Low Graphics Site


 






|
|
|
|
December 21, 2007
|
Friday
|
Zilhaj 10, 1428
|
Destruction of CIA tapes evokes echoes of Watergate
By Tom Raum
WASHINGTON: Bush administration officials refuse to say if White House lawyers talked to the CIA about whether to destroy interrogation videotapes of two terrorism suspects but bristle at questions into the affair and complain about news coverage. That puts the White House in an awkward position. The very vision of White House officials sitting around a table talking about such an inflammatory course of action evokes echoes of disgraced President Richard Nixon and Watergate.
The secret destruction of the CIA tapes in late 2005 has drawn fire from both a federal judge and from Congress. The tapes purportedly documented harsh interrogation techniques approved by the White House, including waterboarding, which simulates drowning.
The revelations generated the second controversy over US intelligence-gathering in as many weeks. It followed a National Intelligence Estimate that Iran had halted its nuclear-weapons programme. That drew criticism of the US spy agencies from conservatives, while the tape destruction drew outrage mostly from congressional Democrats and spawned a round of congressional hearings into why lawmakers were kept in the dark.
Destruction of the tapes was “totally improper behaviour that smacks of efforts by past administrations to destroy evidence as quickly as possible,” said Paul C. Light, professor of public policy at New York University. “Even if it didn’t violate specific law, it violates the spirit of transparency.”
“It brings up the schooling that the Nixon administration received regarding the destruction of the secret White House tapes,” Light said, citing published reports that senior White House lawyers were involved in back-and-forth discussions with the CIA between 2003 and 2005 about whether to destroy the tapes.
Such skullduggery in the 1970s Nixon administration caused him to become the first and only US president to resign.
Of course, in the matter of the incriminating audio tapes secretly made in the White House more than three decades ago, those tapes were ultimately saved for posterity and not destroyed or erased, other than perhaps for the famous 18{-minute gap on one tape.
White House press secretary Dana Perino says President George W. Bush “has no recollection” of hearing about either the CIA tapes’ existence or their destruction before being briefed about it last Thursday by CIA Director Michael Hayden. She will not say whether other White House officials played a role, citing an investigations under way by the Justice Department and the CIA.
Yet Perino told reporters on Wednesday: “Some of the questions are legitimate questions – that the public has and that the attorney general and General Hayden have.” Among these, she said, is “who knew what, when”?
Another echo of Watergate, that response recalled the repeated questions of Republican Sen. Howard Baker at the nationally televised Watergate hearings in 1973: “What did the president know, and when did he know it?”
The New York Times reported on Wednesday that White House officials who discussed the videotapes with the CIA before their destruction included Alberto Gonzales, who was White House counsel until early 2005; Harriet Miers, who succeeded him as White House counsel; David S. Addington, counsel to Vice-President Dick Cheney and now his chief of staff; and John B. Bellinger III, senior lawyer at the White House National Security Council until early 2005.
The article did not say what positions each of the four officials may have advocated.
The White House would not comment on the story but took the unusual step of issuing a statement on Wednesday saying that the newspaper’s “inference that there is an effort to mislead in this matter is pernicious and troubling”.
US District Judge Henry H. Kennedy on Tuesday ordered Justice Department lawyers to appear before him Friday to discuss whether destroying the tapes, which showed two Al Qaeda suspects being questioned, violated his 2005 order to preserve evidence in a lawsuit brought on behalf of 16 prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
That ups the ante, said Marc Rosenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. “There is a presumption against the destruction of records involving potential or alleged government misconduct. But when there is a judicial preservation order in place, the destruction of such records raises far-reaching concerns.”
Former Reagan administration national security officer Robert F. Turner, now associate director of the University of Virginia’s Center for National Security Law, said destruction of the tapes may not have been illegal by itself. “But if a judge told them not to destroy evidence, then you’ve got a problem of who was involved in the decision.”
“Did the people who knew of the judge’s order say, ‘No, we can’t do that?’ If people who knew, or should have known, of the judge’s order were involved in the decision and did not bring that to the attention of others, you’ve got a problem,” Turner said.
Meanwhile, The Democratic-run Congress pledged to investigate the destruction of the tapes despite the Justice Department’s assertion that it could hamper its own investigation. And in a direct challenge to Bush, the House Intelligence Committee said on Wednesday it has prepared subpoenas to force CIA officials to testify about the destruction of the interrogation videotapes.—AP
|