By
Russ Baker on Jan 2, 2014
In a
recent New York Times article
about efforts by the Senate Intelligence Committee to get its hands on
(and perhaps release?) an internal report on torture that the CIA
doesn’t want to turn over, the author mentions in passing the pending
nomination of Caroline D. Krass to be the top lawyer at the Agency.
He then notes that:
Ms. Krass is a career government
lawyer who works at the Justice Department’s Office of Legal
Counsel, the arm of the department that advises the White House on
the legality of domestic and foreign policies.
The office was particularly
controversial during the Bush administration, when lawyers there
wrote lengthy memos approving C.I.A. interrogation methods like
waterboarding and sleep deprivation, as well as signing off on
the expansion of surveillance by the National Security Agency.
That is very useful information, worthy of its own article.
Because the move of Krass from OLC to CIA is highly suspicious. After
all, they’re taking someone from the very heart of the cover-up over
torture at the Agency and putting her in charge of… legal blocking of
inquiries into CIA actions.
This would not be the first time in recent memory that an
organization that is all about subterfuge has moved to prevent the truth
from getting out by shuffling key personnel between it and other parts
of the Executive Branch. In another instance, the CIA last year sent
Sheryl Shenberger, who had served as a branch chief in the CIA
counterterrorism center between 2001 and 2003, to be
in charge of declassification
of documents at the National Archives. Bet that she hasn’t rushed to
make available documents pertaining to the September 11 attacks.
The
Times article, published under the dull headline, “Senate
Asks C.I.A. to Share Its Report on Interrogations,” unsurprisingly does
not seem to have made any waves. And we have not noticed anyone else
drawing attention to the buried sub-narrative about Krass’s new
appointment.
If these kinds of congressional committees are serious about actually
representing the interests of the American people, after years of
failures on that front, they might start by taking a closer look at
dodgy- looking personnel moves.
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