Topic: Cia Torture Report

9 chapters across the catalog

Army of Conquest
Episode 859 39:29 - 43:18

859: Army of Conquest

9-11 Truthers, Building 7 and Intelligence Oversight

The 15th anniversary of the September 11 attacks has renewed interest in alternative theories regarding the collapse of World Trade Center Building 7. Parallel discussions regarding government transparency highlight the CIA torture report and the perceived lack of oversight by the Senate Intelligence Committee. Critics point to instances where committee members refused to read classified reports as evidence of a failure in government accountability.

Frontier Science
Episode 767 43:07 - 46:43

767: Frontier Science

Mike McCaul, OPM Hack and House Intelligence Committee

Representative Mike McCaul, Chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, is criticized for his handling of intelligence oversight and his refusal to read the Senate's CIA torture report. The hosts discuss the massive Office of Personnel Management (OPM) hack, which compromised the security clearance data of over 20 million federal employees. They suggest the Brennan email "hack" may actually be data repurposed from the original OPM breach.

Ten Minute Timer
Episode 691 1:27:13 - 1:28:07

691: Ten Minute Timer

Senator Richard Burr, CIA Torture Report

Senator Richard Burr, the new Republican chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has requested the Obama administration return all copies of the landmark report on CIA torture. Burr also intends to return the "Panetta Review," a secret internal document that reportedly found the agency inflated the value of information obtained through torture.

Sir Thomas Nussbaum presents
Episode 680 2:27:15 - 2:33:29

680: Sir Thomas Nussbaum presents

Donald Gregg Interview, CIA Torture Report

Former CIA officer and Ambassador Donald Gregg appeared on the Regional News Network to discuss the Senate Torture Report. Gregg criticized the outsourcing of interrogations to psychologists who lacked linguistic skills and cultural knowledge of Al-Qaeda. He noted that the U.S. has historically been "lousy torturers" and "bad assassins," citing failed attempts on Fidel Castro as evidence of the agency's limitations.

Sir London Foley Presents
Episode 678 10:07 - 13:57

678: Sir London Foley Presents

CIA Torture Report, Rectal Rehydration Medical Defense

Former CIA Director Michael Hayden defended controversial interrogation techniques during an interview with Jake Tapper, characterizing "rectal rehydration" as a necessary medical procedure for non-cooperative detainees. The exchange highlighted the divide between the Senate Intelligence Committee's findings on torture and the CIA's internal justifications. Hayden claimed the procedures were intended to maintain detainee health rather than serve as a form of punishment or interrogation.

99 Lines of Code
Episode 677 11:50 - 18:11

677: 99 Lines of Code

CIA Torture Report, Fox News Media Medley

The release of the Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture sparked a unified defense from mainstream media outlets, particularly Fox News. Media personalities and former intelligence officials utilized consistent talking points to argue that "enhanced interrogation" was effective and necessary for national security. The report detailed controversial practices such as rectal rehydration and sleep deprivation, which critics label as war crimes under the Geneva Convention.

Putinism
Episode 640 1:41:08 - 1:43:33

640: Putinism

CIA Spying on Senate, RDI Network Torture Report

An Inspector General report confirmed that CIA personnel improperly accessed the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI) shared drives. The investigation into the Rendition, Detention, and Interrogation (RDI) network led to the CIA spying on the very committee tasked with its oversight. Five agency employees, including three IT staff members, were implicated in the breach.

Nuclear Tipped
Episode 599 1:28:34 - 1:35:54

599: Nuclear Tipped

CIA Spying on Senate Intelligence Committee

Senator Dianne Feinstein accused the CIA of improperly searching a computer network used by the Senate Intelligence Committee to investigate the Bush-era torture program. CIA Director John Brennan denied the hacking allegations, suggesting the agency was merely monitoring its own equipment. This public rift is interpreted as a power struggle between the CIA and the NSA over congressional oversight and funding.