CIA Director John Brennan's statement, contained in a message
distributed to CIA employees, comes amid a fierce dispute over
whether members of the spy agency secretly monitored a Senate
Intelligence Committee investigation of the detention and
interrogation policies used under former Republican President George
W. Bush.
In the message, Brennan praised committee chairwoman Dianne
Feinstein, who on March 11 accused the CIA of spying on Congress and
possibly breaking the law.
Feinstein, a Democrat, said the CIA had searched computers used by
committee staffers examining CIA documents when researching the
agency's counterterrorism operations and its use of interrogation
methods such as simulated drowning, or "waterboarding."
Brennan, in a message made available to Reuters by a U.S. official,
said that Feinstein and the other leaders of the two congressional
intelligence panels "carry out their oversight responsibilities with
great dedication and patriotism."
He added that "the CIA has benefited over the years from their
leadership as well as their strong support for CIA programs and
employees."
"I expect the Committee will submit at least some portion of the
report to the CIA for classification review, and, if that happens,
CIA will carry out the review expeditiously. As I noted in a letter
to the Committee last June, CIA must learn from the past and take
immediate steps to prevent any shortcomings in Agency intelligence
activities," Brennan added.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Thursday backed Feinstein in
the dispute with the CIA, ordering an investigation into what he
called an "indefensible" breach of the panel's computers by the CIA.
The Senate Intelligence Committee's 6,000-page draft report on the
interrogation program was finished more than a year ago but is still
classified. Sources say it strongly condemns the now-abandoned harsh
interrogation techniques that critics say is torture and concludes
that these methods did not produce significant counterterrorism
breakthroughs.
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The CIA's inspector general has sent the Justice Department a
"crimes report" about allegations that the agency had intruded into
a computer network that was supposed to be exclusively reserved for
Senate investigators. The allegations suggested that the CIA did
this in an apparent attempt to learn how the congressional
investigators got access to documents that the agency deemed to be
covered by legal privilege.
Meanwhile, the agency's acting general counsel sent a second "crimes
report" to the Justice Department asking it to look into whether
Senate investigators somehow obtained inappropriate access, via CIA
networks, to the same documents.
The committee's investigation also has examined the CIA's operation
of a network of secret prisons overseas and its use of "rendition,"
or extrajudicial transfers, of prisoners between countries.
In his message to CIA employees, Brennan said, "In the meantime, you
can be sure that we and the Committee are committed to finding a way
forward that allows CIA to continue with its important intelligence
mission and that promotes effective and independent Congressional
oversight of our Nation's classified intelligence activities."
(Reporting by Mark Hosenball and Will Dunham;
editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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