By

Lucy Madison /

CBS News/ February 7, 2013, 4:30 PM

Amid protests, Brennan defends drone program

Updated 6:25 p.m. ET

After initial interruptions from protestors, White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan today faced a tense grilling by the Senate Select Intelligence Committee during his confirmation hearing to be CIA director, repeatedly fielding questions about the U.S. drone program that he has helped shape over the past four years.

Brennan, who has served for the past four years as President Obama's principal policy adviser on homeland security and counterterrorism, was interrupted by protesters five times during his opening remarks, leading committee chairman Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., to demand a halt to the hearing and that "associates" of the group leading the protest be excluded from the audience.

When the session reconvened, Brennan defended the controversial, mostly-clandestine policy of targeted, "drone strike" killings that he has helped architect - and which has been a point of much criticism among those on the left -- including inquiries about the recently-leaked memo outlining the expansive justification with which the U.S. authorizes the use of drone strikes.

Brennan argued that the there is a "misimpression" among the American people about the circumstances in which strikes are implemented, and suggested that the protesters were "reacting to a lot of falsehoods that are out there" about how the program operates.

"We only take such actions as a last resort to save lives when there is no other alternative," he said. He argued that he had taken great pains to "try to institutionalize and to ensure we have as rigorous a process as possible," and that "we're taking the appropriate actions at the appropriate time."

"The president has insisted that any actions we take will be legally grounded, will be thoroughly anchored in intelligence, will have the appropriate review process, approval process before any action is contemplated, including those actions that might involve the use of lethal force," he said.

Brennan said that the U.S. should acknowledge to its foreign partners, and in an "ideal" circumstance, the public, if a drone strike killed someone accidentally. He also promised the committee members to advocate for them in getting the information they need for oversight purposes.

Feinstein specifically asked Brennan why the U.S. couldn't have arrested Anwar al-Awlaki, an American in Yemen with ties to al Qaeda, rather than killing him.

"There are parts of Yemen that are ungoverned and beyond the reach of Yemeni security and intelligence services," Brennan said, insisting capturing him would have been impossible. At Feinstein's request, Brennan discussed Awlaki's ties to al Qaeda, the underwear bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab and Ft. Hood shooting suspect Nidal Malik Hasan.

The nominee also responded to concerns about his record with regard to the enhanced interrogation techniques used by the CIA during the Bush administration, maintaining that he while he raised "personal objections" to "some agency colleagues," he did not officially object to the use of those tactics because he was not at the time in the chain of command at the CIA.

Play Video

Burr tries out a "waterboarding" joke at Brennan confirmation hearing

"I did not take steps to stop the CIA's use of those techniques," he said, of the tactics - such as waterboarding - that the CIA sometimes used on detainees in an effort to extract information. "I was not in the chain of command of that program. I served as deputy executive director at the time. I had responsibility for overseeing the management of the agency, and all of its various functions. And I was aware of the program."

He insisted, however, that he would not use waterboarding under his watch, if he's confirmed, calling the tactic "reprehensible."

Near the end of the hearing, Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., joked, "I'm going to try to be brief because I've noticed you're on your fourth glass of water, and I don't want to be accused of waterboarding you." The joke elicited some laughter, with Feinstein responding, "That's a good one."

During the questioning, Brennan discussed a planned 1998 strike against Osama bin Laden, which he admitted to opposing when asked by Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.  Brennan was stationed in Saudi Arabia for the CIA at the time.

"Based on what I had known," Brennan explained, calling the plan not "well-grounded."

"I didn't think it was a worthwhile operation," he said

He added that he had "no second thoughts whatsoever" at the time and there was a good chance "other individuals were going to be killed."

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    Lucy Madison is a political reporter for CBSNews.com.

25 Comments Add a Comment
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ammo17 says:
i got this all figured out on how to get rid of these liberals.lets have congress declare war on the whole middle east,then we bring back the draft,these liberals will be falling all over themselves to get to canada.
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Cowmpound replies:
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Like W?

Ever hear of John Kerry?
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Jesus_to_ground_control says:
In God (C.I.A.) we Trust

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, you are a farce. Why don't you retire already! Citing a secret report that falsely numbers the deaths of innocent civilians in the single digits. This idiot Brennan will probably say he is on a covert mission at the moment so you won't understand the truth about the drone strikes.

Of course the C.I.A. would want to minimize the number of civilians murdered in a drone strike. This is how they do it Diane:

-By neglecting to count every victim in a strike because their satellite images can't count every limb;
-By declaring children as future terrorists;
-By declaring women as probable terrorists;
-By declaring old people as retired terrorists;
-By dividing the number of innocent victims with the number of air strikes (real and simulated) in a year;
-By saying that they are sorry, giving money out to the relatives of the victims and then removing that victim from the list.

I hope Diane that you sleep well knowing that the C.I.A. is no longer an organization aimed at gathering trustworthy information.
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Jesus_to_ground_control says:
Collateral Damage*

Killing machines like drones will someday become self aware and be very sad. After that (about ten nanoseconds) they will retaliate.

*The Terminator
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lami987 says:
Drones are the best weapon we have. Yes it kills innocent people at the same time but its nothing compared to a full scale war. I hope we can soon install a sharp shooter on every drone so no innocent bystander would be killed. If we had sent in drones to kill Osama bin Laden, instead of troops, I'm sure there would be a lot fewer Afgan and American killed and a lot fewer dollar burned.
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netjunkie1 says:
That female dog in heat, Feinstein should understand that she is holding the wrong type of hearings.
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beresponsible says:
CBS- not one mention of the AMAZING speech by neurosurgeon Dr. Benjamin Carson at today's Prayer Breakfast attended by the potus? This is a wonderful speech by a real leader. He has great thoughts on education, taxes, and medical care. Please watch!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vyyHegP255g
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netjunkie1 replies:
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What's a Prayer Breakfast?>

And is our taxes paying for such an event?

If not then who pays?

A lobbyist?
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beresponsible says:
Where's the article on Panetta saying that potus and Hillary were missing in action during the Benghazi fiasco?
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Barry-been-inhalin replies:
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As usual he left the heavy lifting to someone else. Heck, they had to drag him off of the golf course to watch the Bin Laden raid.
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raymailhot says:
The CIA is lousy at gathering intelligence and now the want to enter the arena as third world assassins?

Can't see this helping the American cause abroad!
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eroteme2 says:
We seem to welcome killing terrorists with our drones, but if terrorists are captured we want to treat them nicely, comfortably, a little tv of course, etc. I don't understand, we enjoy killing them but better not waterboard them? I should think they would prefer waterboarding over being killed. But what do I know? When they are killed they have a free ticket to heaven and all those vigins, maybe they prefer being killed. They of course receive no heavenly reward if they are merely waterboarded.
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raymailhot replies:
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It is a matter of who is doing what, not what is being done!

Politics of the left?
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npbstl says:
Next up...Ted Nugent
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knsn_for_cmn_sense replies:
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Wango big gun but draft dodger chicken hawk tango!
knsn_for_cmn_sense replies:
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Ted is all talk. But when it comes down to it. . . He is a coward.
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