The President Ties His Own
Hands on Terror
The point of
interrogation is intelligence, not confession.
The Wall Street
Journal
By MICHAEL HAYDEN and MICHAEL B. MUKASEY
April 17,
2009
Excerpt:
The Obama administration has declassified and
released opinions of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC)
given in 2005 and earlier that analyze the legality of interrogation techniques
authorized for use by the CIA. Those techniques were applied only when expressly
permitted by the director, and are described in these opinions in detail, along
with their limits and the safeguards applied to them.
The release of
these opinions was unnecessary as a legal matter, and is unsound as a matter of
policy. Its effect will be to invite the kind of institutional timidity and fear
of recrimination that weakened intelligence gathering in the past, and that we
came sorely to regret on Sept. 11, 2001.
Proponents of the release have
argued that the techniques have been abandoned and thus there is no point in
keeping them secret any longer; that they were in any event ineffective; that
their disclosure was somehow legally compelled; and that they cost us more in
the coin of world opinion than they were worth. None of these claims survives
scrutiny.
Soon after he was sworn in, President Barack Obama signed an
executive order that suspended use of these techniques and confined not only the
military but all U.S. agencies -- including the CIA -- to the interrogation
limits set in the Army Field Manual. This suspension was accompanied by a
commitment to further study the interrogation program, and government personnel
were cautioned that they could no longer rely on earlier opinions of the
OLC.
Although evidence shows that the Army Field Manual, which is
available online, is already used by al Qaeda for training purposes, it was
certainly the president's right to suspend use of any technique. However, public
disclosure of the OLC opinions, and thus of the techniques themselves, assures
that terrorists are now aware of the absolute limit of what the U.S. government
could do to extract information from them, and can supplement their training
accordingly and thus diminish the effectiveness of these techniques as they have
the ones in the Army Field Manual.
Moreover, disclosure of the details of
the program pre-empts the study of the president's task force and assures that
the suspension imposed by the president's executive order is effectively
permanent. There would be little point in the president authorizing measures
whose nature and precise limits have already been disclosed in detail to those
whose resolve we hope to overcome. This conflicts with the sworn promise of the
current director of the CIA, Leon Panetta, who testified in aid of securing
Senate confirmation that if he thought he needed additional authority to conduct
interrogation to get necessary information, he would seek it from the president.
By allowing this disclosure, President Obama has tied not only his own hands but
also the hands of any future administration faced with the prospect of
attack.
Disclosure of the techniques is likely to be met by faux outrage,
and is perfectly packaged for media consumption. It will also incur the utter
contempt of our enemies. Somehow, it seems unlikely that the people who beheaded
Nicholas Berg and Daniel Pearl, and have tortured and slain other American
captives, are likely to be shamed into giving up violence by the news that the
U.S. will no longer interrupt the sleep cycle of captured terrorists even to
help elicit intelligence that could save the lives of its citizens.
Which
brings us to the next of the justifications for disclosing and thus abandoning
these measures: that they don't work anyway, and that those who are subjected to
them will simply make up information in order to end their ordeal. This ignorant
view of how interrogations are conducted is belied by both experience and common
sense. If coercive interrogation had been administered to obtain confessions,
one might understand the argument. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM), who organized
the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, among others, and who has boasted of having beheaded
Daniel Pearl, could eventually have felt pressed to provide a false confession.
But confessions aren't the point. Intelligence is. Interrogation is conducted by
using such obvious approaches as asking questions whose correct answers are
already known and only when truthful information is provided proceeding to what
may not be known. Moreover, intelligence can be verified, correlated and used to
get information from other detainees, and has been; none of this information is
used in isolation.