Concerns about harsh techniques used by Special Operations forces prompted the Central Intelligence Agency last year to bar its officers in Iraq from taking part in military interrogations where prisoners were subjected to duress, intelligence officials said. A classified directive issued by the agency’s headquarters on Aug. 8, 2003, to all its personnel in Iraq advised that “if the military employed any type of techniques beyond questions and answers, we should not participate and should not be present,” according to an account provided by a senior intelligence official. In telling C.I.A. personnel to keep away from interrogations where military personnel were using harsh techniques, the directive was more restrictive than was previously known. Officials first disclosed the agency’s order last September, saying that it had barred C.I.A. officers from interviewing the military’s prisoners unless military officials were present. Full Story
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