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FRONT PAGE CONTRIBUTOR

The war of leaks may now begin.

And as I noted yesterday, what an interesting war it will be. Via AoSHQ:

Justice Dept. Report Advises Pursuing C.I.A. Abuse Cases

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department’s ethics office has recommended reversing the Bush administration and reopening nearly a dozen prisoner-abuse cases, potentially exposing Central Intelligence Agency employees and contractors to prosecution for brutal treatment of terrorism suspects, according to a person officially briefed on the matter.

[snip]

With the release of the details on Monday and the formal advice that at least some cases be reopened, it now seems all but certain that the appointment of a prosecutor or other concrete steps will follow, posing significant new problems for the C.I.A. It is politically awkward, too, for Mr. Holder because President Obama has said that he would rather move forward than get bogged down in the issue at the expense of his own agenda.

My reading of the article suggests that the focus of this is not Bush administration policies, but is instead on how the CIA carried those policies out. This should prove interesting: the CIA is already dealing with new Director Leon Panetta’s epic-level bungling of the ‘assassination program’ nonsense, and this is going to do nothing to persuade the career bureaucrats in the Agency that the current administration isn’t planning to hang them all out to dry. Having lived through one Church Committee, I suspect that the CIA is not inclined to endure another.

I don’t exactly have ‘a pox on both their houses’ attitude towards this, but I do consider this to be a bit of a karmic balancing for both the White House and the CIA.

Moe Lane

Crossposted to Moe Lane.

COMMENTS

  • janis

    pick as coming out on top in this one? Mine would be on the CIA.

  • bk

    There are no Black Panther cases to waste time on.

    The war on terror is over, so they’ll just let all those poor Gitmo detainees go eventually. A couple hundred people more in Dearborn won’t get much notice.

    No one else we capture will be held unless the troops read him his Miranda rights immediately.

    So who is left to go after except CIA guys and anybody they employed? If there is any spare time, they can find some FBI guys to investigate over any wiretapping they did while Bush was in office.

    We wouldn’t want them to just sit around and collect checks for doing nothing would we?

  • penguin2

    of budget cuts could be made. Knocking down the CIA and the military would save some money. Of course, the real cost of that may not be known for while, but I would bet we’ll learn sooner rather than later.

  • http://www.redstate.com/tnjim TNJim

    was on a certain September morning about 8 years ago…

  • mbecker908

    Resurrect Tookie!!

    There, that should keep Holder busy.

  • blooch

    being pushed for now in anticipation of the coming turf war? I guess having your own Cabinet-level Closer would cut down on leaks.

  • http://andrightlyso.com/ civil_truth

    becomes the People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs, affectionately known to history as the NKVD.

  • Tbone

    Obama is now a lame duck with little hope of passing big stuff. This frees up his leftist ideologs to do what they do best and that is to destroy traditional American institutions which they hate. This includes government insitutions like the CIA and the Military, social institutions like marriage and the sanctity of life and economic institutions like free markets, right to work and personal initiative.

    The Left really are the scum of our society.

  • StandardCandle

    nt.