Inside the Battle Over the CIA Torture Report -- Josh Rogin & Eli Lake, Bloomberg
After months of internal wrangling, the Senate Intelligence Committee is finally set to release its report on President George W. Bush-era CIA practices, which among other details will contain information about foreign countries that aided in the secret detention and interrogation of suspected terrorists.
Several U.S. officials told us that the negotiations are nearly complete between the Central Intelligence Agency and the committee's Democratic staff, which prepared the classified 6,300-page report and its 600-page, soon-to-be-released declassified executive summary. Dianne Feinstein, the committee's chairman, is set to release the summary early next week. Her staff members had objected vigorously to hundreds of redactions the CIA had proposed in the executive summary. After an often-contentious process to resolve the disputes, managed by top White House officials, Feinstein was able to roll back the majority of the disputed CIA redactions.
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More News On The CIA 'Torture Report' To Be Released Next Week
CIA torture report to be published on Monday without the word 'torture' -- RT
CIA ‘torture report’ could be out Monday -- The Hill
Deal Reached, CIA Torture Report to Be Released Next Week -- Roll Call
Senate 'Torture' Report To Be Published, Following Battle Between CIA, Democratic Party Staffers -- IBTimes
CIA Torture Report ‘Days’ Away, Feinstein Says -- Daily Beast
Torture Report Leaks May Reopen CIA Rendition Case -- Newsweek
12 Things to Keep in Mind When You Read the Torture Report -- The Intercept
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