Oh Nancy
by digby
Panetta Admits CIA Misled Congress on “Significant Actions”
By Tim Starks, CQ StaffCIA Director Leon Panetta told the House Intelligence Committee that the agency had misled and “concealed significant actions from all members of Congress” dating back to 2001 and continuing until late June, according to a letter from seven Democrats on the panel.
The letter was dated June 26, two days after Panetta appeared before a closed door session with the committee and it asked that the CIA chief “correct” his statement from May 15 that “it is not our policy or practice to mislead Congress.”
“Recently you testified that you have determined that top CIA officials have concealed significant actions from all members of Congress, and misled members for a number of years from 2001 to this week,” states the letter to Panetta from Anna G. Eshoo of California, Alcee L. Hastings of Florida, Rush D. Holt of New Jersey, Jan Schakowsky of Illinois, Adam Smith of Washington, Mike Thompson of California and John F. Tierney of Massachusetts.
CIA spokesman George Little said Panetta stood by his May remarks and believes Congress must be kept fully informed and Little added, “it was the CIA itself that took the initiative to notify the oversight committees.”
Big of them. But you have to stop and truly appreciate the weasel words in that statement: Panetta stands by his statement — at least the part where he said he believes congress should be kept informed.
The issue is politically sensitive because House Speaker Nancy Pelosi , D-Calif., found herself at the center of a firestorm in May when she accused the CIA of misleading Congress over the use of harsh interrogation methods during the Bush administration.
Somebody owes Pelosi an apology. According to the article it won’t be Pete Hoekstra who is simply putting his fingers in his ears and singling “lalalalalala.”
But lest anyone thinks that the actual rules and processes are going to change any of this:
The Obama administration has threatened to veto the funding bill for US intelligence agencies because the House included a provision that would increase the number of members who receive briefings on highly secretive covert operations.
[…]
The same provision allows Congress, not the administration, to restrict the briefings in extraordinary circumstances.
This seemingly small change to the law is what’s provoked the veto threat. The Obama administration, like all previous administrations of the modern era, believe that the president, and only the president, has the power to determine what constitutes national security information and, even more vitally, what safeguards ought to be in place to protect the information.
Because it’s worked out so well up to now.
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