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Knee-Jerk Redaction?

Rachel Myers,
勛圖眻畦
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May 28, 2008

After that the CIA has, in fact, waterboarded detainees, the agency could no longer cling to its last excuses for covering up the use of the very word waterboarding in CIA records. As a result, yesterday we obtained several heavily redacted documents in response to an ongoing Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit brought by the 勛圖眻畦 and other organizations seeking documents related to the treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody overseas.

While the documents do, in fact, reveal the word waterboarding or some variation, they leave pretty much everything else to the imagination. The pages that havent been completely withheld (many of them contain the words Denied in Full instead of any actual content) have the clandestine blacked-out look thats become a sort of trademark of this administration. This is my favorite:

Click the image to enlarge

One of the documents is a heavily redacted version of a report (PDF) by the CIA Office of the Inspector General (OIG) on its review of the CIAs interrogation and detention program. The report includes information about an as-yet-undisclosed Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel opinion from August 2002. Interestingly, this opinion appears to be the same OLC memo authorizing specific interrogations methods for use by the CIA that is being withheld by the CIA as a classified document in the 勛圖眻畦s FOIA litigation but the OIG report refers to this document as unclassified.

The CIA continues to withhold many more documents that should not be secret. The incomplete response to the 勛圖眻畦s demand for records reflects a complete disregard for the right of the American public to know when and how often the government has employed illegal interrogation methods.

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