Bill Would Ease CIA Interrogation LimitsBy ANNE PLUMMER FLAHERTY, Associated Press Writer
10:08 AM PDT, September 9, 2006
WASHINGTON -- To many of President Bush's allies, it is time to free intelligence
officials from "legislative purgatory" and get the CIA back in the business
of effective interrogations of suspected terrorists.
That chance could come this week if the Senates takes up a White House proposal
limiting the punishable offenses that CIA interrogators may face when questioning
"high-value" terrorist suspects. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn.,
is expected to begin debate on the bill as early as Tuesday.
Through omissions and legal definitions, the proposal could authorize harsh
techniques that critics contend potentially violate the Geneva Conventions,
which govern the treatment of war prisoners. These methods include hypothermia,
stress positions and "waterboarding," a practice of simulated drowning.
-snip-The proposal would apply back to 2001 the Bush administration's standards
for treatment of detainees. That would shield CIA personnel from liability
under a 1996 law intended to uphold the Geneva Conventions, since the fight
against terrorism began and harsher interrogation methods were approved.
-snip-