WASHINGTON -- The chairs of the Senate intelligence and armed services committees are looking into whether the CIA misled the makers of a movie about the hunt for Osama bin Laden by telling them that coercive interrogation of suspected terrorists produced intelligence that led to the al Qaida founders hideout in Pakistan.
Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Carl Levin, D-Mich., were joined by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., in writing letters last month to Acting CIA Director Michael Morell asking that he provide the intelligence panel with whatever information the CIA gave to the makers of the film Zero Dark Thirty.
Releasing the letters on Thursday, the three said in a statement that they also are seeking clarification from Morell about a Dec. 21 message he sent to the CIA workforce in which he asserted that some of the intelligence that led to bin Laden came from detainees subjected to enhanced techniques.
Enhanced techniques was the term that the Bush administration adopted for waterboarding, sleep deprivation, stress positions and other procedures considered torture by many experts that CIA and Defense Department interrogators used on suspected terrorists in secret U.S. detention centers.
Feinstein, Levin and McCain previously called the movie by director Kathryn Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal grossly inaccurate, contending that scenes of brutal detainee interrogations by CIA officers perpetuate the myth that torture produced leads to bin Ladens whereabouts.
Feinstein is the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, of which Levin is an ex officio member. Levin is the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and McCain, a former Navy pilot who was tortured in a North Vietnamese prison camp, is the senior Republican member.
Preston Golson, a CIA spokesman, said the CIA would cooperate with the request. As weve said before, we take very seriously our responsibility to keep our oversight committees informed and value our relationship with Congress, he said in an email.
The Pentagon inspector general has been investigating whether a senior Defense Department official, Michael Vickers, provided restricted information to Bigelow and Boal. The Pentagon denies that he did so. McClatchy reported last month that the inspector generals office referred the case to the Justice Department in September, but that the department has declined to launch a criminal prosecution.
Bin Laden was killed when U.S. Navy SEALs raided his hideout in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on May 2, 2011. The raid culminated a decade-long hunt for the founder of al Qaida after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
The Senate Intelligence Committee recently adopted an exhaustive study of the CIAs interrogation and detention program that found detainees subjected to the brutal interrogation procedures did not provide information about the al Qaida courier who the agency eventually tracked to bin Ladens hideout.
Moreover, the detainee who provided the most accurate information about the courier provided the information prior to being subjected to coercive interrogation techniques, the three senators said in their statement.
In a Dec. 19 letter to Morell, the senators wrote that they were concerned that the films clear implication that information obtained during or after the use of the CIAs coercive interrogation techniques played a critical role in locating bin Laden.


















My Yahoo