Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
International

CIA chief admits use of brutal interrogation techniques

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Dec, 2014 11:12 AM
    Some officers of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) used brutal techniques on terrorist suspects and there was no proof of useful information yielded from the interrogation, the chief of the US spy agency has said.
     
    John Brennan, in a rare televised press conference held at the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, Thursday acknowledged "unauthorised" and "abhorrent" practices by some officers, saying it was "unknowable" whether the so-called enhanced interrogation techniques produced key intelligence, Xinhua reported.
     
    "We fell short when it came to holding some officers accountable for their mistakes," Brennan said, adding that the use of coercive methods has a strong prospect for resulting in false information because "if somebody is being subjected to a course of techniques, they say something to have those techniques stopped".
     
    "And so there have been a lot of studies done over the years about the value of different types of interrogation methods and whether or not coercive methods can lead to useful information that couldn't otherwise be obtained," the CIA chief noted.
     
    But Brennan asserted the CIA "did a lot of things right" in a time when there were no easy answers, saying CIA officers were acting under Bush administration guidance that harsh techniques were legal.
     
    The CIA was brought to sharper focus following the release Tuesday of a Senate Intelligence Committee report, in which details were offered about the agency's brutal interrogation methods over the years after the Sep 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the US mainland.
     
    Among the methods were water-boarding, sexual threats and sleep deprivation, though the report found the techniques largely ineffective and poorly managed.
     
    The revelations have sparked outrage and demands for justice around the world.
     
    Juan Mendez, the UN's special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, said the use of torture when interrogating prisoners captured in the US "war on terror" has damaged the country's moral high ground and set back the global fight against the condemnable practice.
     
    "The example set by the United States on the use of torture has been a big drawback in the fight against such practice in many other countries throughout the world," he said.
     
    "We have lost a little bit of the moral high ground," Mendez added. "But it can be regained and it should be regained." 
     
    He said the torture programmes had made the matter of terrorism worse and provided "a breeding ground for more terrorism".
     
    "As a nation that has publicly affirmed its belief that respect for truth advances respect for the rule of law, and as a nation that frequently calls for transparency and accountability in other countries, the United States must rise to meet the standards it has set both for itself and for others," Mendez said. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistani, Indian Army officials speak over hotline

    Pakistani, Indian Army officials speak over hotline
    Senior Pakistani and Indian military officials spoke to each other over the hotline Tuesday and discussed ways to reduce tension along their border, a media report said Tuesday....

    Pakistani, Indian Army officials speak over hotline

    Indian jailed for molesting woman in Singapore

    Indian jailed for molesting woman in Singapore
    Kandasamy Krishnan, 27, who works in an electrical company, has been held guilty of molesting a 28-year-old Filipino woman in a lift at Serangoon MRT...

    Indian jailed for molesting woman in Singapore

    No Thanks, We're Full: Supreme Court Rejects Appeal Of California Foie Gras Ban

    No Thanks, We're Full: Supreme Court Rejects Appeal Of California Foie Gras Ban
    WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court is allowing California to continue enforcing a law that bans the sale of foie gras.

    No Thanks, We're Full: Supreme Court Rejects Appeal Of California Foie Gras Ban

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil
    MILAN - The founder of the Luxottica luxury eyewear maker has taken over temporarily as CEO amid management turmoil that has tanked the company's stock.

    Luxottica Founder Takes Over Ceo Role As Stock Tanks Amid Turmoil

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US
    US groups in favour of the legal use of marijuana have intensified their campaign to have Alaska, Oregon and the District of Columbia approve the recreational...

    Campaign for making marijuana legal in US

    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life

    Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life from the Jundallah militant organisation, media reported Tuesday....

    Bilawal Bhutto Zardari faces threats to his life