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Obituary: Dianne Feinstein

The California senator was a passionate advocate for gun control

October 26, 2023 14:21
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WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 6: Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on judicial nominations on Capitol Hill September 6, 2023 in Washington, DC. During the hearing the committee considered five judges for federal vacancies. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
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In March, 2009 Dianne Feinstein, chair of America’s Senate Intelligence Committee, was faced with the decision of her political life. Whether to release the report of her committee’s investigation into the CIA’s alleged use of torture in the aftermath of 9/11. She wavered over the moral and political implications. Her old friend Secretary of State John Kerry said releasing the report would lead to violence. US intelligence agencies warned it would damage America’s international reputation. She would have blood on her hands.

But her mind was made up. In December, 2014 the intrepid Feinstein published her report that made claims about the scale and brutality of the CIA’s actions and its attempts to mislead Congress and the White House. As the exhausted but steadfast Senator took to the Senate floor, she said: “History will judge us by our commitment to a just society governed by law and the willingness to face an ugly truth and say ‘Never Again’.”

The 500-page summary from the 6,700-page report, which is still classified, made allegations about the CIA’s “enhanced interrogation techniques” — a euphemism for waterboarding, stripping detainees naked and putting them in nappies, chaining them in stress positions, depriving them of sleep for days at a time, menacing and threatening them. And other alleged methods.

Dianne Feinstein, who has died aged 90, spent five decades running openly as a US Jewish politician. A Democrat, she was not soft on crime. She upheld her government’s policy of “targeted killings” via drone, considered Edward Snowden a traitor for revealing national security secrets, and had at one time supported the death penalty.