The Senate Intelligence Committee Report on Torture by Senate Select Committee on Intelligence - ISBN: 9781612194851
Paperback
One of the most significant government reports in American history, this is the complete official summary report of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s investigation of the Central Intelligence Agency’s interrogation and detention programs launched in the wake of the 9⁄11 attacks.

The Senate Intelligence Committee Report on Torture

Committee Study of the Central Intelligence Agency's Detention and Interrogation Program

$34.74

  • Paperback

    576 pages

  • Release Date

    2 January 2015

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Summary

The most important public document of a generation.“The most extensive review of U.S. intelligence-gathering tactics in generations.” -Los Angeles TimesThis is the Executive Summary of the “Committee Study of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Detention and Interrogation Program,” a U.S. Senate investigation – a.k.a., The Torture Report.Based on more than six million pages of classified CIA documents, this report details the establishment of a covert CIA program to secretly detain and in…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781612194851
ISBN-10:1612194850
Author:Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
Publisher:Melville House Publishing
Imprint:Melville House Publishing
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:576
Release Date:2 January 2015
Weight:534g
Dimensions:210mm x 140mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

A Boston Globe Bestseller

“This massive chronicle of malfeasance concerns not only the efficacy of certain interrogation techniques, not only the perennial clash between spies and their civilian overseers, but something far more profound: the nation’s political soul.”
Harper’s

“A high-quality version of the 500-some page report.”
John Hockenberry, The Takeaway/WNYC

“The most extensive review of U.S. intelligence-gathering tactics in generations.”
—Los Angeles Times

“The Senate intelligence committee’s report is a landmark in accountability … It is one of the most shocking documents ever produced by any modern democracy about its own abuses of its own highest principles.”
The Guardian (UK)

“Exhaustive … Haunting”
Washington Post

“The small independent publisher Melville House has done it, turning ‘a five-hundred-and-twenty-eight-page PDF with the slanted margins and blurred resolution of a Xerox made by a myopic high-school Latin teacher’ into a more readable text.”
—Andrew Sullivan, The Dish

“Releasing this report is an important step to restoring our values and showing the world that we are a just society.”
Senate Intelligence Committee chair Senator Dianne Feinstein

“A portrait of depravity that is hard to comprehend and even harder to stomach.”
—New York Times

“Details the use of gruesome torture techniques used by the CIA and … concludes that the agency misled both the White House and Congress.”
Christian Science Monitor

“I believe the American people have a right—indeed, a responsibility—to know what was done in their name; how these practices did or did not serve our interests; and how they comported with our most important values. I commend Chairman Feinstein and her staff for their diligence in seeking a truthful accounting of policies I hope we will never resort to again.”
—Senator John McCain

“Melville House is betting that there’s enough interest in the Torture Report that people will want to have it in book form.”
—Rachel Maddow, MSNBC

“The book business in 2015 is pretty much a crapshoot, but it’s hard to believe that even the canniest insider could’ve predicted the sales success that indie publisher Melville House has had with the Senate Intelligence Committee Report on Torture.”
—Vulture

“A tiny Brooklyn publishing house printed a 50,000-copy run of the Senate torture report—and it’s flying off shelves faster than The Goldfinch.”
—Entertainment Weekly

“Given the swift and harsh condemnations of CIA interrogation tactics, the Torture Report is sure to top nonfiction charts for months to come — mark my words.”
—Bustle

“If you were wondering why it’s important that indie presses exist, HERE, THIS IS WHY.”
Portland Mercury

“A watershed moment in contemporary publishing.”
Flavorwire

“It’s quite the important and powerful idea: that simply repackaging material can make it more accessible and can perhaps make it last—truly last—in the way we need to know and remember it.”
Ploughshares

“[Melville House is] continuing the critical work of publishing important documents.”
Shelf Awareness

“Small but conscientious Melville [House]…is rushing to get the report out promptly.”
Library Journal

About The Author

Senate Select Committee on Intelligence

The United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence was created by the U.S. Senate in 1976 as a bipartisan committee responsible for overseeing federal intelligence activities.It is the committee’s responsibility to “oversee and make continuing studies of the intelligence activities and programs of the United States Government,” to “submit to the Senate appropriate proposals for legislation and report to the Senate concerning such intelligence activities and programs,” and to “provide vigilant legislative oversight over the intelligence activities of the United States to assure that such activities are in conformity with the Constitution and laws of the United States.”

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