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Monday, July 23, 2007 8:51 a.m. EDT

CIA Chief Won't Reveal Tactics

The nation's spy chief yesterday refused to identify what CIA interrogators are allowed to do in getting information from terror suspects, but he tried to assure critics that torture is not condoned or used.

National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell, in a rare broadcast interview, defended a new order from President Bush that broadly outlines the limits of how suspects may be questioned in the CIA's terror interrogation program.

The executive order bans torture, cruel, and inhumane treatment, sexual abuse, acts intended to denigrate a religion, or other degradation "beyond the bounds of human decency." It pledges that detainees will receive adequate food, water, and medical care and be protected from extreme heat and cold.

It does not, however, say what techniques are permitted during harsh questioning of suspects — a matter of debate in America and elsewhere. Mr. McConnell would not elaborate.

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  "If I announce what the specific measures are, it would aid those who want to resist those measures," Mr. McConnell said. "So I won't be too specific."

When asked if the permissible techniques would be troubling to the American people if the enemy used them against an American citizen, Mr. McConnell said: "I would not want a U.S. citizen to go through the process. But it is not torture, and there would be no permanent damage to that citizen."

Mr. Bush's order is intended in part to quell international criticism of some of the CIA's most debated work.

In the past, CIA methods are believed to have included sleep deprivation and disorientation, exposing prisoners to uncomfortable cold or heat for long periods, stress positions, and a simulated drowning technique known as waterboarding.

Without getting specific, Mr. Bush's homeland security adviser, Frances Fragos Townsend, said some techniques used earlier are no longer allowed.

"It's a different program going forward today, that's correct," she said. Human-rights groups have decried the CIA's methods and said the agency's techniques have eroded America's reputation.

Mr. McConnell and Ms. Townsend both said yesterday that the program has undoubtedly saved lives.

The order specifically refers to captured Al Qaeda suspects who may have information on attack plans or the whereabouts of the group's senior leaders. Mr. McConnell, who took over as spy chief in February, oversees 16 American intelligence agencies.

Last fall, Congress instructed the White House to draft an executive order as part of the Military Commissions Act, which outlined the rules for trying terrorism suspects. The bill barred torture, rape, and other war crimes that clearly would have violated the Geneva Conventions, but it allowed Mr. Bush to determine — through executive order — whether less harsh interrogation methods can be used.

© 2007 Associated Press.

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