Former CIA Executive Director Buzzy Krongard told BBC on Monday that the CIA did engage in torture:
[BBC] asked Buzzy Krongard, the CIA’s former executive director, if he thought waterboarding and painful stress positions were torture:Krongard isn’t the first high-level official to admit that what the CIA did was torture. The following officials also admitted that the CIA tortured:
“Well, let’s put it this way, it is meant to make him as uncomfortable as possible. So I assume for, without getting into semantics, that’s torture. I’m comfortable with saying that,” he explained.
- Eric Holder, U.S. Attorney General
- Ramsey Clarke, U.S. Attorney General
- Lt. Gen. Michael D. Maples, the director of the Defense Intelligence Agency
- Barry McCaffrey, 4-Star General, who was awarded three Purple Hearts, two Distinguished Service Crosses, and two Silver Stars
- David Irving, Brigadier General
- Colonel Morris Davis, the Chief Prosecutor of the Guantanamo military commissions
- Darrel Vandeveld, former prosecutor in the Guantanamo military commissions
- Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Colin Powell
- Malcolm Nance, an advisor on terrorism to the US departments of Homeland Security, Special Operations and Intelligence
- Matthew Alexander, a former top Air Force interrogator who led the team that tracked down Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
- John Kiriakou, CIA officer and interrogator
- Ricardo Sanchez, Lieutenant General and the former top coalition commander in Iraq
- Thomas Romig, Major General and Army JAG
- Antonio Taguba, Major General
- The United States has always considered waterboarding to be a crime of torture, including when the Japanese did it in WWII (and see this)
Because top experts say that torture doesn’t work to provide evidence (even in a “ticking time bomb” scenario) … and that it severely harms America’s national security.
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