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View Full Version : CIA Accused Of Spying On Senate Intelligence Committee Staffers




DamianTV
03-06-2014, 02:55 AM
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140305/00445926435/cia-accused-spying-senate-intelligence-committee-staffers.shtml


from the biting-the-hand-that-oversees-you dept

While at times, it's appeared that the Senate Intelligence Committee, led by Dianne Feinstein, serves more to prop up the intelligence community than to handle oversight, it has actually clashed quite a bit with the CIA. We've discussed a few times how the Committee has been pushing to release a supposedly devastating 6,000 page report about the CIA's torture program, which cost taxpayers an equally astounding $40 million to produce. However, the CIA has been fighting hard to block the release of the report, arguing that it misrepresents the CIA's actions.

However, things are getting even more bizarre, as the NY Times is reporting that the CIA is now accused of spying on the Intelligence Committee and its staffers in its attempt to keep that report from being released.

The details are still a little cloudy, but in December, Senator Mark Udall revealed that the Senate Intelligence Committee had come across an internal CIA study that apparently corroborated the information that is in the big Senate report -- and which directly contradicted claims by the CIA to the Committee about how the report was inaccurate -- suggesting that, on top of everything else, the CIA lied to the Intelligence Committee. Udall quizzed CIA boss John Brennan about that internal report. And according to the NY Times, it appears that CIA folks freaked out that the Intelligence Committee somehow got access to that internal study, and responded the way the CIA knows best: by starting to spy on Intelligence Committee staffers:

The agency’s inspector general began the inquiry partly as a response to complaints from members of Congress that C.I.A. employees were improperly monitoring the work of staff members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, according to government officials with knowledge of the investigation.

The committee has spent several years working on a voluminous report about the detention and interrogation program, and according to one official interviewed in recent days, C.I.A. officers went as far as gaining access to computer networks used by the committee to carry out its investigation.

(continues on link)

Mini-Me
03-06-2014, 03:07 AM
I hope this escalates to an incredible level of animosity between the two groups, but considering Madam Umbridge is in charge, I imagine it will all be smoothed out in the end so the spooks can continue all abuses unimpeded. If only the CIA had waterboarded her or worse to find out how the staffers knew about their internal report...but I guess they're smart enough to know she wouldn't have a clue.

Occam's Banana
03-06-2014, 03:30 AM
When can we just drop the fiction that Congress possesses any real "oversight" of the CIA (and numerous other executive agencies & departments)?

The notion that Congressional committees have any substantive or significant power over the executive is a naive fantasy.

It's nothing but a public-relations facade - a dog-and-pony show put on for the benefit of the rubes (including the ones in Congress).

Mini-Me
03-06-2014, 05:31 AM
When can we just drop the fiction that Congress possesses any real "oversight" of the CIA (and numerous other executive agencies & departments)?

The notion that Congressional committees have any substantive or significant power over the executive is a naive fantasy.

It's nothing but a public-relations facade - a dog-and-pony show put on for the benefit of the rubes (including the ones in Congress).

The cynical side of me agrees, but the other cynical side of me has a bit of hope: They're pretty much all united in the War on Us, but remember that powerful Senators have massive egos too. If they feel personally slighted by someone else, even the CIA, their attitude is liable to play out like a contempt of cop scenario. They may have originally looked into the CIA torture report out of morbid curiosity or to find a way to release just the mildest bits to quell "paranoid" fears from the populace...but once they found out they were lied to and even spied on, that's personal. Look what happens on the streets when a gangster steps on another tightly wound gangster's toes and pays him disrespect, even on accident. Gangsters fight, and sometimes it escalates and they damage the gang as a whole in their vanity. One can only hope.

oyarde
03-06-2014, 09:59 AM
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Schifference
03-06-2014, 10:27 AM
Thus the case with all govt.
When can we just drop the fiction that Congress possesses any real "oversight" of the CIA (and numerous other executive agencies & departments)?

The notion that Congressional committees have any substantive or significant power over the executive is a naive fantasy.

It's nothing but a public-relations facade - a dog-and-pony show put on for the benefit of the rubes (including the ones in Congress).