The Congress defied a White House veto threat on Wednesday
and voted to ban the CIA from using waterboarding and other
harsh interrogation techniques.
On a largely party-line vote of 51-45, the Democratic-led Senate
passed a broad intelligence measure approved in December by
the House of Representatives and sent it to President George
W. Bush.
"There must be no doubt in the world that this great nation
does not torture," said Nebraska Republican Sen. Chuck
Hagel, one of the bill's chief sponsors. Waterboarding, a simulated
drowning technique, has been widely condemned by human rights
groups and other countries as torture and illegal.
But White House spokesman Tony Fratto said aides would recommend
a veto. "Parts of this bill are inconsistent with the effective
conduct of intelligence gathering," he said.
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Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the leading Republican presidential
candidate and an author of previous anti-torture legislation,
voted against the overall intelligence bill. The interrogation
provision says the Central Intelligence Agency must adhere to
limitations in the U.S. Army Field Manual.
"I made it very clear that I think that waterboarding
is torture and illegal, but I will not restrict the CIA to only
the Army Field Manual," McCain said before the vote.
The action follows CIA Director Michael Hayden's disclosure
to Congress last week that government interrogators had used
waterboarding on three suspects captured after the September
11 attacks.
The new provision would require the CIA to comply with Army
rules on questioning detainees, which forbid eight methods including
waterboarding, forced nudity, electric shock, use of dogs and
mock executions.
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