US names CIA abuse investigator
时间:2009-08-25 08:34:27
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
The announcement of John Durham's selection came as a report was published detailing the allegations of abuse by CIA agents.
Agents threatened to kill a key
terror(恐怖) suspect's children and sexually assault another's mother, it is claimed.
The report was made in 2004 but only a heavily
censored1 version appeared and a judge ordered fuller disclosure.
The justice department is reported to be reopening about a dozen prisoner abuse cases.
[I will] stand up for those officers who did what their country asked and who followed the legal guidance they were givenLeon Panetta, CIA directorTeenager leaves GuantanamoAlso on Monday, President Barack Obama approved a new
elite2 team to question terror suspects.
The team includes members of agencies other than the CIA. It will be led by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation3 and supervised by National Security
Adviser4 James Jones.
The administration has
vowed5 that in future interrogations will be
strictly6 in accordance with the army's field manual, and adhere to strict rules on tactics.
Republican angerMr Durham, who is already investigating the destruction of videotapes of CIA interrogations, was picked by US Attorney General Eric
Holder7.
Most computers will open this document automatically, but you may need
Adobe8 ReaderDownload the reader hereMr Holder said: "I
fully9 realise that my decision to commence this preliminary review will be controversial.
"In this case, given all of the information currently available, it is clear to me that this review is the only
responsible(负责) course of action for me to take."Special
prosecutors10 in the US are independent figures appointed to investigate the possible wrongdoing of government officials or agencies.
Senior Republicans have already expressed anger at the decision.
Nine signatories of a letter to Mr Holder said they were "deeply disappointed" at a decision that "could have a chilling effect on the work of the intelligence community".
'Aggressive'
The
declassified11 document released by the justice department said that one agent told key terror suspect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed that "we're going to kill your children" if there were further attacks on the US.
ANALYSISKevin Connolly, BBC News, WashingtonThe question now that these startling depictions of the handling of those suspects are in the public
domain12 is - what should happen next?
Barack Obama doesn't want to
inflame13 anti-American feelings around the world but he doesn't want to
alienate14 the professionals within America's own intelligence agencies. The problem is that below the cautious pragmatism of the White House rages a
partisan15 political battle.
America's human rights lobby wants full disclosure, and on the left of the Democratic Party there is a real appetite for
proceeding16 with further
investigations(调查). Conservatives, though, will argue that the harsh interrogations came at a desperate moment in American history. The interrogators could be cast as
dedicated17 intelligence officers, ruthless only in the cause of protecting their fellow citizens.
Dilemma18 over CIA tacticsAnother agent allegedly told Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, a suspect in the bombing of the USS Cole in 2000, that his mother would be sexually assaulted in front of him. The agent has denied the allegation.
In other incidents involving Mr Nashiri, he was allegedly threatened with an unloaded gun and had a power drill held near him which was repeatedly turned on and off.
Another incident involved an agent pinching an
artery19 in a detainee's neck. As the man was passing out, the agent shook him awake, then repeated the action twice.
Ahead of the document's release, CIA Director Leon Panetta wrote on the agency's website that the report was "in many ways an old story" and that he would make "no
judgments20 on the accuracy of the report or the various views expressed about it".
He said it was clear that the CIA had "obtained intelligence from high-value detainees when inside information on al-Qaeda was in short supply".
Mr Panetta said the CIA had been "aggressive" in seeking regular legal advice from the department of justice on its techniques.
He said his primary concern was "to stand up for those officers who did what their country asked and who followed the legal guidance they were given. That is the president's position, too."But Mr Panetta also said: "This agency made no excuses for behaviour, however rare, that went beyond the formal guidelines on counter-terrorism."Earlier on Monday, deputy White House press secretary Bill Burton confirmed there would be a new interrogation team for key terror suspects.
Correspondents say Mr Obama was concerned at the number of different agencies involved and he wanted to bring them together.
The new team will be called the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group
.(本文由在线英语听力室整理编辑)
分享到: