Monday, May 14, 2012 05:49 PM
By: Jim Meyers and Kathleen Walter
Veteran CIA official Jose A. Rodriguez, Jr., who led all U.S.
counterterrorism operations after 9/11, tells Newsmax that under President
Barack Obama the agency has been forced to give up interrogation “capabilities”
that it may need to protect American lives.
He also warns that al-Qaida
still poses a “continuous threat” of a terrorist strike, and says the leaking of
details regarding the new underwear bomber is “very damaging to national
security.”
Rodriguez is the former director of the CIA’s National Clandestine Service, and
oversaw the Counterterrorism Center, which collected vital intelligence from
captured terrorists following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. His new book is “Hard
Measures: How Aggressive CIA Actions After 9/11 Saved American
Lives.”
In an exclusive interview with Newsmax TV, Rodriguez
discussed the leaking to the press of details about the new underwear bomber.
The plot to use an underwear bomb was recently foiled by the CIA through the use
of an operative posing as a would-be bomber, and some reports allege that the
leak came from Obama’s White House.
“I am very distraught by the leak,”
he says.
“People don’t understand that this is very damaging to national
security. It prevents us from doing similar things in the future because the
methodology is compromised. I think it is just very
unfortunate.”
While al-Qaida has been crippled to
some extent by American anti-terrorism efforts, “the foiling of this plot
demonstrates that they are still around,” Rodriguez notes.
“They are
capable of striking at any moment. I don’t think we can ever be so complacent. I
don’t think we should ever declare victory over this enemy.
“Al-Qaida is
a worldwide organization. It’s a continuous threat.”
In his book,
Rodriguez asserts that the CIA’s interrogation program using enhanced techniques
such as waterboarding was the most maligned and misunderstood mission in the
agency’s history, with Obama openly criticizing the program and, therefore, the
CIA. Asked if he fears the CIA will be weakened, especially if Obama is
re-elected, he responds: “I am very concerned that we have given up capabilities
and methodologies that have worked in the past.
“I know they work and I’m
concerned because in the future we may need these.
“So while it is the
prerogative of the president to make that decision, I am concerned that in the
future we may miss these and we may need them to protect American
lives.”
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi created a stir in May 2009 when
she accused the CIA of misleading Congress by not briefing lawmakers on the use
of waterboarding. Rodriguez refutes that claim.
“The facts are that in
August 2002 we used enhanced interrogation on [high-ranking al-Qaida operative]
Abu Zubaydah. In September when Congress got back in session I led the team that
briefed Congressman Porter Goss [then chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee] and Nancy Pelosi about the interrogation of Abu Zubaydah and the use
of the techniques including waterboarding.”
As for the reaction of
Rodriguez’s fellow officers to Pelosi’s claim that the CIA had lied to Congress,
he observes: “We are of course very concerned, because if we were to do the same
thing and lie to the Congress, they would put us in jail.”
Rodriguez
explains why he ordered the destruction of videotapes showing CIA interrogations
of terrorist suspects, which set off an investigation by the Justice Department
and congressional committees.
“These tapes were created because Abu
Zubaydah had been severely wounded during his capture by the Pakistanis and we
wanted to show the world that we were treating Abu Zubaydah humanely and were
actually trying to save his life.
“Later we wanted to use the tapes to
see how much we could learn about Abu Zubaydah, his behavior, how we could best
assess him psychologically.
“But pretty quickly we became convinced that
they had become a security problem for us because my officers’ faces were shown
on the tapes, so at some point we decided to destroy them. We asked for
permission for three years and everybody told us it was legal to do it. I
finally made the decision myself in November of 2005.”
Rodriguez also
explains why, if his actions were legal, he told the House Intelligence
Committee that he would exercise his Fifth Amendment rights if ordered to appear
before the committee to talk about the videotapes.
“My action was legal, but in today’s world, where anything you say can be used
against you, your lawyer advises you not to say a word, and that’s what I did. I
protected my rights as an American.”
Rodriguez was also asked about the
interrogation techniques used by enemies of America, including
al-Qaida.
“They are not restricted as we are by law as to what we can
do,” he tells Newsmax.
“The concern we have is that if somebody from our
side gets captured they are going to get their throats
slit.”
© 2012 Newsmax. All rights reserved.
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