J_White
12-10-2012, 11:19 PM
This week, the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee plans to vote on whether to approve the as-yet unreleased findings of a 6,000-page report about its three-year investigation into the secret CIA interrogation program that is depicted in "Zero Dark Thirty."
This report promises to be the definitive assessment of the intelligence value of the CIA's coercive interrogation techniques. After the examination of millions of pages of evidence, the chairmen of the Senate Intelligence Committee and the Senate Armed Services Committee have publicly stated that coercive interrogation techniques such as waterboarding did not provide the information that led to bin Laden.
http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/10/opinion/bergen-zero-dark-thirty/index.html
Will this make any change to how the system works ? Probably not.
Oh, I think "officially" these torture techniques are not used anymore. :rolleyes:
This report promises to be the definitive assessment of the intelligence value of the CIA's coercive interrogation techniques. After the examination of millions of pages of evidence, the chairmen of the Senate Intelligence Committee and the Senate Armed Services Committee have publicly stated that coercive interrogation techniques such as waterboarding did not provide the information that led to bin Laden.
http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/10/opinion/bergen-zero-dark-thirty/index.html
Will this make any change to how the system works ? Probably not.
Oh, I think "officially" these torture techniques are not used anymore. :rolleyes: