A U.S. judge ordered the Central Intelligence Agency on Thursday
to submit to the court a 2002 memo said to specify harsh interrogation
methods used on suspected terrorists held abroad.
The American Civil Liberties Union said the memo was written
by the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel and
sent to the CIA in August 2002. The ACLU described the memo
as "one of the most important torture documents still
being withheld by the Bush administration."
In a copy of the order posted on the ACLU's Web site, Judge
Alvin Hellerstein told the government to produce the memo
so he can determine whether it should be made public as part
of a lawsuit the ACLU and other organizations filed in June
2004 requesting records concerning the treatment of prisoners
in U.S. custody abroad.
Hellerstein has scheduled a review of the document for Monday.
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"This memo authorized the CIA to use specific torture
techniques -- including waterboarding," Jameel Jaffer,
ACLU's national security project director, said in a statement.
"CIA agents waterboarded prisoners because this memo
told them that they could," he said. "The memo is
being withheld not for legitimate security reasons, but in
order to protect government officials from accountability
for their decisions."
Waterboarding is a simulated drowning technique.
The ACLU said more than 100,000 pages of government documents
have been released in response to its lawsuit.
Full
article here.