Nancy Pelosi

Pelosi: I was Misled by the CIA!

Posted in Central Intelligence Agency, Nancy Pelosi on May 14th, 2009 by John H – Be the first to comment

During a weekly news conference, the House Speaker Nancy Pelosi faced some “enhanced” questioning by the press. Crumbling under the intense scrutiny, Pelosi instinctively attacked the Central Intelligence Agency and Bush administration in her own defense.

“Yes I am saying the CIA was misleading the Congress and at the same time the (Bush) administration was misleading the Congress on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, to which I said that this intelligence doesn’t support the imminent threat,” Pelosi said at her weekly news conference.

“Every step of the way the administration was misleading the Congress and that is the issue and that’s why we need a truth commission,” she added.

Under a barrage of questioning, Pelosi also again adamantly insisted that she was not aware that waterboarding or other enhanced interrogation techniques were being used on terrorism suspects and

“I am telling you they told me they approved these and said they wanted to use them but said they were not using waterboarding,” she said.

Ironically, Nancy didn’t suspect anything as the ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee in 2002 when she was “informed” by the CIA they have the legal right to use these enhanced interrogation techniques but haven’t implemented them yet… or so SHE says.

Why didn’t she request or attend any further briefing on interrogation techniques while a member of the Intelligence Committee? Why didn’t she personally raise objection to the use of waterboarding when it was a fact a couple months later? Why didn’t she try to block funding for the C.I.A. programs associated with enhanced interrogation techniques?

“No letter could change the policy. It was clear we had to change the leadership in Congress and in the White House. That was my job — the Congress part.”

Oh, I see… Nancy was too busy campaigning.

Even Nancy Pelosi’s Top Aide Knew about Waterboarding Since 2003

Posted in Central Intelligence Agency, Nancy Pelosi on May 11th, 2009 by John H – 1 Comment
I can't hear you

Somehow, everyone around Nancy Pelosi seemed to know that the CIA was using waterboarding as an enhanced interrogation technique except for Nancy herself…

A top aide to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi attended a CIA briefing in early 2003 in which it was made clear that waterboarding and other harsh techniques were being used in the interrogation of an alleged al-Qaeda operative, according to documents the CIA released to Congress on Thursday.

Pelosi has insisted that she was not directly briefed by Bush administration officials that the practice was being actively employed. But Michael Sheehy, a top Pelosi aide, was present for a classified briefing that included Rep. Jane Harman (D-Calif.), then the ranking minority member of the House intelligence committee, at which agency officials discussed the use of waterboarding on terrorism suspect Abu Zubaida.

A Democratic source acknowledged yesterday that it is almost certain that Pelosi would have learned about the use of waterboarding from Sheehy. Pelosi herself acknowledged in a December 2007 statement that she was aware that Harman had learned of the waterboarding and had objected in a letter to the CIA’s top counsel.

“It was my understanding at that time that Congresswoman Harman filed a letter in early 2003 to the CIA to protest the use of such techniques, a protest with which I concurred,” Pelosi said in the Dec. 9, 2007, statement.

Plausible deniability… isn’t it great?

Nancy Pelosi Tortures the Facts Again!

Posted in Central Intelligence Agency, Nancy Pelosi on May 8th, 2009 by John H – 1 Comment
Nancy Pelosi

In light of newly released CIA documents showing Nancy Pelosi was one of the first members of Congress briefed on the use of enhanced interrogation techniques back in Sept. 2002, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi quickly released the following press statement:

“Of the forty CIA briefings to Congress reported recently in the press, I was only briefed once, on September 4, 2002, as I have previously stated. As I said in my statement of December 9, 2007: ‘I was briefed on interrogation techniques the Administration was considering using in the future. The Administration advised that legal counsel for both the CIA and the Department of Justice had concluded that the techniques were legal.’ I had no further briefings on the techniques.

“My understanding of the briefing I received is consistent with the description that CIA General Counsel Scott Muller provided to Congresswoman Jane Harman in a letter dated February 28, 2003, which states: ‘As we informed both you and the leadership of the Intelligence Committees last September, a number of Executive Branch lawyers including lawyers from the Department of Justice participated in the determination that, in the appropriate circumstances, the use of these techniques is fully consistent with U.S. law.’ As reported in the press, the accompanying memo from CIA Director Panetta concedes that the descriptions provided by the CIA may not be accurate.”

Pelosi has less regard for the truth than the CIA did for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

CIA Releases Memo Pelosi was Briefed on Use of Enhanced Interrogation Tactics

Posted in Central Intelligence Agency, Nancy Pelosi on May 7th, 2009 by John H – Be the first to comment
Pelosi, House leaders meet with economists in Washington

The Washington Post reports that the Central Intelligence Agency released documents showing that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was brief in September 2002 about the use of “enhanced” interrogation techniques contradicting her repeated denial.

In a 10-page memo outlining an almost seven-year history of classified briefings, intelligence officials said that Pelosi and then-Rep. Porter Goss (R-Fla.) were the first two members of Congress ever briefed on the interrogation tactics. Then the ranking member and chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, respectively, Pelosi and Goss were briefed Sept. 4, 2002, one week before the first anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The memo, issued by the Director of National Intelligence and the Central Intelligence Agency to Capitol Hill, notes the Pelosi-Goss briefing covered “EITs including the use of EITs on Abu Zubaydah.” EIT is an acronym for enhanced interrogation technique. Zubaydah was one of the earliest valuable al-Qaeda members captured and the first to have the controversial tactic known as water boarding used against him.

The issue of what Pelosi knew and when she knew it has become a matter of heated debate on Capitol Hill. Republicans have accused her of knowing for many years precisely the techniques CIA agents were using in interrogations, and only protesting the tactics when they became public and liberal antiwar activists protested.

I think it’s time to interrogate Nancy Peolsi… she’s the poster child for some enhanced techniques if there ever was one right now.

Pelosi: Government Run Health Care Option Will Improve Global Competition

Posted in Nancy Pelosi on March 27th, 2009 by John H – 1 Comment

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is fast tracking health care legislation this week that would include an option for a government run program that would compete with insurers.

Pelosi reasons a government role in health care will help U.S. companies be more competitive.

“This is not only about the health of individuals in our country, which will be justification enough,” said Pelosi, a California Democrat. “It’s about the competitiveness of our businesses to make them globally competitive because they are competing with companies and countries where the federal government — their governments — pay for health care. They don’t have to bear those health care costs.”

So, creating a government program funded by taxing health care benefits provided by private insurers will make these companies ultimately more competitive?  Doesn’t it sound like Pelosi is really proposing to eliminate competition?  While the government is subsidized by their customers, private insurers will be forced to increase premiums and reduce health benefits while customers defect to the cheaper government alternative.   Its pretty clear the government doesn’t consider these insurers “too big to fail” unlike AIG and other financial institutions they are asking for control over.  Funny how that works out…