![]() convoys in Afghanistan, nightclubs in Dubai, targets in Turkey, and an Israeli embassy in the Middle East.” He wrote that Abu Zubaydah, a prisoner from Al Qaeda, offered intelligence on “planned plots.” (The detainee was “singing” with information, Kessler said.) But the Senate Intelligence Committee's report on torture, released Tuesday, called these statements “incongruent” with CIA records. ![]() Kessler wrote, for instance, that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, whom the 9/11 commission named the chief architect of the 9/11 attacks, “told the CIA about a range of planned attacks-on U.S. It included an impressive trove of classified information-of the sort that can launch federal investigations, followed by journalist subpoenas (as to the New York Times’ James Risen), and sometimes ending with leakers (like former CIA agent John Kiriakou) in jail. ![]() Secret Service agents solicited prostitutes while in Colombia, published a book called The CIA at War. In 2003, Ronald Kessler, the writer known today for breaking the news that U.S. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |