CIA

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  • Our misguided fight against Somali pirates

    Those teenage high-seas renegades are not about to team up with terrorists, so why is the U.S. military devoting so much attention to them?
  • Source: Cheney hasn't asked CIA to release memos

    A senior U.S. intelligence official tells Salon the former Vice President has not requested that the agency declassify memos about interrogation techniques.
  • Obama speaks to the CIA

    The president worked to reassure any staffers worried about what his release of the OLC torture memos means for them.
  • CIA destroyed 92 interrogation tapes

    An attorney for the government reveals that many more records than originally believed have been destroyed.
  • Panetta under fire already

    Both the incoming and outgoing chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee are criticizing Barack Obama's choice to head the CIA.
  • Obama taps Leon Panetta to head CIA

    The former White House chief of staff doesn't have intelligence experience, but after the Bush administration, the president-elect couldn't really tap an Agency insider.
  • Report: Torture started with Bush

    After a two-year investigation, the Senate names names -- Bush, Tenet, Rumsfeld, Ashcroft, Gonzales, Addington, Rice.
  • Obama's plans for probing Bush torture

    President Bush could pardon officials involved in brutal interrogations -- but he may also face a sweeping investigation under the new president.
  • Is the U.S. putting mentally incompetent terror suspects on trial?

    At Guantánamo, bizarre proceedings with the 9/11 suspects raise questions about a prisoner's psychiatric evaluation and the murky role of the CIA.
  • New evidence suggests Ron Suskind is right

    What was an Iraqi politician doing at CIA headquarters just days before he distributed a fake memo incriminating Saddam Hussein in 9/11?
  • Forging the missing case for war

    In further chronicles of Bush government deceit, author Ron Suskind drops a bombshell: The White House ordered the CIA to fake a letter linking Saddam Hussein to al-Qaida.
  • The bizarre trial of bin Laden's bodyguard

    The "capture videos" the Pentagon aims to bury, late-night brutality pointing to the CIA -- and even a surreal viewing of "The Dark Knight" here in Guantánamo.
  • When war goes corporate

    Grave threats to our national security may now include the mass privatization of U.S. intelligence and military operations.
  • Exposing Bush's historic abuse of power

    Salon has uncovered new evidence of post-9/11 spying on Americans. Obtained documents point to a potential investigation of the White House that could rival Watergate.
  • Ashcroft suggests CIA sought legal approval after torture began

    The former attorney general raises the possibility that the CIA looked for legal cover only after at least one suspected member of al-Qaida was tortured.
  • Suing George W. Bush: A bizarre and troubling tale

    U.S. officials went to extremes to stifle our legal challenge to Bush's warrantless surveillance -- but a federal judge says the program is criminal, anyway.
  • Bush's top general quashed torture dissent

    New evidence shows that despite warnings from across the military, former Gen. Richard Myers shut down legal scrutiny of brutal interrogation tactics.
  • The Scott McClellan sideshow

    The former press secretary's testimony about Valerie Plame is valuable, but only the press can uncover whether Bush and Cheney lied to investigators.
  • Former high-ranking Bush officials enjoy war profits

    Now working inside America's "shadow" spy industry, George Tenet, Richard Armitage, Cofer Black and others are cashing in big on Iraq and the war on terror.
  • Blacklisted by the Bush government

    Spying on Americans without warrants, charges based on secret evidence, a small town divided by fear. Welcome to the world of Bush's "specially designated global terrorists."
  • "We'll make you see death"

    A harrowing account from a man the CIA handed over to Jordan -- smuggled from prison on tiny paper -- exposes U.S. complicity in torture.
  • Killing ourselves in Afghanistan

    In a secret meeting with a Taliban commander, I learned how Bush administration aid to Pakistan helps fund insurgents who kill U.S. troops.
  • Uncovering the truth about CIA torture tapes

    Congress must remedy its abysmal record of investigating the Bush administration on prisoner abuse and torture.
  • White House pushes back against Times' tapes story

    The Bush administration isn't happy about a report linking it to the destruction of tapes of CIA interrogations.
  • Administration lawyers were in on discussion of CIA tapes' destruction

    The New York Times reports greater involvement of White House lawyers than previously known; administration officials may even have advocated the destruction.
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