsibility to defend those same values.
Message after the fold...
November 5, 2007
MEMORANDUM FOR: Chairman and Ranking Member
Senate Committee on the Judiciary
FROM: Former U.S. Intelligence Officers
SUBJECT: Nomination of Michael Mukasey for Attorney General
Dear Senators Leahy and Specter,
Values that are extremely important to us as former intelligence
officers are at stake in your committee's confirmation deliberations on
Judge Michael Mukasey. With hundreds of years of service in sensitive
national security activities behind us, we are deeply concerned that
your committee may move his nomination to the full Senate without
insisting that Mukasey declare himself on whether he believes the
practice of waterboarding is legal.
We feel this more acutely than most others, for in our careers we have
frequently had to navigate the delicate balance between morality and
expediency, all the while doing our best to abide by the values the
vast majority of Americans hold in common. We therefore believe we have
a particular moral obligation to speak out. We can say it no better
than four retired judge advocates general (two admirals and two
generals) who wrote you over the weekend, saying: “Waterboarding is
inhumane, it is torture, and it is illegal.”
Judge Mukasey's refusal to comment on waterboarding, on grounds that it
would be “irresponsible” to provide “an uninformed legal opinion based
on hypothetical facts and circumstances,” raises serious questions.
There is nothing hypothetical or secret about the fact that
waterboarding was used by U.S. intelligence officers as an
interrogation technique before the Justice Department publicly declared
torture “abhorrent” in a legal opinion in December 2004. But after
Alberto Gonzales became attorney general in February 2005, Justice
reportedly issued a secret memo authorizing harsh physical and
psychological tactics, including waterboarding, which were approved for
use in combination. A presidential executive order of July 20, 2007
authorized “enhanced interrogation techniques” that had been banned for
use by the U.S. Army. Although the White House announced that the order
provides “clear rules” to govern treatment of detainees, the rules are
classified, so defense attorneys, judges, juries — and even nominee
Mukasey — can be prevented from viewing them.
Those are some of the “facts and circumstances.” They are not
hypothetical; and there are simple ways for Judge Mukasey to become
informed, which we propose below.
Last Thursday, President George W. Bush told reporters it was unfair to
ask Mukasey about interrogation techniques about which he had not been
briefed. “He doesn't know whether we use that technique [waterboarding]
or not,” the president said. Judge Mukasey wrote much the same in his
October 30 letter, explaining that he was unable to give an opinion on
the legality of waterboarding because he doesn't know whether it is
being used: “I have not been made aware of the details of any
interrogation program to the extent that any such program may be
classified and thus do not know what techniques may be involved in any
such program.” Whether or not the practice is currently in use by U.S.
intelligence, it should in fact be easy for him to respond. All he need
do is find out what waterboarding is and then decide whether he
considers it legal.
The conundrum created to justify the nominee's silence on this key
issue is a synthetic one. It is within your power to resolve it
readily. If Mukasey continues to drag his feet, you need only to
facilitate a classified briefing for him on waterboarding and the
C.I.A. interrogation program. He will then be able to render an
informed legal opinion. We strongly suggest that you sit in on any such
briefing and that you invite the chairman and the ranking member of the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence to take part as well. Receiving
the same briefing at the same time (and, ideally, having it taped)
should enhance the likelihood of candor and make it possible for all to
be — and to stay — on the same page on this delicate issue.
If the White House refuses to allow such a briefing, your committee
must, in our opinion, put a hold on Mukasey's nomination. We are aware
that the president warned last week that it will be either Mukasey as
our attorney general or no one. So be it. It is time to stand up for
what is right and require from the Executive the information necessary
for the Senate to function responsibly and effectively. It would seem
essential not to approve a nominee who has already made clear he is
reluctant to ask questions of the White House. How can a person with
that attitude even be proposed to be our chief law enforcement officer?
We strongly urge that you not send Mukasey's nomination to the full
Senate before he makes clear his view on waterboarding. Otherwise,
there is considerable risk of continued use of the officially
sanctioned torture techniques that have corrupted our intelligence
services, knocked our military off the high moral ground, severely
damaged our country's standing in the world, and exposed U.S. military
and intelligence people to similar treatment when captured or
kidnapped. One would think that Judge Mukasey would want to be briefed
on these secret interrogation techniques and to clarify where he stands.
The most likely explanation for Mukasey's reticence is his concern
that, should his conscience require him to condemn waterboarding, this
could cause extreme embarrassment and even legal jeopardy for senior
officials — this time not just for the so-called “bad apples” at the
bottom of the barrel. We believe it very important that the Senate not
acquiesce in his silence — and certainly not if, as seems the case, he
is more concerned about protecting senior officials than he is in
enforcing the law and the Constitution.
It is important to get beyond shadowboxing on this key issue. In our
view, condoning Mukasey's evasiveness would mean ignoring fundamental
American values and the Senate's constitutional prerogative of advice
and consent.
At stake in your committee and this nomination are questions of
legality, morality, and our country's values. And these are our primary
concerns as well. As professional intelligence officers, however, we
must point to a supreme irony — namely, that waterboarding and other
harsh interrogation practices are ineffective tools for eliciting
reliable information. Our own experience dovetails well with that of
U.S. Army intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. John Kimmons, who told a
Pentagon press conference on September 6, 2006: “No good intelligence
is going to come from abusive practices. I think history tells us that.
I think the empirical evidence of the last five years, hard years,
tells us that.”
Speaking out so precisely and unequivocally took uncommon courage,
because Kimmons knew that just across the Potomac President Bush would
be taking quite a different line at a press conference scheduled to
begin as soon as Kimmons finished his. At the White House press
conference focusing on interrogation techniques, the president touted
the success that the C.I.A. was having in extracting information from
detainees by using an “alternative set of procedures.” He said these
procedures had to be “tough,” in order to deal with particularly
recalcitrant detainees who “had received training on how to resist
interrogation” and had “stopped talking.”
The Undersigned
(Official duties refer to former government work.)
Brent Cavan Intelligence Analyst, Directorate of Intelligence, CIA
Ray Close Directorate of Operations, CIA for 26 years — 22 of them overseas; former Chief of Station, Saudi Arabia
Ed Costello Counter-espionage, FBI
Michael Dennehy Supervisory Special Agent for 32 years, FBI; U.S. Marine Corps for three years
Rosemary Dew Supervisory Special Agent, Counterterrorism, FBI
Philip Giraldi Operations officer and counter-terrorist specialist, Directorate of Operations, CIA
Michael Grimaldi Intelligence Analyst, Directorate of Intelligence, CIA; Federal law enforcement officer
Mel Goodman Division
Chief, Directorate of Intelligence, CIA; Professor, National Defense
University; Senior Fellow, Center for International Policy
Larry Johnson Intelligence analysis and operations officer, CIA; Deputy Director, Office of Counter Terrorism, Department of State
Richard Kovar Executive Assistant to the Deputy Director for Intelligence, CIA: Editor, Studies In Intelligence
Charlotte Lang Supervisory Special Agent, FBI
W. Patrick Lang U.S. Army Colonel, Special Forces, Vietnam; Professor, U.S. Military Academy,
West Point; Defense Intelligence Officer for Middle East, Defense
Intelligence Agency (DIA); founding director, Defense HUMINT Service Lynne Larkin Operations
Officer, Directorate of Operations, CIA; counterintelligence;
coordination among intelligence and crime prevention agencies; CIA
policy coordination staff ensuring adherence to law in operations
Steve Lee Intelligence Analyst for terrorism, Directorate of Intelligence, CIA
Jon S. Lipsky Supervisory Special Agent, FBI
David MacMichael Senior Estimates Officer, National Intelligence Council, CIA; History professor; Veteran, U.S. Marines (Korea)
Tom Maertens Foreign
Service Officer and Intelligence Analyst, Department of State; Deputy
Coordinator for Counter-terrorism, Department of State; National
Security Council (NSC) Director for Non-Proliferation
James Marcinkowski Operations Officer, Directorate of Operations, CIA by way of U.S. Navy
Mary McCarthy National Intelligence Officer for Warning; Senior Director for Intelligence Programs, National Security Council
Ray McGovern Intelligence
Analyst, Directorate of Intelligence, CIA; morning briefer, The
President's Daily Brief; chair of National Intelligence Estimates;
Co-founder, Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)
Sam Provance U.S. Army Intelligence Analyst, Germany and Iraq (Abu Ghraib); Whistleblower
Coleen Rowley Special Agent and attorney, FBI; Whistleblower on the negligence that facilitated the attacks of 9/11
Joseph Wilson Foreign Service Officer, U.S. Ambassador and Director of Africa, National Security Council.
Valerie Plame Wilson Operations Officer, Directorate of Operations