Today’s edition of quick hits.
* In a pleasant surprise, after a promised stonewall, the CIA and the Justice Department agreed yesterday to start sharing documents with Congress regarding the destruction of the torture tapes. The CIA also agreed to let the agency’s top lawyer, John Rizzo, testify about the matter before the House Intelligence Committee.
* In related news, the Intelligence Committee heard from former CIA Assistant General Counsel John Radsan today, who said the stated defense — the tapes had to be destroyed to protect the identities of the U.S. torturers — doesn’t make any sense: “There was no indication that they wanted to share this with anybody. If they are worried about a leak, the CIA protects a lot of classified information. If you have tapes in an overseas location, then have the tapes moved back to headquarters as Ms. Jackson-Lee said, put it in a safe in the Director’s office. If a tape is not safe in the CIA, in the office of the Director of the CIA, we’re in trouble.”
* And speaking of torture: “A blood-spattered ‘torture complex’ used by Iraqi insurgents, and the remains of 26 people buried nearby, were found in the province of Diyala on Thursday, the US military announced…. The torture chamber was housed in an area containing three detention facilities, the military said. ‘It had chains on the walls and ceilings, a bed still hooked up to an electrical system and several blood-stained items,’ a statement said.” I remember a time when we had the moral authority to denounce such horrors without looking like hypocrites.
* And speaking of Iraq: “A suicide bombing northeast of the capital and a car bombing in Baghdad on Thursday shattered the calm of an otherwise unusually peaceful holiday period in Iraq. Authorities said 19 people were killed in the two attacks, including a U.S. soldier.”
* California has been waiting for quite a while for a waiver from the Bush administration to implement its own regulations to cut greenhouse-gas emissions from vehicles. Yesterday, Bush’s EPA finally responded: “No.”
* Time magazine’s person of the year: Vladimir Putin. (Al Gore was a runner-up.)
* Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) is facing some heat for defending Trent Lott’s racism. Good.
* Mukasey got this one absolutely right: “Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey issued new restrictions yesterday on contacts between Justice Department and White House officials regarding ongoing criminal or civil investigations, implementing his first major policy revision since taking office on Nov. 9.” During the Clinton years, there were seven people at the White House and the Justice Department who were authorized to initiate discussions about pending cases. Under Ashcroft, that number swelled to 40. Under Alberto Gonzales, it grew to more than 900. Mukasey is adding some welcome sanity to this part of the Justice Department.
* Aw-kward: “It’s true that in Washington, adversaries often wind up drinking together after hours. But when insiders at the FBI saw that Sen. Ted Stevens had RSVP’d ‘yes’ to last Friday’s annual director’s holiday bash, the hunters couldn’t quite conceive of partying with the prey. FBI agents raided the Alaska Republican’s home less than five months ago as part of a sprawling corruption probe.” Stevens agreed to attend, but didn’t show up.
* Time magazine is about to get better: “Two conservative Time magazine columnists are on their way out the door: Neither William Kristol nor longtime contributor Charles Krauthammer will be on contract with the magazine starting next month. Mr. Krauthammer confirmed the news to Off the Record, and a spokeswoman for Time said Mr. Kristol’s contract would not be renewed.”
* If his presidential campaign doesn’t work out, might Chris Dodd be considered as a Senate Majority Leader? There’s quite a bit of talk about the subject.
* Remember, CNN, you’re paying good money to keep this clown on the air: “Glenn Beck guest host Joe Pagliarulo described an Australian professor’s proposal as ‘a baby tax to help save the planet,’ about which Beck said: ‘[A] lot of these environmentalists absolutely hate people.’ Beck also claimed that ‘it’s these same kind of environmentalists that took the wolves out of Yellowstone Park.’ In fact, the gray wolf population in Yellowstone National Park was eradicated in the late 1800s and early 1900s by federally funded predator-elimination programs.”
* And finally, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas told students at Chapman University that he doesn’t much care for his job: “There’s not much that entices about the job,” Thomas said. “There’s no money in it, no privacy, no big houses, and from an ego standpoint, it does nothing for me.” If he wanted to quit in, say, 2009, that’d be just fine.
Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.