Memo
on the Nomination of Michael Mukasey by former U.S.
Intelligence Officers
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
DATE: Novermber 6, 2007
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; Chargé d'Affairs,
Iraq (1990); Ambassador to Gabon and Sao Tome/Principe;
Senior Director for African Affairs, NSC
Valerie
Plame Wilson
Operations officer, Directorate of Operations, CIA
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