Tag Archives: Dianne Feinstein

Senator: Games Are ‘Simulators’ to Practice Violence

California senator Dianne Feinstein has once again commented on what she sees as a connection between video games and real-world violence. Speaking on MSNBC’s Morning Joe yesterday, Feinstein explained that she believes games can “enable” individuals who might become violent.

“I think the really violent video game becomes a kind of simulator to practice on,” she said. “It enables the individual to become much more familiar with that depiction of death and blood. Of course it’s not the way it is in real life.”

Last week, Feinstein said games have “a very negative influence” for young people and suggested that Congress should intervene.

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From: http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/12/senator-games-are-simulators-to-practice-violence

Internet Caused Gun Grabbers To Fail

By Joel Valenzuela

The stars aligned. A mass shooting in a movie theater in Colorado still very fresh in people’s minds, the horrific massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticut was the deal-sealing tragedy to usher in a new era of gun control. They had been waiting for a moment like this.

It was the perfect storm of a gun-grab… but it failed. President Obama has admitted to a group of San Francisco donors that he has lost confidence in his ability to get passed any gun control measures of significance. Why? How could such a perfectly-orchestrated effort fall flat? The answer: the information age.

In the weeks following the massacre, the mainstream media reported one major myth regarding the incident: a “military-style assault rifle,” such as an AR-15, was used. Critical analysis quickly uncovered, and spread far and wide across the internet, that not only was an assault rifle not used in the actual killings, but one might not even have been present at all. That proved Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s proposed assault weapons ban to be completely irrelevant to preventing a similar massacre, dooming it from the start.

Next, thanks once more to the internet, information regarding gun violence in America was able to travel around the mainstream media’s filter rather than through it. This illuminated the abject failure of gun restrictions to cause a reduction in violence in places like England, Chicago, and Washington, D.C. itself. Once gun control’s abysmal track record on stopping violence came to light far and wide, the narrative of saving lives simply fell apart.

Finally, the moral case for gun rights, often reserved to the hearts and minds of patriotic Americans, was allowed online public exposure. A photo of Rosa Parks with the tagline “I don’t ‘need’ an AR more than Rosa Parks ‘needed’ to sit in the front of that bus” spread like a virus via Facebook, effectively setting in stone the message that We The People have the right to exercise whatever peaceful behavior we so desire without having to justify it to the government.

Times have changed. Any other decade and this would have been an open-and-shut case of national disarmament. This time, however, they underestimated the power of a free people standing up for their rights. And, most of all, they underestimated the unregulated power of the internet. Next time they try to take away a precious Constitutional right through manipulation and deception they’re going to have to try a little harder than that.

Joel Valenzuela is the editor of The Desert Lynx

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Assault Weapons Ban Won’t Be In Dems’ Gun Bill

By Breaking News

Harry Reid 4 SC Assault weapons ban won’t be in Dems’ gun bill

WASHINGTON— Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has decided that a proposed assault weapons ban won’t be part of a gun control bill the Senate plans to debate next month, the sponsor of the ban said Tuesday, a decision that means the ban stands little chance of survival.

Instead, Sen. Dianne Feinstein said she will be able to offer her ban on the military-style firearms as an amendment. Feinstein is all but certain to need 60 votes from the 100-member Senate to prevail, but she faces solid Republican opposition and likely defections from some moderate Democrats.

“I very much regret it,” Feinstein, D-Calif., told reporters of Reid’s decision. “I tried my best.”

Asked about the decision, Reid, D-Nev., said he wanted to bring a gun bill to the full Senate that would have enough support to overcome any GOP attempts to prevent debate from even starting.

He said that “using the most optimistic numbers,” there were less than 40 votes for Feinstein’s ban. That is far less than the 60 votes needed to begin considering legislation, and an indication that Reid feared that including the assault weapons ban in the main guns bill would risk getting the votes needed to begin debate.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Alan Fram.

Photo Credit: Talk Radio News Service Creative Commons

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

U.S. Senate Panel Approves Assault Weapons Ban, Other Gun Control Measures

By Breaking News

us capitol building SC U.S. Senate panel approves assault weapons ban, other gun control measures

WASHINGTON – After a couple of false starts, the Senate Judiciary Committee approved a bill Thursday that would ban assault weapons, restrict the size of ammunition clips and require universal background checks on gun sales.

But in spite of passionate pleas by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the bill’s sponsor, it heads to the Senate floor with no Republican support, and it may not have the backing of every Democrat. The Republican-led House of is all but certain to reject it.

“As I’ve said before, the road is uphill,” Feinstein said Thursday, after her bill cleared the panel on a party-line vote of 10-8.

She was the lead sponsor of the original assault weapons ban Congress passed in 1994 but didn’t renew 10 years later for lack of support. The political landscape has changed since then, as has the degree of public shock over recent mass shootings, including one in December that left 20 Connecticut elementary school children dead, and another more than two years ago that gravely injured former Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords.

But even that might not be enough to get restrictions on the use of assault weapons.

Read More at dallasnews.com .

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

U.S. Senate Panel Approves Assault Weapons Ban

By Breaking News

us capitol building SC U.S. Senate panel approves assault weapons ban

WASHINGTON – After a couple of false starts, the Senate Judiciary Committee approved a bill Thursday that would ban assault weapons, restrict the size of ammunition clips and require universal background checks on gun sales.

But in spite of passionate pleas by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the bill’s sponsor, it heads to the Senate floor with no Republican support, and it may not have the backing of every Democrat. The Republican-led House of is all but certain to reject it.

“As I’ve said before, the road is uphill,” Feinstein said Thursday, after her bill cleared the panel on a party-line vote of 10-8.

She was the lead sponsor of the original assault weapons ban Congress passed in 1994 but didn’t renew 10 years later for lack of support. The political landscape has changed since then, as has the degree of public shock over recent mass shootings, including one in December that left 20 Connecticut elementary school children dead, and another more than two years ago that gravely injured former Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords.

But even that might not be enough to get restrictions on the use of assault weapons.

Read More at dallasnews.com .

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Video: Explosive Exchange At Gun Hearing Between Cruz And Feinstein

By Daniel Noe

Ted Cruz and Dianne Feinstein had this explosive exchange at a Senate Judiciary Hearing on guns yesterday:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Video: Explosive Exchange At Senate Gun Hearing!

By Daniel Noe

Ted Cruz and Dianne Feinstein had this explosive exchange at a Senate Judiciary Hearing on guns yesterday:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Feinstein to Cruz on Guns: 'I'm Not a Sixth-Grader'

By John Johnson It got testy on Capitol Hill today as the Senate Judiciary Committee debated gun legislation. After Ted Cruz suggested that Dianne Feinstein‘s proposal to ban assault weapons was unconstitutional, she shot back: “I’m not a sixth-grader,” reports the Hill . “It’s fine you want to lecture me on the Constitution. I… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Cruz, Feinstein tangle over 2nd Amendment as panel approves assault-weapons ban

Sen. Ted Cruz and Sen. Dianne Feinstein tangled Thursday over the Second Amendment, with the pro-gun control Feinstein accusing the freshman Republican senator of trying to “lecture” her as the committee on which they sit advanced a renewed assault-weapons ban.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox News – Politics

Senate Panel Approves Assault Weapons Ban

By Breaking News

us capitol building SC Senate panel approves assault weapons ban

WASHINGTON— A Senate committee approved an assault weapons ban on a party-line vote Thursday that signaled how difficult it will be for the proposal to survive in the full Senate.

The Democratic led Senate Judiciary Committee approved the bill on a 10-8 vote after rejecting a series of Republican amendments aimed at exempting victims of sexual abuse, people living along the Southwest border and others from the prohibition. The GOP proposals were also defeated along party lines.

President Barack Obama made an assault weapons ban part of the gun curbs he proposed in January, a month after a shooter with an assault rifle killed 20 first-graders and six educators at a school in Newtown, Conn. Feinstein and others have argued that such firearms are used in a disproportionate number of mass shootings and shouldn’t be available to civilians.

The prohibition is one of the most controversial of the gun restrictions being considered in Congress. Its foes say law-abiding citizens should not lose their Second Amendment right to own the weapons, which they say are popular for self-defense, hunting and collecting.

Thursday’s debate included a fiery clash between Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the ban’s author, and outspoken freshman conservative Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. Cruz said Feinstein’s bill would create exceptions to the Second Amendment and asked her if she would favor exemptions to the First Amendment’s freedom of speech by denying that right to certain books.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Alan Fram.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Democrats push for speedy approval of CIA nominee

Senate Democrats pushed Wednesday for speedy confirmation of John Brennan‘s nomination to be CIA director but ran into a snag after a Republican senator began a lengthy speech over the legality of potential drone strikes on U.S. soil.

Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., was attempting to get a Senate confirmation vote before the end of the day so senators could make travel arrangements due to inclement weather in Washington.

But Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., stalled the chamber as he took to the Senate floor to complain over what he said was President Barack Obama‘s failure to adequately answer questions about the legality of conducting lethal drone strikes against targets inside the United States. The Obama administration has said it does not intend to conduct such strikes.

No American should be killed by a drone on American soil without first being charged with a crime, without first being found guilty of a crime by a court,” Paul said. “How can you kill someone without going to a judge, or a jury?”

Brennan’s nomination won approval Tuesday by the Senate Intelligence Committee after the White House broke a lengthy impasse by agreeing to give lawmakers access to top-secret legal opinions justifying the use of lethal drone strikes against al-Qaida suspects overseas.

Brennan has told the intelligence committee that the Obama administration has not carried out drone strikes on U.S. soil and has no intention of doing so. But Paul has previously said that answer is insufficient because the issue is not whether the federal government intends to hit terror targets with drones in the U.S., but whether it believes it has the authority to do so.

The committee cleared Brennan’s nomination by a vote of 12-3, with four Republicans on the committee siding with the eight Democrats. If confirmed, Brennan would replace Michael Morell, the CIA‘s deputy director who has been acting director since David Petraeus resigned in November after acknowledging an affair with his biographer.

“He’s got a whole chain of duties as the No. 2 and it’s hard to be No. 1 at the same time,” the committee’s chairwoman, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said Tuesday of Morell. “This is an agency that most of us think needs oversight, needs supervision and needs direction. It needs a director.”

The Republican vice chairman of the committee, Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., voted against the nomination because he didn’t think …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Obama’s CIA Nominee On Fast Track For Confirmation

By Breaking News

Barack Obama speech hand 2 SC Obama’s CIA nominee on fast track for confirmation

After lagging for weeks, John Brennan’s nomination to be CIA director is on the fast track to Senate confirmation after the White House agreed to give lawmakers access to top-secret legal opinions justifying the use of lethal drone strikes against terror suspects.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., was trying Wednesday to get a Senate confirmation vote before the end of the day. On Tuesday, the Senate Intelligence Committee overwhelmingly approved Brennan’s nomination by a vote of 12-3, with four Republicans on the committee siding with the eight Democrats.

The committee’s chairwoman, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., called for swift approval of Brennan’s nomination. If confirmed, Brennan would replace Michael Morell, the CIA’s deputy director who has been acting director since David Petraeus resigned in November after acknowledging an affair with his biographer.

“He’s got a whole chain of duties as the No. 2 and it’s hard to be No. 1 at the same time,” Feinstein said Tuesday of Morell. “This is an agency that most of us think needs oversight, needs supervision and needs direction. It needs a director.”

The Republican vice chairman of the committee, Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., voted against the nomination because he didn’t think Brennan would create the type of “trust relationship” that needs to exist between the agency and Congress.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Richard Lardner.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Senate Committee Set To Vote On Obama’s CIA Choice

By Breaking News

us capitol buildiing Senate committee set to vote on Obama’s CIA choice

WASHINGTON — The Senate Intelligence Committee is scheduled to vote on President Barack Obama’s pick to lead the CIA after weeks of wrangling with the White House over access to top-secret information about the use of lethal drone strikes against terror suspects and the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya.

The committee’s chairwoman, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said the panel would move ahead Tuesday with John Brennan’s nomination to lead the spy agency even as Republicans said they were frustrated with the Obama administration’s reluctant disclosure of all the records. Feinstein would not describe the material the committee has received because it is classified.

“Certain documents have been made available to members,” she said Monday.

Brennan’s nomination has been held up as Democrats and Republicans on the intelligence panel have been pressing the Obama administration to provide them with a series of classified Justice Department legal opinions that justify the use of unmanned spy planes to kill terror suspects overseas, including American citizens. The senators have argued they can’t perform adequate oversight without reviewing the contents of the documents.

Key Senate Republicans have said they will oppose Brennan’s nomination unless they get classified information, including emails among top U.S. national security officials, detailing the Obama administration’s actions immediately following the Sept. 11, 2012, attack in Benghazi that killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.

Read More at OfficialWire , By Richard Lardner.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

The Shot Heard Around The World

By Chris Enloe

Guns SC The Shot Heard Around the World

“The shot heard around the world” is most commonly taught today to be the shot that started the Revolutionary War and America’s fight for freedom. However, I believe that as time has gone on, the true meaning behind “the shot heard around the world” has been quite distorted; and this can easily be tied into the media narrative today.

Since the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary, there has been a nasty haze looming over DC, figuratively speaking of course. The need to control guns and restrict our rights seems to be the number one issue on Capitol Hill, and it has been that way since that fateful December morning.

If you have studied American history, then you will understand that the basis of needing to separate from Britain was the restriction of freedoms and, ironically, high taxes. I’m not calling for any succession, but I am calling for all Americans to open their eyes and read the writing on the wall.

“The shot heard around the world” wasn’t a literal shot fired out of a musket; the shot heard around the world was the order sent out by King George III to confiscate the colonists’ guns.

Are you recognizing the parallels yet?

The Colonists of 1775 wouldn’t stand for having their own personal weapons confiscated from them. In that time period, weapons were handmade by each individual owner or by a local blacksmith, not massed produced, such as the case today.

The musket was the livelihood of a family in those times. The men in the family used the gun to hunt for food and protect the family, should the need arise. They didn’t keep their guns unloaded and stored away; they kept them loaded and ready to fire at the press of the trigger.

They would be kept over or around the door. People were taught how to responsibly handle and care for the gun because they knew they wouldn’t survive without properly knowing how to use it.

We need to read into the past and take large lessons away from the actions of those brave Americans who stood up for what they knew was right.

The original intent behind the Second Amendment was not to tell citizens they are allowed to bear arms when they need to put food on the table. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Sen. Chuck Schumer are completely wrong to be sitting on Capitol Hill and holding investigations as to why someone needs more than 10 rounds of ammunition to kill a deer.

Truth is, you don’t need 10 rounds of ammunition of kill a deer. BUT, you do need 10 rounds of ammunition to protect yourself and others from a tyrannical government and tyrants like Dianne Feinstein and Chuck Schumer who believe that guns must be restricted in order for our society to be safer.

And this was the original intent behind the Second Amendment. Jefferson and Madison knew that if the need ever arose, the people would have to check their government. It’s like a fourth “check and balance.”

The legislation that Feinstein introduced last …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Lawmakers consider regulating drone strikes

CIA Director-designate John Brennan‘s vigorous defense of drone strikes to kill terror suspects — even American citizens — overseas is causing key lawmakers to consider lifting secrecy from what has become an important weapon in the fight against al-Qaida.

Brennan, President Barack Obama‘s top counterterror adviser, was grilled for more than three hours Thursday before the Senate Intelligence Committee on the drone program he leads, as well as on the CIA‘s harsh interrogation techniques during the Bush administration, which he denounced, and on leaks of classified information to the media, which Brennan vehemently denied being a part of.

Despite Brennan‘s wide-ranging testimony and the White House‘s release of a top secret memo explaining its legal rationale for the strikes just hours before the confirmation hearing began, some senators afterward said it was time to bring the drone program into the open.

In a hearing that was interrupted by anti-drone protests that brought it to a brief halt at the outset, Brennan told the committee that missile strikes by the unmanned drones are used only against targets planning to carry out attacks against the United States, never as retribution for an earlier one.

“Nothing could be further from the truth,” he declared.

Referring to one American citizen killed by a drone in Yemen in 2011, he said Anwar al-Awlaki had ties to at least three attacks planned or carried out on U.S. soil. They included the Fort Hood, Texas, shooting that claimed 13 lives in 2009, a failed attempt to down a Detroit-bound airliner the same year and a thwarted plot to bomb cargo planes in 2010.

“He was intimately involved in activities to kill innocent men women and children, mostly Americans,” Brennan said.

The committee’s chairwoman, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., told reporters after the hearing that she wanted to open more of the program to the public so U.S. officials can acknowledge the strikes and correct what she said were exaggerated reports of civilian casualties.

Feinstein said she and other senators were considering legislation to set up a special court system to regulate drone strikes, similar to the one that signs off on government surveillance in espionage and terrorism cases.

Speaking with uncharacteristic openness about the classified program, Feinstein said that the CIA had allowed her staff to make more …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Lawmakers to get drone report before CIA hearing

President Barack Obama‘s choice to head the CIA faces a Senate Intelligence Committee confirmation hearing just hours after lawmakers are expected to receive a classified report providing the rationale for drone strikes targeting Americans working with al-Qaida overseas.

John Brennan, the White House counterterrorism chief and Obama‘s nominee to run the nation’s spy agency, helped manage the drone program. The confirmation hearing Thursday sets the stage for a public airing of some of the most controversial programs in the covert war on al-Qaida, from the deadly drone strikes to the CIA‘s use of interrogation techniques like waterboarding during President George W. Bush’s administration.

Obama directed the Justice Department to provide access to the secret document to members of the Senate and House intelligence committees, an administration official said Wednesday. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the Senate committee’s chairman, said the legal opinion would be provided to her committee by Thursday morning.

An unclassified memo leaked this week says it is legal for the government to kill U.S. citizens abroad if it believes they are senior al-Qaida leaders continually engaged in operations aimed at killing Americans, even if there is no evidence of a specific imminent attack.

That unclassified memo is based on classified advice from the Office of Legal Counsel that is being made available to the intelligence committees’ members, the official said. The official was not authorized to speak publicly about the decision and requested anonymity.

Brennan laid out the administration’s policy for targeting al-Qaida with lethal drone strikes ahead of the hearing, defending the use of such strikes but disavowing the harsh interrogation techniques used when he was at the CIA.

In answers to pre-hearing questions released Wednesday by the Senate Intelligence Committee, Brennan said no further legislation was necessary to conduct operations against al-Qaida wherever it’s operating.

Brennan answered some of his critics who charged him with backing the detention and interrogation policy while he served at the CIA. Those allegations stymied his attempt to head the intelligence agency when the Obama administration began in 2009.

Brennan said in his written answers that he was “aware of the program but did not play a role in its creation, execution, or oversight.” He added that he “had significant concerns and personal objections” to the interrogation techniques and voiced those objections to colleagues at the agency privately.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Brennan, once stung by waterboarding, now opposes

John Brennan, now President Barack Obama‘s nominee to be CIA director, sat quietly around a conference table at the agency’s headquarters in Langley, Va., during briefings about the capture and waterboarding of key al-Qaida operative Abu Zubaydah.

Former and current U.S. intelligence officials who were part of those briefings say Brennan, then deputy executive director of the CIA‘s administrative arm, did not raise objections to the interrogation practices in those forums. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the top-secret meetings publicly.

Brennan’s silence may have cost him his first chance to lead the spy agency. He withdrew his name from consideration in 2008 following a stream of complaints that he was tainted by his CIA service during the administration of President George W. Bush, when harsh interrogation techniques like waterboarding came under fire.

But in his letter withdrawing his nomination, Brennan wrote that he’d been a “strong opponent” of the program. Throughout Obama‘s first term, Brennan added to the body of criticism of so-called enhanced interrogation techniques in his role as Obama‘s counterterrorism adviser.

The same issue that caused him to withdraw from consideration to be the nation’s spy chief is likely to come up again this week as Brennan faces his confirmation hearings in Congress to be director of the CIA.

Brennan declined to be interviewed, as is customary ahead of confirmation hearings.

A senior administration official speaking on Brennan’s behalf said Brennan had “significant concerns and personal objections to many elements of the EIT program while it was under way. He voiced those objections privately with colleagues at the agency.”

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the nomination publicly, said Brennan spoke out after being named to his current job, where he was “in a position of influence over decisions such as how we handle interrogations, and he advised the president to ban such techniques.”

Brennan is likely to be quizzed on his desire to stop the CIA from conducting drone strikes on terror suspects and leave that to the military. He will also probably be asked about a growing feeling in Congress that the administration has too much authority to kill terror suspects, including U.S. citizens.

Some of the former and current U.S. intelligence officials said he was silent during the Bush administration because it wasn’t his place to object to a White House-approved policy that was run by another CIA department. Others said he could have objected to any subject raised at any briefing in keeping with CIA custom.

Brennan moved from his job as deputy executive CIA director in 2003 to become director of the Terrorist Threat Integration Center, and then interim director of its next incarnation, the National Counterterrorism Center. When Bush’s second term began, Brennan left government to run The Analysis Corp., which provides counterterror analysis to government agencies, from 2005 to 2008. After Obama‘s election, he returned to the government payroll, in 2009, as the White House counterterror czar.

“Tactics such as waterboarding were not in keeping with our values as Americans, and these practices have been rightly terminated and should not and will not happen again,” Brennan said in an August 2009 speech to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. But Brennan’s previous public statements suggest he may have felt the program was both necessary, and useful, at the time.

Waterboarding is a technique in which interrogators typically wrap a cloth over a restrained suspect’s face and pour water on the cloth at timed intervals to simulate the sensation of drowning.

In a 2006 interview with the PBS program “Frontline,” Brennan said, “When it comes to individuals who are determined to destroy our nation, though, we have to make sure that we take every possible measure.”

In a CBS News interview in 2007, Brennan acknowledged that the practices came close to torture, but he seemed to defend them. “There has been a lot of information that has come out from these interrogation procedures that the agency has, in fact, used against the real hard-core terrorists,” Brennan said. “It has saved lives.”

But in his first year in the Obama White House, Brennan offered a different view.

“Such practices not only fail to advance our counterterrorism efforts, they actually set back our efforts,” he said in the 2009 speech. “They are a recruitment bonanza for terrorists, increase the determination of our enemies and decrease the willingness of other nations to cooperate with us.”

One close associate of Brennan said his thinking evolved, as did that of many in the intelligence service. Panicked strategy sessions where CIA officers grasped at untried methods to speed up the intelligence cycle, under the pressure of the threat of another 9/11-style attack, gave way to the longer war. That second major attack did not materialize, and U.S. intelligence officials saw the news reports of harsh interrogation used against the U.S., fueling militant jihadist recruitment drives.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has signaled she will support Brennan’s nomination, but congressional staffers say both she and her Republican counterparts will ask Brennan to explain publicly if he objected to the interrogation program and how, and whether he believes it produced any useful intelligence.

Feinstein’s committee just produced a 6,000-page classified report on the interrogation program that says it did not.

The CIA program authorized intelligence officers to capture al-Qaida suspects and hold them around the world without charge, and interrogate them using techniques such as sleep deprivation and waterboarding,

The California senator wants the White House‘s support to declassify part of the document and let it become part of the argument against the program, congressional aides said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The administration and the CIA are both reviewing the report.

Feinstein has also demanded that the CIA share evidence backing up public statements that the program helped track down terrorist leader Osama bin Laden — proof she said her investigators could not find in the agency’s report.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., a member of the Intelligence Committee, also asked Brennan to react “to the report’s revelation that the CIA repeatedly provided inaccurate information about its interrogation program to the White House, the Justice Department and Congress.”

“This is about how Brennan will lead. What is he going to do about the fact that the White House and the Congress were lied to?” said Andrea Prasow, senior counterterrorism counsel at Human Rights Watch. “A commitment to disclosing that study will go a long way to showing he wants oversight.”

Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., complained that Brennan would not go into the subject in a closed-door meeting with senators last week.

“He hadn’t reviewed the report at all,” but promised to review it before Thursday’s hearings, Udall said.

“I understand that he may not see it in his or the CIA‘s interests to criticize the very agency that he hopes to lead, but I see this as an opportunity for Mr. Brennan to correct the record.”

Among those listening closely to how Brennan explains his evolving statements to the senators will be CIA officers past and present, including those who helped craft the interrogation program.

John McLaughlin, who served as acting CIA director during Brennan’s CIA tenure, said if asked, Brennan won’t hold back or sugarcoat.

“John and I were discussing how to share a really difficult piece of news with the president,” McLaughlin said of a conversation with Brennan during their time at the CIA. “John said, ‘My dad always said the best policy is to tell the truth.’ So that’s what we did.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News