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Originally published December 18, 2007, Updated and Republished March 28, 2008, Updated and Republished April 11, 2008, Updated and Republished May 06, 2008:
Wow! ... videogate has already reached the level of White House vice presidential and presidential counsel...
"At least four top White House lawyers [Harriet Miers, John Bellinger, Alberto Gonzales and David Addington] took part in discussions with the Central Intelligence Agency between 2003 and 2005 about whether to destroy videotapes showing the secret interrogations of two operatives from Al Qaeda, according to current and former administration and intelligence officials."--NYT's reporters Mark Mazzetti and Scott Shane--
Web:
UPDATED 04/11/2008 AP, Cheney, Others OK'd Harsh Interrogations Torture
"...Vice President Dick Cheney on down signed off on using harsh interrogation techniques against suspected terrorists after asking the Justice Department to endorse their legality..."--AP--
Bet Cheney, David Addington, and William Haynes coordinated (explicitly or implicitly) to "use" the “green as grass” and “eager to please” John Yoo (who was a stupid, naive, and willing stooge)1 to write the torture memo(s)—then pretended they were relying on Yoo's opinion(s)—Ashcroft doing his best to keep his fingerprints off the memo(s).
If you believe the president didn't know and sanction the torture, I've got some weapons of mass destruction in Iraq for you.
UPDATED 12/22/2007 WP, CIA Tapes Were Kept From 9/11 Panel, Report Says. The CIA most certainly stonewalled the 911 Commission on information, not just the torture tapes! Additionally the White House was uncooperative and stonewalled the 911 Commission.
The 911 Commission did not serve the public's interest by capitulating instead of challenging both (although they believed, at the time was in the public's interest to strive for the lowest common denominator so a bipartisan albeit incomplete report could issue). Nice to hear the Commission's executive director speaking candidly, if somewhat late.
Blog:
-----notes-----
1. A recent John Yoo Esquire interview, given after public disclosure of a second torture memo, indicates some realization that trading autonomous thinking, credibility, and integrity for acceptance is usually not a good trade—a realization that comes too late to change his nom de plum, "the guy who wrote the torture memos"