Mark Matheny
A bid to reduce allegations of torture and abuse
Editor's Note:
Wow, do you see how they are merging the CIA, FBI, and Homeland Security together in order to interrogate "suspects"? and to top it off Eric Holder then wants to be able to interrogate BEFORE reading miranda rights! This includes foreign and domestic terrorists.NOW WE ARE ONE STEP CLOSER TO THE ROUNDUPS AND CONCENTRATION CAMPS!!!!!!!
I see Gestapo Nazi Brownshirt tyranny coming to America!
Middle East Online
White House takes control over interrogations dominated by CIA, plagued by controversy.
WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama's top counterterrorism adviser confirmed Tuesday that newly-created US interrogation teams designed to question terror suspects started operating at home and abroad "over the past six, seven months or so."
The elite teams are drawn from intelligence agencies, law enforcement and the Defense Department, and include experts with linguistic skills, knowledge of a particular region or terror network, as well as specialists in "behavioral science," according to senior administration officials.
John Brennan's comments appeared aimed at defusing criticism of the White House over how it has questioned and prosecuted terror suspects.
The Obama administration came under fire after the director of national intelligence, Dennis Blair, told lawmakers in January that the special interrogation teams were not yet operational, despite a decision to form the teams months earlier.
Obama approved establishing the high-value interrogation group, or HIG, in August as part of a larger effort to break with the previous administration and overhaul how terror suspects are questioned and prosecuted.
The interrogation group is led by an official from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with deputies from the Central Intelligence Agency and the Defense Department, and reports to the National Security Council.
The change asserts more direct White House control over interrogations that had been dominated by the CIA and plagued by controversy and allegations of torture and abuse.
CIA officers in the interrogation teams are not expected to take part directly in questioning of suspects on US soil, officials said.
Although no law bars intelligence officers from participating in the interrogations in the United States, the spy agency as a rule has chosen to play a supporting role to avoid being drawn into a possible court case if a suspect is prosecuted, officials said.
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