Politics - Written by Bart on Wednesday, January 30, 2008 17:43 - 0 Comments

Attorney general dances around waterboarding issue

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Attorney General Michael Mukasey refused to legally define waterboarding as “torture” during Senate testimony Wednesday, although he acknowledged that if the interrogation technique were performed on him, he would personally “feel that it was.”

During his first testimony since his November confirmation, Mukasey told the Senate Judiciary Committee that it wouldn’t “be appropriate for me to pass definitive judgment on the technique’s legality.”

Interrogation by torture is illegal under U.S. law and Mukasey said labeling waterboarding as torture would give “our adversaries the limits and contours of generally worded laws that define the limits of a highly classified interrogation program.”

Full story from CNN



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About half the 800 superdelegates — elected officials, party leaders, and others — have committed to either Clinton or Obama, though they can change their minds until the convention.

Obama’s political action committee has doled out more than $694,000 to superdelegates since 2005, the study found, and of the 81 who had announced their support for Obama, 34 had received donations totaling $228,000.

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