Trump's nominees for state department and CIA threaten legal protections: HRW

Young journalists club

News ID: 20627
Publish Date: 18:56 - 15 March 2018
TEHRAN, March 15 - US President Donald Trump’s new nominees for secretary of state and CIA director are deeply troubling because of their past endorsements of torture, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Trump's nominees for state department and CIA threaten legal protections: HRWTEHRAN,Young Journalists Club (YJC) - Trump’s nomination of Mike Pompeo to head the US State Department and Gina Haspel the CIA “do not bode well for US commitments to uphold basic rights and the rule of law at home and abroad,” the US-based rights group said Wednesday.

Last year, Human Rights Watch opposed Pompeo to be CIA director partly because of his prior endorsement of torture. During his Senate confirmation hearing in January 2017, Pompeo failed to explicitly renounce the US government’s use of torture and mass surveillance.

In a speech in January, he implicitly endorsed coercive methods, saying that if CIA officers said they “missed an opportunity to obtain information from a detainee … we’re going to begin to move heaven and earth to make sure that something like that does not ever happen again.”

Trump fired Tillerson on Tuesday after a series of public rifts over issues including Iran, Russia and North Korea. He nominated Pompeo to replace Tillerson. Trump also tapped Haspel, the CIA’s second-in-command, to lead the spy agency.

“It is bad enough that outgoing Secretary of State Rex Tillerson ran the State Department poorly, demoralized staff, undermined US multilateral engagement, embraced arms deals to governments committing widespread abuses, supported restrictions on women’s rights, and barely engaged human rights issues,” the group said in a statement.

“Now, by nominating a secretary of state and a CIA director with a history of endorsing abusive practices, the Trump administration not just runs the risk of eroding US law on torture and other ill-treatment, but US engagement in the international legal system more broadly,” it added.

Trump’s selections have sparked opposition by Democratic lawmakers in Congress and human rights activists.

Haspel is reported to have run a CIA “black site” in Thailand as part of a US program that used torture after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks. She was directly involved in the CIA’s notorious and unlawful rendition, detention, and interrogation program.

“The US government should investigate Haspel for past violations, not nominate her for higher office,” HRW said.

Some Democratic senators consider the promotion of Haspel to deputy director of the CIA as a clear sign that the Trump administration intends to reestablish the use of torture techniques such as waterboarding and sleep deprivation.

Trump insisted in a televised interview last month that he “absolutely” thinks that water boarding works and would consider reinstating it as senior administration officials see it necessary.

Source: Presstv

 

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